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Showing posts with label Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Museum. Show all posts

Maiacetus inuus - forelegs - Smithsonian Museum of Natural History - 2012-05-17

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Maiacetus inuus - forelegs - Smithsonian Museum of Natural History - 2012-05-17
animals that are extinct
Image by Tim Evanson
Skull and forelimbs of a maiacetus inuus in the Sant Hall of Oceans in the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C. Maiacetus means "mother whale," and Inuus was a Roman god of fertility god. The first skeleton of this ancient whale-like animal was found in Pakistan in 2009, and was a pregnant female with an unborn calf (hence the name).

Maiacetus inuus is an "archeocete," which means "ancient whale." It wasn't really a whale, but rather an ancestor of whales which lived both on land and in the ocean (although it lived primarily in the latter). It had bit, sharp, long teeth and ate fish. Maiacetus probably came out of the sea only to rest, mate, and give birth. Its four legs were adapted for foot-powered swimming. The legs could support the maiacetus on land, but they probably couldn't travel very fast or very far inland.

This ancient whale-like animal was about 8.5 feet (2.6 m) in length and weighed about 620 to 860 pounds (280 to 390 kg). It lived about 49 to 40 million years ago. The fingers of each foot were elongated, and probably webbed. The hind feet were much larger than the forefeet, which shows how already the limbs were beginning to atrophy and turn into a fluke. The snout was highly elongated as well, good for snapping at fish.

The position of the fetus (head-first) suggests that these whales gave birth on land. (Land mammals almost all give birth head-first. Whales give birth tail-first.) The fetus has fully developed teeth, which indicates it was able to fend for itself immediately after birth.

A male maiacetus inuus has also been unearthed, and it is about 20 percent larger than the female. This is not much at all, which indicates that males didn't control territories or command harems.


Shasta Ground Sloth
animals that are extinct
Image by Travis S.
Below this ground sloth it reads:

Shasta Ground Sloth, Northrotheriops shastense, is the smallest sloth found at Rancho La Brea. In the arid southwest this animal probably browsed on various desert shrubs including the Joshua tree, Mormon tea, and agavi. Fossil finds of the Shasta Ground Sloth suggest that it lived in or near mountains. Follow the blue line for the approximate time of this sloth's extinction. (It was about 8,000 years ago.)


Laurilland's Ground Sloth
animals that are extinct
Image by akseabird
Eremotherium laurillardi stood 20 feet tall and weighed several tons. It is one of many species of giant ground sloths, at least four of which were found on the North American Continent.

Apparently many species of sloths survived well passed the end of the last ice age (about 10kya) well beyond many other ice age animals. It is even possible that some species survived on Cuba and Hispanola as late as the mid 16th century

View of an exhibition room within the Australian Museum

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View of an exhibition room within the Australian Museum
images of animals
Image by Australian National Maritime Museum on The Commons
This photo is part of the Australian National Maritime Museum’s William Hall collection. The Hall collection combines photographs from both William J Hall and his father William Frederick Hall - the latter of which is likely to have taken this image. The images provide an important pictorial record of recreational boating in Sydney Harbour, from the 1890s to the 1930s – from large racing and cruising yachts, to the many and varied skiffs jostling on the harbour, to the new phenomenon of motor boating in the early twentieth century. The collection also includes studio portraits and images of the many spectators and crowds who followed the sailing races.

The Australian National Maritime Museum undertakes research and accepts public comments that enhance the information we hold about images in our collection. If you can identify a person, vessel or landmark, write the details in the Comments box below.

Thank you for helping caption this important historical image.

Object number 00002297



Woolly donkeys come out for the summer
images of animals
Image by ellenm1
There are only about 400 of these in the US. These 2 are at Domino's farms in Ann Arbor.



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