Listen....idk what it is about the Wilfred Batty photos but they always make me jump when they finish and I am left with a thylacine in deep rigor mortis and really good colors.
So...Woolworth female and her joeys and Wilf Batty thylacine photos.
i also do art! Idk if y'all knew that I only have like two other drawings I've posted on here. But it's not just historical photo recolors and stuff!
Sorry it's blurry
This painting is currently taped to my wall so I had to climb on my bed to get a photo LOL
A woman looks into a diorama of three Thylacines, date and location unknown. [ x ]
(will update when I pull out my info I wrote down, I just woke up =w=)
EDIT IM SO SORRY
LOOK BEHIND THE DEVIL GDFSGDHFFVB LOL
-Top pictured is one of the Burrell photographs. Which were edited to be close ups to depict a 'thylacine in the wild' later debunked to be a captive thylacine.
-Middle pictured is the Wilfred batty thylacine which is the last recorded thylacine shot in the wild.
-Bottom pictured is the Beaumaris zoo family group.
Hi!!! I baguely remember a photo of a thylacine with a joey poking out of the pouch and it stuck with me a lot because it surprised me to learn their pouch opened backwards, but I can't for the live of me to find it. Do you perhaps have it around? Thank you!!
Hello! Thank you for the ask!
I have a few ideas what the photo you are looking for might be.
First is the Buckland and Springbay mother and pups photo. This was a taxidermy that was later destroyed, however portrays a joey emerging from the pouch:
Next is the family group from the Washington zoo:
(portrait done by Joseph M Gleeson of the Washington zoo family)
This was a mother and 3 Joey's that were brought into the national zoo in Washington DC. The Joey in the pouch ended up passing away in September unfortunately.
Beaumaris zoo group:
This was a mama with an extended pouch from four Joeys. In the film where the keepers are getting them into the den for the night her pouch is easily seen moving as she walks.
Lastly pictographs:
These are a collection of pictographs from around mainland Australia that depict Thylacinus Cynocephalus. Note the two middle on the left that have an extra tail, showcasing young in the pouch.
This doesn't show the pouch but it's one of my favorites.
If none of these are it and you have more ideas on what the picture may be let me know! Send as many asks as you'd like! As far as I know I'm aware of all or at least the majority of thylacine media.
I spend a lot of time in archives *sob*
My boy screaming at god.
I'll be posting some backlog cuz why not- this is a sketch I finished like a month ago but the original sketches were from 1-2 years ago. Thylacines are really goofy looking, basically Kangaroos but with dog configuration.
Day 15: Armadillo
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The Glyptodont is a cryptid that used to live in the Americas during the Pliocene Epoch. It’s status as a cryptid is based on the fact that some people believe it may still exist to this day.