The Search for the Thylacine

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  • Опубликовано: 22 окт 2024

Комментарии • 201

  • @FactorTrace
    @FactorTrace  Год назад +40

    IMPORTANT CORRECTION:
    The thylacine endling mentioned as “Benjamin” in the video turned out to be a female and she was never known by that name. The name has been a myth that was widely used to refer to the last known thylacine.
    This myth originated from a story published in the Melbourne press in 1968 (32 years after the last thylacine died). Frank Darby told the story, he claimed to have worked in the Hobart Zoo and took care of the thylacine, and lied about the name Benjamin of the last thylacine. This story took on and although the Zoo has denied Darby’s claim and inconsistencies have been found from his story, the name stuck.
    Researcher Robert Paddle and museum curator of vertebrate zoology Kathryn Medlock said on 6 December 2022 that they had managed to track down the remains of the final thylacine that died in Hobart Zoo in 1936. It was found that the thylacine was a female.
    Source
    www.abc.net.au/news/2022-12-06/benjamin-thylacine-tasmanian-tiger-naming-myth-persists/101734442?
    Please read the sources linked in the description

    • @andrewchalmers7422
      @andrewchalmers7422 5 месяцев назад

      I had a very very good look at a panther in Victorian high country 40 years ago. I'm sure l could search for proof of the panthers for 20 years and still not see another one.
      Peter report their sights when it's news because like me they keep it to themselves until they opportunity to tell someone who is not going to ridicule them.
      Like so many dicks have done in the comments here

    • @s.tavares3257
      @s.tavares3257 4 месяца назад +1

      Was going to point that out.

    • @pedrogabrielduarte4544
      @pedrogabrielduarte4544 2 месяца назад +1

      so that means that the story of the thylacine is a lie?! but how?!

  • @flatwavelength
    @flatwavelength Год назад +24

    You're videos are SUCH high quality. I cant wait to watch you grow.

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +1

      Thank you! I really appreciate it! :D

  • @The_PokeSaurus
    @The_PokeSaurus Год назад +129

    I think people's claims of seeing this animal still alive is a result of our guilt over its extinction. I think instead of trying to prove it's still alive or cloning it, a better way of honoring the Thylacine is to save what animals we have today that are endangered and make a more friendly environment for them before just bringing them back.

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +26

      Yes, I completely agree with you. People see what they want to see, and because they feel guilty they want the thylacine to still exist.
      I also think that it's best for us to use the money we're currently spending on thylacine resurrection project to be used in extant animal conservation. But experts are torn between the two, since advancements in genome editing technology can also help save endangered species.

    • @paleoph6168
      @paleoph6168 Год назад +15

      "You never realise the value of something until it's gone."

    • @laseriedeladilophosaure9246
      @laseriedeladilophosaure9246 Год назад +4

      Je pense aussi que les gens ont confondues le dongo ou les chiens sauvages avec le thylacine

    • @Trilobite-r1u
      @Trilobite-r1u Год назад +5

      It has nothing to do with guilt, they see it because it's still alive and out there. It was filmed just last week --- > ruclips.net/video/giH3QSI2N2A/видео.html

    • @The_PokeSaurus
      @The_PokeSaurus Год назад +1

      @@Trilobite-r1u That video isn't even in color so it just looks like a dog. So there is no proof they are still alive out there.

  • @Levelz31
    @Levelz31 Год назад +20

    the quality of content you put out is mind-blowing, I hope your channel has incredible growth this year. keep the content coming.

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +1

      I appreciate that! I hope so too, thanks! Still working on more videos

  • @ham_sandvich
    @ham_sandvich 4 месяца назад +2

    as a tasmanian i am very happy that you covered one of my favourite creatures i’ve traveled the entirety of tasmania as i love camping and the only things close to them that i see/hear are usually just tassie devils fighting or possums fighting and i assume a lot of tourist think that they’ve struck gold when they hear it

  • @BronyLord-wo1ym
    @BronyLord-wo1ym Год назад +8

    "May we one day see this beloved creature again"

  • @sidstevens9035
    @sidstevens9035 10 месяцев назад +8

    Frank Darby, who claimed to have been a keeper at Hobart Zoo, suggested Benjamin as having been the animal's pet name in a newspaper article of May 1968. No documentation exists to suggest that it ever had a pet name, and Alison Reid (de facto curator at the zoo) and Michael Sharland (publicist for the zoo) denied that Frank Darby had ever worked at the zoo or that the name Benjamin was ever used for the animal. Darby also appears to be the source for the claim that the last thylacine was a male. Robert Paddle was unable to uncover any records of any Frank Darby having been employed by Beaumaris/Hobart Zoo during the time that Reid or her father was in charge and noted several inconsistencies in the story Darby told during his interview in 1968.

  • @F0xR0t13
    @F0xR0t13 Год назад +14

    Your videos are so high quality it's a shame you're so underrated :(

    • @seregagerassimov4864
      @seregagerassimov4864 Год назад +8

      Yeah, it feels like I am watching a channel that has at least 1 million subscribers.

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +2

      Thank you! I'm still working to get more recognition :D

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +2

      @Serega Gerassimov Thanks, I really appreciate that!

  • @meikitotoku
    @meikitotoku Год назад +10

    It's been a while but I'm glad you're back! Your videos are always very educational and helpful! Both your paleontology videos and modern-day animal videos are very enjoyable to watch. And the motion design and editing are phenomenal!

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +2

      Hi again! Yeah it did take a while to finish these videos, thanks for sticking around and I'm glad you like them!

  • @benmcreynolds8581
    @benmcreynolds8581 Год назад +5

    Man, I sure hope that there are rare groups of Tasmanian Tiger's still alive in the remote dense wilderness of Tasmania, or other near by region's. They are such amazing creatures. They were unfairly scapegoated.

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +2

      Yeah, that will be great news if we find living populations of them hidden somewhere. It's so sad that we can't see them anymore

    • @calm.wonders
      @calm.wonders Год назад +1

      Even if they’re alive , the government probably know but you won’t tell the public , if they publicly say it , everyone will go to that area to find them , don’t forget there are some people who over millions of dollar to capture a live one

    • @Atomic_Pinneaple
      @Atomic_Pinneaple 3 месяца назад

      ​@@calm.wonderswould be reasonable

  • @KennyKAdventures
    @KennyKAdventures Год назад +1

    Great video 👍🏾
    Such a beautiful animal I hope they still exist, if I ever saw one I wouldn’t say a thing! I have heard there has been quite a few sightings in PNG most of the land is untouched.

  • @parkerredeker5216
    @parkerredeker5216 Год назад +6

    Great overview! Another video by one of the most underrated RUclipsr's ever.

  • @deshrektives
    @deshrektives Год назад +3

    So glad you’re back! Love the animals, and these videos are one hell of a class on how to communicate information visually.
    It’s only a matter of time before your channel blows up, dude!

  • @hsdinoman2267
    @hsdinoman2267 Год назад +6

    ⁣Trapped am I,
    in cage of twisty wire, cold concrete.
    PROWL
    RAGE
    HOWL
    Know you not that I am tooth and claw-
    see me hunt through bracken and bush,
    see me swagger across wild lands,
    see me glory at the edge of cliff.

  • @herby375
    @herby375 Год назад +1

    That was really good!

  • @ASM42186
    @ASM42186 5 месяцев назад +1

    The last surviving Thylacine died of NEGLECT?!?!
    Before seeing this video, I was melancholy for the extinction of the thylacine. Now I'm outraged.

  • @FactorTrace
    @FactorTrace  Год назад +7

    Image and video credits:
    1. Thylacine footage compilation
    1911 footage by "Mr. Williamson", 1933 footage by David Fleay. Authors of the 1928 footage are unknown., Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons | commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thylacine_footage_compilation.ogv
    2. 4 Griffith on expedition
    Jeremy Griffith’s remarkable search for the Tasmanian Tiger (thylacine) | www.humancondition.com/tasmanian-tiger-search/
    3. Footage of the last thylacine
    Probably Sidney Cook (1873-1937), Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons | commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Last_known_footage_of_a_Thylacine.webm
    4. Thylacine and Tasmanian devil
    after a drawing by George Harris, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons | commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Didelphis_cynocephala_and_Didelphis_ursina,_1808.jpg
    5. Thylacine with chicken
    Henry Burrell (died 1945), Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons | commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Thylacine-chicken.png
    6. Wilf Batty with the last wild thylacine
    Photo of Wilfred Batty, author unknown, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons | commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Wilf_Batty_last_wild_Thylacine.jpg
    7. Bagged thylacine
    Victor Prout?, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons | commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Bagged_thylacine.jpg
    I can't put the credits in the description box because I have exceeded the maximum number of character limit with my sources. I need to find a more effective way of putting my citations that's both easily accessible and is more spacious than the regular RUclips description box. If anyone knows how, please let me know, thanks!

  • @jellybean_91
    @jellybean_91 Год назад +2

    Absolutely awesome video with brilliant research and production values! Thank you!

  • @LadyViscera
    @LadyViscera 4 месяца назад +1

    I never realised that Thylacines only hunted small prey.
    That makes their extinction all the more pointless and tragic.

  • @loadingyourdata2131
    @loadingyourdata2131 5 месяцев назад

    How does this video not have a million views by now??

    • @CallOfTheVoid-ib3py
      @CallOfTheVoid-ib3py 4 месяца назад +1

      Because most of it is fake.He is deleting and blocking any correction posts

  • @markgilfernando7385
    @markgilfernando7385 Год назад +3

    it's us humans that should be tagged as troublesome creatures

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад

      Yeah, I can't help but agree with this

  • @NatureEnjoyer523
    @NatureEnjoyer523 Год назад +1

    0:28 I think that drawing is based on the only image i could found with the pouch visible

  • @andersliwenborg3355
    @andersliwenborg3355 8 месяцев назад +1

    "did not know" before and after.....bounty says it all

  • @flatwavelength
    @flatwavelength Год назад

    Sorry to ask this in a comment, but is there a way to contact you? I know you either are or were in my discord, but I forgot your user. No worries if you don't want to be contacted, but if you DO please let me know! I'd be asking about a collab, and if you'd be interested in doing that!

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад

      Hey Izzie! It's fine no worries. I can DM you on Discord if that would be the most convenient for you. I also have Twitter and Email linked on my RUclips about page.
      I have sent you an email. Thanks for reaching out! :D

  • @vladimirberegovoy2886
    @vladimirberegovoy2886 11 месяцев назад +2

    How could Australians afford losing such animals? Greed and stupidity rule.

  • @squidlyminimalisim
    @squidlyminimalisim Год назад +1

    Great channel and even better video you had epic content from the start but you’ve stepped it up again

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад

      Thanks a lot! Still trying to improve :D

  • @pattskatoey3139
    @pattskatoey3139 Год назад +3

    It’s a real shame they let the Thylacine go extinct.

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +1

      Yes, it is. We lost another iconic and unique animal because of human activities

  • @NatureEnjoyer523
    @NatureEnjoyer523 Год назад +1

    6:20 i doubt if it was mounted, since i have seen photos in the same area, were the thylacine had clearly moved

  • @iamarizonaball2642
    @iamarizonaball2642 Год назад +4

    The dodos are cuter, and yet we still are unknowingly killing species.
    (Say, how’s that Arizona extinct species video going?)

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +3

      Yeah you're right! We should protect all species regardless of their physical appearance tho 😆
      I haven't found a topic about any Californian species to make a full video about, currently I'm still focusing on finishing this Holocene Extinction series, I still have 4 episodes to go. :D

    • @iamarizonaball2642
      @iamarizonaball2642 Год назад

      @@FactorTrace I’ll look through Arizona’s extinct animals for ones during the Holocene extinction.

  • @tatianaromonov1416
    @tatianaromonov1416 11 месяцев назад +1

    How can they have an exact day of extinction of a species they’d never researched or counted or even understood? Its a marsupial and was hunted like a big cat predator but it turns out the only predator in this story is man himself

  • @paulturner8372
    @paulturner8372 Год назад +1

    They didn't bother with a proper confersation program for the species back them.

  • @communication001
    @communication001 5 месяцев назад

    I'm starting the think the existence of things like dogs and humans is what drives them to live in very remote mountainous places so maybe that's why they were never caught as live specimens on the mainland - because they were already living in fear of the Dingo and driven to very isolated mountainous spots that aren't favoured by the Dingos.

  • @sidstevens9035
    @sidstevens9035 Год назад +1

    An excellent post. Well done to you !

  • @dbx1233
    @dbx1233 Год назад +5

    I was in a remote part of Tasmania, when I spotted a huge Big Foot, about 8 feet tall, and he had a pair of Thylacine, one male and one female, on a leash. He was trotting with them, through the woods. I quickly grabbed mt phone so I could get some video footage, when suddenly my battery died. Oh well, the footage probably would have been too grainy to see anything anyway.

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +3

      You got me at the first half not gonna lie 😂
      I'm going to guess the camera you're carrying must be one of those old surveillance cameras with 144p max resolution

    • @fastandloose3856
      @fastandloose3856 8 месяцев назад +1

      Ha Ha Ha! Right O.

    • @AzwaadGD
      @AzwaadGD Месяц назад

      Bro understands​@@FactorTrace

  • @laseriedeladilophosaure9246
    @laseriedeladilophosaure9246 Год назад +1

    Le thylacine ressemble beaucoup à un loup mais il chasse des prois beaucoup plus petites donc il n’à pas le même satue au niveau de l’écologie car le loup est un grand prédateurs alors que le thylacine est un prédateurs de taille moyenne.

  • @Pingebont-blumptrot
    @Pingebont-blumptrot Год назад +1

    Such a sad story

  • @dodoxasaurus6904
    @dodoxasaurus6904 Год назад +3

    This is a Great Video

  • @andrewchalmers7422
    @andrewchalmers7422 3 месяца назад

    Very informative video.
    BUT there has never been a panther body or perfect photo taken in Australia 🇦🇺
    However the panther does exist in Australia because l had a really really good look at one.
    Lots of people also see panthers and say nothing because of the ridicule.
    I'm sure that Tasmanian tigers are in Tasmania and the mainland due to heaps of legitimate sightings

  • @paulturner8372
    @paulturner8372 Год назад +1

    Why didn't they organise a breeding program back then to save them up to now.

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад

      I believe back then, people weren't aware that the thylacines are dying out (even now a lot of people still believe they're around). On top of that, people weren't particularly fond of thylacines, calling them troublesome and a pest.
      Now millions of dollars are poured into de-extinction projects to recreate them.

  • @andrewchalmers7422
    @andrewchalmers7422 Год назад +2

    Your conclusion that the Tasmanian tigers are extinct on the mainland and Tasmanian is to be expected because there has never been clear photo or a body to prove that they exist.
    Let me mention the black panthers of Australia with many sightings of the years but as with the tigers no clear photo no body to provide proof.
    But the panthers do exist because l had a very very good look at one 40 years ago in Victorian high country.
    So l imagine the tigers are out there as well

  • @RyanMc66
    @RyanMc66 2 месяца назад

    How much more life will perish due to humans before it ends?

  • @pedrogabrielduarte4544
    @pedrogabrielduarte4544 2 месяца назад

    i heard somewhere that benjamin was not his real name

  • @jimkennedy7050
    @jimkennedy7050 Год назад

    is a tiger on the coat of arms of NZ?

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад

      No, I don't think so. But it is featured on the coat of arms of Tasmania

  • @WilliamBenecke-f9c
    @WilliamBenecke-f9c Год назад

    Can you make a video on recently extinct animals

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад

      I've actually made 5 videos about 5 iconic extinct animals, find it in the Holocene Extinction playlist.

  • @AdrianWright6363
    @AdrianWright6363 Год назад +1

    Another highly professional video! I've already started putting the word out about your channel - I have no idea how successful I'll be, but even one extra subscriber will be worth it!

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад

      Thank you very much, I highly appreciate your help! Definitely, 1 new sub is worth it. Thanks again!

  • @Swizkai
    @Swizkai Год назад

    fun fact the people looking for them lots of the time found paw tracks

  • @KonnorHermann
    @KonnorHermann 2 месяца назад

    Perhaps it's better that if the Thylacine still does exist, that it remains hidden. Because we know how cruel the poaching industry is.
    If you see an extremely rare, or a thought to be extinct species. For the sake of the animal no you didn't.

  • @NatureEnjoyer523
    @NatureEnjoyer523 Год назад +1

    Hey, its more likely than a still alive megalodon

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +1

      Yes, the megalodon is long dead. It's habitat and prey items are also gone

  • @TammyM36
    @TammyM36 Год назад +1

    This really made me mad and sad

  • @wattsiswhat
    @wattsiswhat Год назад +2

    NO! It lives

  • @NatureEnjoyer523
    @NatureEnjoyer523 3 дня назад

    Sorry, but I think your video has some misconceptions/treats questionable information as fact.
    First off, the weak bite can be contasted. As not only it obviously conflicts with historical accounts (I don't think dogs are a good explanation, as thylacine kills were described as differentely as those of dog kills), it also conflicts with other studies (Stephen Wroe, Colin McHenry, Jeffrey Thomosan, 2005). Even the video itself contradicts this, as the silhouette of a Tasmanian emu is depicted as extinct prey of the thylacine, and what are the other two animals depicted on there?
    Also, I would like if you treated the extinction of the thylacine with some more catious, as even Mr. Malley said the search wasn't conclusive, and that the thylacine was still alive.

  • @paleoph6168
    @paleoph6168 Год назад +2

    4:20 ecological

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +2

      Oh, that's a typo, I missed that one before rendering the video 😆
      Near the end there's another one 9:15 , it's supposed to be "cynocephale"

  • @pauloconnor7951
    @pauloconnor7951 Год назад

    Nope. foot prints galore; and scat. witnessed by Police; and Ranger.

  • @pollyannaprinciple5860
    @pollyannaprinciple5860 Год назад

    I hope they fired the negligent zoo keeper.

  • @NatureEnjoyer523
    @NatureEnjoyer523 Год назад

    Humans: *destroy the thylacine's habitait*
    Thylacines: *kill sheep, wich it possibly dindnt even do*
    Humans: These m*therf*ckers need to pay

  • @mickwarnie8707
    @mickwarnie8707 Год назад +2

    Well he was not the last one, just the last one on film. We will never know when the last one died. Its not like the put in a huge effort to replace him.

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +2

      It's true. That's the last "known" thylacine

    • @mickwarnie8707
      @mickwarnie8707 Год назад +2

      @@FactorTrace known one on film yes. But to think it was the last one ever is ridiculous, nobody was running around trying to film them after this died because they just did not realise how scarce they were, the care factor was not like it is now. Plus farmers who were trying to protect their stock admit they were still shooting them into the 50s and 60s but at the time kept their mouth shut because they were protected at that stage.

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +1

      @@mickwarnie8707 Yes, it is the last one on film, and after that, there has been no known thylacine. So, calling it "the last known thylacine" is wrong?
      If we're going to take sighting reports as evidence for an animal's existence, then we should start adding the bigfoot, yeti, and the loch ness monster to our encyclopedias. Those farmers might be telling the truth, but who knows? No one can verify it. So, by definition, the one died in the zoo is the last known thylacine.

  • @calebbetteridge5749
    @calebbetteridge5749 Год назад

    so was it sighted or not? dont waste my time XD

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад

      No, they're extinct.
      But watch the whole video, you won't get your time wasted 😁

    • @calebbetteridge5749
      @calebbetteridge5749 Год назад

      @@FactorTrace I’m sure the videos great I jus don’t like the clickbait thumbnail bruh, you don’t be sighten him

  • @Picasso_305
    @Picasso_305 11 месяцев назад

    So sad

  • @laurenfrail6045
    @laurenfrail6045 Год назад

    Dog as conclusion Lad

  • @gonota72
    @gonota72 Год назад

    I like how the zoo just wanted to get another one after letting the one they had die!! I believe there are still tigers out there.

  • @rustykilt
    @rustykilt Год назад

    Nothing to see here..usual click bait. Reported sightings over decades proved groundless.

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад

      If you're saying that thylacine no longer exists, then that's the point of the video. Have you even seen the whole video?

    • @rustykilt
      @rustykilt Год назад

      @@FactorTrace yes

    • @rustykilt
      @rustykilt Год назад

      @@FactorTrace like the video but it has all been said before so nothing new added.

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад

      Lots of people would argue otherwise, besides the video covers more than just the sightings

  • @NormanF62
    @NormanF62 Год назад

    If we’re looking to repair the ecosystem, we could do no better than to transplant the Malagasy fossa as a stand in fot the extinct thylacine on Tasmania and in eastern Australia and pledge never to hunt another animal to extinction. We can’t amend the sins of the past but we can take care of the environment we do have to preserve it for future generations.

  • @davejensen7922
    @davejensen7922 9 месяцев назад +1

    There are still wild parts of Tassie that white man has never set foot on
    It’s hard to say whether it’s extinct or not and feel certain

  • @wolfpredator1000
    @wolfpredator1000 Год назад

    Jeremy Femto

  • @SuperGravey
    @SuperGravey Год назад +5

    Two thylacines have clearly been spotted on thermal cameras this year in Tasmania and Victoria. Another had 12 witnesses on different occasions in S.A last year in the same area.
    Thylacines are just like kangaroos in the clips but clearly walk on all 4 legs and in one clip run extremely fast bounding and trying to hide.
    Don't forget, that the thylacine is a marsupial and should be compared with a kangaroo rather than dog or fox which is what people continually do. Maybe because they watch too much television rather than understand what people have seen.
    Thousands of sightings have been made about seeing the illusive marsupial all over Australia including the majority on the mainland. Our scientists are weak in this field and as one farmer commented, I have thylacines on my property and they live in a den. I don't go down there I just leave them alone. No scientist has ever asked us about them but continue to publish rubbish without asking the people who know.
    Another farmer I know said that they also knew of them in their area but they keep quiet because they don't want people wandering around their houses.
    I asked another farmer who I see every so often about them in the area and he just gave a cheeky smile and said they're still there, don't worry.
    How can I, a simple person speak to a few people and get totally different answers than our well paid scientists? Scientists want evidence and the farmers have it but no, they sit in the office.
    If you want a conspiracy theory, a belief is that where they are generally found is in farming areas. Forestry and wheat farming areas have heaps of sightings so if they do find one alive, what will happen to that town and industry? It'd probably go under. Look, no thylacine keep moving, it must have been a mangy fox or a dog etc.

    • @davida.4933
      @davida.4933 Год назад +1

      I've spent a lot of time in academia and IMO, many scientists give a superficial dubious opinion on the continual survival of the thylacine simply because it's not their field of expertise and they give a knee jerk reaction since for so many decades there has been no definitive proof. Probably many if not most would find some of the sighting interviews very interesting if they took the time to research those sightings esp. by personal interviews.

    • @SuperGravey
      @SuperGravey Год назад +1

      @@davida.4933 I have a very simple rule of thumb. If I don't know what I'm on about I quickly state this in order to not mislead anyone. In my subjects I'm not at the top yet but one day my goal is to be there.
      Did you know that the W.A parliament agreed that they are still apart of the West Australian fauna? They admitted this but went under the radar.
      There's definitely a breeding population because the farmers and indigenous people say they are breeding because they have seen them.
      The photo of Neils is only new to people who haven't seen them but the locals said yeah that looks like them, the aboriginal people said similar but scientists said no it's a pademelon.
      Imagine generational farmers and the world's oldest culture being bullied by a few know it alls straight from university trying to debunk them.
      As an aboriginal man once said on 4 corners if you want Australia to move forward you need to sack the educated leaders because they clearly know nothing about Australia.
      This was about the climate and major fires in 2019 but is still appropriate in this subject.
      Remember Azria Chamberlain and the Dingo? Why did the trackers walk one way and the cops the other? The police were looking for a person or dingo but what were the trackers looking for? Didn't they say the devil dog took her aka thylacine? The aboriginal people said that the thylacine would do this and knew from experience.
      You can't blame an extinct species of animal for that can you? It'd look pretty stupid.
      The Dingo took the body and sadly we know the rest.

    • @frankgallacher4799
      @frankgallacher4799 Год назад +3

      am sorry I have to disagree with you they are extinct, especially the part when it comes to the farmers after all they where the ones that put pressure on the tasmanian Government to wipe them from the face of the earth so as way back as 1830 they paid 7 shillings for a pup and a £1 for an adult, because of their paranoia that they where attacking sheep which of course they went.
      now your trying to say those same called farmers see them and allow them into their property....some how I don't think so ..look at the old photos of them hung up like meat in a buture shop.
      the last tyhacine Benjamin died of neglect frozen to death.
      I mean seriously do you really expect me to believe those farmers have been keeping it a secret, yeah right.

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +8

      Thank you for the addition, but I personally don't find those claims to be convincing enough. I don't think there's any clear, high definition footage of a thylacine to back those sightings claims, nor physical evidence like droppings or footprints.
      I would give the benefit of the doubt for claims originating from Tasmania, not mainland Australia. Since again, when the thylacine was still abundant in Tasmania, there's none found in the mainland, why would suddenly when they're gone in Tasmania, they instead begin appearing in mainland Australia?
      In this day and age, everyone has high quality cameras in their pockets all the time, all they have to do is take their smartphones out and get some footage to prove the thylacine's existence.
      And lastly, if we were to take sighting claims as "definitive proof" of an animal's existence, then we should start adding Bigfoots, yetis, and Loch Ness monsters to our encyclopedia. There's a difference between real science and mythos, one needs to be able to be physically observed, measured and analysed, the other one only needs faith to exist.

    • @SuperGravey
      @SuperGravey Год назад +4

      @@FactorTrace mate I would personally reccomended you do a bit more research about this subject as in field research asking the right people instead of internet research. This is good for a RUclips story but geeze have you missed a ton of evidence due to not looking in the right places.
      Have you personally been to the museums and looked in their archives? In W.A did you not look up the government stance on the thylacines still being present in numbers in the 70s?
      When you spoke with the aboriginal elders in remote Australia and also around the states what did they tell you about the thylacine and its ability to disappear?
      When you met trackers in the bush, there's plenty of them what were the footprints like and what was different about them? There's thousands of recent prints so please don't lie to us about not having any samples. There's some up the road from me that scientists can't explain from a 4 legged walking marsupial.
      Thylacines have also been spotted in New Guinea over the past few centuries but what would the locals know and understand.
      Australia is 7.668 million squared kilometers with much of it isolated.
      Your comment is absolutely full of holes and to have a RUclipsr privilege of trying out educate some of Australias best bushman including aboriginals is absolutely pathetic.
      Go back, think about your facts, get up and go out and speak to people.
      How is it I'm more in tune with people than someone doing a clip?
      Ps. A guy I know who has an agreement with other farmers about the thylacine being present in their surroundings hasn't heard of you. Obviously you must have missed a major portion of Australia.
      Go back and educate yourself in the field and stop relying on someone else's work.

  • @felipehagi
    @felipehagi 8 месяцев назад +1

    It's not because you can't see that it's extinct... it's no longer a "naive" animal as it was at the time of its genocide... be very calm in saying that some species is extinct... it's impossible and irresponsible

  • @lynxmflynxmf5347
    @lynxmflynxmf5347 7 месяцев назад +2

    Clickbait bollox, blocked 🚫

  • @marth6270
    @marth6270 Год назад +1

    Im back, unlike the thylacine

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +2

      Hey there, oh that's a bit dark

    • @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886
      @thylacineawarenessgroupofa5886 Год назад

      Rubbish

    • @marth6270
      @marth6270 Год назад +1

      @@FactorTrace I hope you blow up one day, if you keep making vids with such good editing, I hope it happens. At least you will have a good back catalogue.

  • @felixbuenjr.1403
    @felixbuenjr.1403 Год назад

    hahaha.. sightings? dreaming men.. your ancestor already wipe it out.. every video shown here always start with benjamin...

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад

      That's the point of the video, have you seen it until the end?
      And that's just how you do RUclips I guess? you show the most interesting part first

    • @richlisola1
      @richlisola1 Год назад +2

      If you can’t write in correct English, just don’t write

    • @andrewchalmers7422
      @andrewchalmers7422 Год назад

      Read my post

  • @tristinsway4217
    @tristinsway4217 Год назад +1

    Thylacines are related to the hyena both are marsupials both have wide jaws both have a pouch near there anus One has stripes one has spots both have 4 pups every 14 months when breeding etc🦘

    • @FactorTrace
      @FactorTrace  Год назад +3

      Despite their similarities, hyenas and thylacines are actually not closely related. Hyena is a placental mammal, not a marsupial :D
      Surprisingly, hyenas are in the order Carnivora, Suborder Feliforma, closer to cats! Whereas the thylacines are in the order Dasyuromorpha, with Tasmanian devils and dunnarts. 😁

    • @fastandloose3856
      @fastandloose3856 8 месяцев назад +1

      Ok then. Clearly you never made it past pre school.