Alca impennisGreat Auk (Alca impennis), a stuffed specimen preserved at the Icelandic Institute of Natural History. The bird was collected off the south coast of Iceland in 1821 shortly before the species became extinct in 1844. The last ever Great Auk site, Eldey island, forms the background og the photo. The egg is a mimmic.
Plot hatched to reintroduce extinct great auk to British shoresThe great auk could return to British shores for the first time in almost 200 years after geneticists hatched a plan to bring the extinct bird back from the dead.
Pleistocene Era AnimalsGreat Auk (Pinguinus impennis) flightless sea bird. Habitat: rocky and isolated islands. Funk islands was the largest breeding colony. Estimated to have had a maximum population in the millions. Extermination began with a slaughter for food and eggs by local inhabitants, but its fate was sealed when feather became fashion. The last colony of Great Auks is believed to be lived on Geirfuglasker (the "Great Auk Rock") off Iceland. THIS SPECIES IS EXTINCT.
The Penguins We Know Today Aren’t Penguins?! The Surprising Truth Behind The Great AukWhen you picture a penguin, you probably imagine a waddling black-and-white bird slipping along the ice in Antarctica, right? But here’s a twist that might surprise you: the birds we call “penguins” today are actually not true penguins at all! The name we associate with these loveable little birds was borrowed from an entirely different species—the Great Auk—that’s been extinct for over a century.
The Bizarre Story of Britain’s Last Great AukPrized for their meat, oil, and feathers, great auks were slowly killed off until only one remained in the wild.
An ‛Aukward’ Tale: A Genetic Approach to Discover the Whereabouts of the Last Great AuksOne hundred and seventy-three years ago, the last two Great Auks, Pinguinus impennis, ever reliably seen were killed. Their internal organs can be found in the collections of the Natural History Museum of Denmark, but the location of their skins has remained a mystery. In 1999, Great Auk expert Errol Fuller proposed a list of five potential candidate skins in museums around the world. Here we take a palaeogenomic approach to test which—if any—of Fuller’s candidate skins likely belong to…
George Edwards 1743 Heron, Crane, Pelican, Penguin PrintsGeorge Edwards 1743 Heron, Crane, Pelican, Penguin Prints
Dark Ocean WildlifeJulian Friers | 'Great Auks by Fairhead on the Northern Irish coast' | Once a common bird of the North Atlantic, it was driven to extinction in the mid nineteenth century