THYLACINE - Full history, Extinction, Sightings, De Extinction

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  • Опубліковано 10 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 420

  • @professorroundbottom438
    @professorroundbottom438 6 місяців тому +25

    Please don't apologize for the length of this video. I enjoyed every minute of it; this is quality content from beginning to end.

  • @TheGruffchickJournal
    @TheGruffchickJournal Рік тому +57

    You've done the thylacine justice here. The amount of time and love you've put into this video is readily apparent. Thank you for this.

  • @ThKiwi
    @ThKiwi Рік тому +202

    I’ll call myself a skeptical optimist. I really want to believe that they’re hiding out there somewhere, but the lack of concrete evidence over such a long period of time makes me sad. Fingers crossed for the reintroduction to go well.

    • @NoodleIDK13
      @NoodleIDK13 9 місяців тому +4

      There have been many sightings and bones found that don't seem to be old

    • @bigmama3372
      @bigmama3372 9 місяців тому

      The thing that makes me believe that they might still exist after all is, that the Australian government is trying to snuff out any news or evidence regarding it. Because if there would be evidence, Thylacines would be classified as endangered species and the corrupt government couldn't continue logging all of Tasmania.

    • @unusualtomato5
      @unusualtomato5 8 місяців тому

      ​@@NoodleIDK13But that doesn't equal reliable evidence

    • @andrewchalmers7422
      @andrewchalmers7422 6 місяців тому +2

      My sighting of a panther 40 year old makes me sure Tasmania tigers are still around on mainland Australia and Tasmania many people see them and say nothing like l did with my panther sighting

    • @johnmead8437
      @johnmead8437 6 місяців тому

      The consistency of the discrepancies in nearly all sightings with what is actually known about this species show most are delusions or hoaxes. The comments here will be full of perpetrators. Red flags to their survival are the surge of records since 1060, the absence of bounty payments (or accounts of ripping off the Government by selling them from that source if only Tasmania paid it) from mainland thylacine tokens, and another very clear one that this video partially explains. Like panther sign, if the obvious evidence factors are publicised, Forrest Galante, Neil Waters and dozens of others will suddenly start finding them. Some already do, badly faked or other species evidence misidentification or disinformation.
      What is really frustrating is the drivel these content makers influence any reports to be treated dubiously. So potentially a sound record could be dismissed or follow up delayed due to such sad attention seekers.
      Recent AI progress will only increase such rubbish. An example is a recent report Forrest G has received, and treated quite competently. The record seems credible if a few key issues can be confirmed. Otherwise it is the beginning of the avalanche of falsehoods to join the 99% of cryptid/character species extinction information some feel rational. Forrest may yet crack it?
      Perhaps a remnant population still exists far from turkey access, hope springs eternal.

  • @lucaslowmusic2385
    @lucaslowmusic2385 Рік тому +48

    I have lived on mainland Australia and Tasmania, and as much as I love the main land, Tasmanian wildlife has always been breathtakingly stunning. I remember my teachers telling us that the Tasmanian tiger might still be out there, and whenever I would go on bush walks with my dad, I would always look out for them

  • @et1249
    @et1249 Рік тому +91

    I can say without doubt that the Tasmanian Tiger still lived in 1978 in the South West of Western Australia, in the Nannup and Pemberton area, I had the good fortune to see one just after cyclone Alby passed through on my way back to Perth heading towards Nannup on a wet and windy night. I saw an animal in my headlights and stopped my car as it slowly walked across the road no more that 5 metres in front of me, I did not have a clue what it was. A peculiar looking, not small but large lean dog with stripes across its back, powerful tail and long jaws, it stopped looked at my car and walked on without any haste at all. No computers back then but I searched my local library in Perth and with assistance from my wife discovered it was an extinct Thylacine.

    • @jonniefast
      @jonniefast Рік тому +21

      i believe you

    • @gladiator_zyx
      @gladiator_zyx Рік тому +12

      ​@@jonniefastme too- it's very specific in details

    • @ninjafrog6966
      @ninjafrog6966 Рік тому +1

      lol! no you didn’t

    • @edwardfletcher7790
      @edwardfletcher7790 Рік тому +9

      There's been many many reports of Thylacines from that area of WA. There was even a short doco video in the early 2000's.

    • @edwardfletcher7790
      @edwardfletcher7790 Рік тому +19

      ​@@ninjafrog6966Dude, you're a gamer who probably never leaves the house, how would you know ? LoL

  • @Raventooth
    @Raventooth Рік тому +41

    1 hour is not too long! We watched it while we made and ate dinner. Thank you.

  • @phrayzar
    @phrayzar Рік тому +190

    I have worked in the Tassie bush for over 25 years. I am a feral pest controller and camping out in remote areas is part of my job. I have never seen one and never seen any signs or heard any sounds that might be from one. Unfortunately I would say that it's highly unlikely that they made it past the late 70's. Tasmania is a fairly small island and unless the government get serious about feral pests, the reintroduction of animals would probably starve to death due to lack of native fauna for food and suitable environment.. Ive seen all of the video's and photo's, they are all quite clearly foxes, dogs or just fakes.

    • @MuertaRara
      @MuertaRara Рік тому +10

      From your experience there is not a certain part where tgey may have survived? like a very remote forest? or anything?
      really envy hearing you spend so much time in the wildlife I'm really in love with Aussie nature.

    • @pheart2381
      @pheart2381 Рік тому

      Long nosed echidnas which were declared extinct in 1961 have recently been discovered alive and well.

    • @edwardfletcher7790
      @edwardfletcher7790 Рік тому +19

      The most recent "Thylacine" video is very obviously a Padymelon (small wallaby).
      I desperately wish they were still alive too 🥺

    • @SuperTurtle0
      @SuperTurtle0 Рік тому +13

      The saddest animal extinctions, in my opinion, are the ones to take place in the 1860’s to 1940’s, because the pictures and old videos of them make them so alive. Like I can feel them, they’re RIGHT THERE, but no they dead and I’ll never see them. Also where is the Thylacine pouch? If it’s a marsupial and all? Like where it at

    • @josm1481
      @josm1481 Рік тому +7

      Sadly, it's unlikely on Tasmania. More likely in PNG.
      I'm only at the beginning of the video so don't know if he mentions it was actually declared extinct many times. Showing it was elusive even when relatively common on Tasmania.

  • @Whendidweloseit.
    @Whendidweloseit. Рік тому +81

    This animal always saddens me. It was so beautiful.

    • @duhkwism
      @duhkwism 8 місяців тому +4

      It is*

  • @Saurophaganax1931
    @Saurophaganax1931 Рік тому +34

    I’m glad this video was so long. It really covered every possible base.

  • @hebedite4865
    @hebedite4865 Рік тому +64

    my heart breaks for thylacines. For whatever reason they have been one of my favorite animals, and it hurts me so deeply that they were purposefully exterminated because farmers found them to be pests. I genuinely hope de-extinction is possible for them. I think they are a great example of animals we absolutely SHOULD bring back because their extinction is so recent as apposed to a mammoth or other holocene era megafauna that haven't been around for thousands of years.

    • @airbornemelody6156
      @airbornemelody6156 Рік тому +6

      me too.. i love them so much and it hurts so bad knowing their likely extinction was caused by humans.. i wish nothing more than for them to still exist..

    • @QenaitheCustodianGuard
      @QenaitheCustodianGuard 11 місяців тому +2

      "hurts deeply"? If it hurts you deeply I think you need to check yourself a bit, it's impossible that it hurts for you because you weren't around to see them and did not live through it's extinction..

    • @saberdoesgaming
      @saberdoesgaming 11 місяців тому +6

      @@QenaitheCustodianGuard So if a teenager nowadays is a huge fan of Michael Jackson and hurts because their favorite artist has passed and they weren't able to see them, does that invalidate their sadness of who they admire?

    • @hebedite4865
      @hebedite4865 11 місяців тому

      @@QenaitheCustodianGuard are.... are you just now discovering that empathy exists and that you don't need to be physically there at the scene of a horrific tragedy to still be deeply affected by it? Deeply unserious and i wish there were far fewer people like yourself on this planet, then maybe the world wouldn't be on fire due to everyone being huge self indulgendent mindless drones. Please learn compassion or svffer the consequences! :)

    • @anonymousanonym450
      @anonymousanonym450 8 місяців тому

      @@saberdoesgaming yes

  • @OlyChickenGuy
    @OlyChickenGuy Рік тому +21

    I love the fact that the thylacine was granted this length of documentary, as it's by far one of my favorite cryptids. The story of its extinction is heartbreaking and hits a hard, personal note for me. I'm very grateful for the detail you've added to this story and the time you've spent on it, and I would gladly watch another long form video from you.

    • @systemofaslipstatic
      @systemofaslipstatic Рік тому +10

      Ahh the thylacine isn't a cryptid it was a real animal.

    • @OlyChickenGuy
      @OlyChickenGuy Рік тому +1

      @@systemofaslipstatic There was a time I was seriously considering cryptozoology as an actual career, and in that time I learned that most "real" cryptozoologists spend their time trying to prove that presumed extinct animals aren't. It's kind of like how Nessie is considered a cryptid because if it's real, it'd be a living example of a tight extinct animal, this if an animal becomes extinct, it becomes a cryptid until proven real and alive.

    • @unusualtomato5
      @unusualtomato5 8 місяців тому +1

      ​@OlyChickenGuy Isn't that a field of pseudo science? I'm not taking a jab at you, it is a genuine question.
      I'm under the impression that cryptozoology is sort of a "made up" or not largely accepted/acclaimed field of study by colleges/other scientific fields?
      Anyways, it seems like it would be incorrect to classify animals that have factually been scientifically described in the same way as creatures that are, by all accounts, urban legends and havent yet been actually studied or described by any reliable sources?

    • @OlyChickenGuy
      @OlyChickenGuy 8 місяців тому +3

      @@unusualtomato5 Thank you for asking in a civil manner, and I shall do my best to clarify what you've asked about.
      The type of cryptozoology that I was interested in potentially making a career out of wasn't the field as people tend to think of it, like looking for Bigfoot or Nessie. What I was looking into was a field where the goal was to investigate sightings of undetermined animals to find out what they are, such as sightings of the Tasmanian Tiger, or some unknown bird in the Congo. It's much less sensational than the idea of running around trying to prove that Pterodactyls still exist, or that there's lizard people at the core of the Earth. It's much more likely that you're either going to find a species that was thought extinct or to not exist in the area, a rare species, an unusual expression of genes in an existing species, an unusual behaviour in an existing species, or maybe we'd be lucky enough to find something new, but it would likely be grounded in reality of the ecosystem we're exploring. You'd be more likely to be sent out to find some plant that some botanist recorded a hundred years ago than to actually prove the existence of dragons.
      In this field, taken as an actual, grounded career, a "cryptid" would refer to any animal that's known anecdotally to exist but is yet to be proven, which as explained above could be as mundane as confirming that a sub-species of something exists in an area that was previously undocumented. As an example, the Northern Flying Squirrel is known to exist throughout Canada and certain sections of the northern US. It has, however, recently become known that there's a tiny section between the Cascade Mountains and Pacific Coast that a previously unknown sub-species exists. Externally, they're nearly identical to all other Northern Flying Squirrels, but upon genetic sequencing we've found a genetically distinct population that seems to not interbreed with other Flying Squirrels where their territories overlap. In this case, if someone has ever proposed that the Flying Squirrels of the Pacific Northwest were unique, but we didn't yet have that genetic information to confirm this, the PNW version of the Flying Squirrel would be considered a cryptid despite knowing that Flying Squirrels exist in the area. To take cryptozoology is a "real" science, they'd really just be the ones doing the genetic testing to prove that a PNW variant of the Northern Flying Squirrel exists. That's not to say that the people who did the genetic study ARE cryptozoologists (they were actually testing for general genetic information from specimens sitting in storage at the Smithsonian), just that if someone specialised in cryptozoology as an actual science, they might do such tasks.

    • @unusualtomato5
      @unusualtomato5 8 місяців тому +3

      ​@@OlyChickenGuy That's pretty interesting, ty for replying. I didn't know that it went that deep or had roots in actual zoology in the sense that you actually went out and studied the animals- tbh, my impression of all cryptozoology was just like 7 grown men going out into the woods and "AWOOOOO"-ing out to try to attract a Bigfoot, lol.
      Pretty cool idea to specifically study unknown animals through an actual scientific lense

  • @variabeth9554
    @variabeth9554 Рік тому +11

    The Thylacine has been my favorite animal since I was a teenager. Benjamin stole my entire heart and I hope we are able to share our world with these creatures once again.

  • @Dingo_Latrans
    @Dingo_Latrans Рік тому +37

    Quality content! Keep it up, you're going to blow up eventually.

  • @masterofreality.o0o.535
    @masterofreality.o0o.535 Рік тому +19

    More of this style, please. I'm optimistic. If a tiny % of the many reports are real that's all we need!!!

  • @geoffbell6247
    @geoffbell6247 Рік тому +6

    One of the best most balanced videos I've seen to date

  • @davidjazay9248
    @davidjazay9248 Рік тому +7

    I enjoyed the long format very much, thank you for your effort!

  • @designatedwireliner4547
    @designatedwireliner4547 Рік тому +6

    I stayed to the end: I loved it. Newest patron: Linda “my mom” to prove it. Ben and Martin definitely did a great job! I’ll be checking into your future videos. What a great informative video. ❤

  • @InLawsAttic
    @InLawsAttic 2 місяці тому

    Thanks for being to the point, not click bait, thorough and no music! Great pics also! I have seen many of your videos, great coverage! 🎉

  • @RedDeadSakharine
    @RedDeadSakharine 3 місяці тому

    I'm only found this channel recently, but to your question: I love long-form videos! This kinda content replaces what History channel used to be. It's a lot of work no doubt, but it's very much appreciated! ❤

    • @all.about.nature1987
      @all.about.nature1987  3 місяці тому

      Thanks so much! I'm glad you enjoy the content and I really appreciate the tip!

  • @sorreldislikespotatoes9882
    @sorreldislikespotatoes9882 Рік тому +13

    This video is very well made and I am extremely shocked that it doesn't have many views,

  • @christinem2511
    @christinem2511 Рік тому +7

    I loved the length of this video and appreciate your hard work to create it .

  • @davidheaver2854
    @davidheaver2854 Рік тому +4

    It's refreshing to see such a well researched and rational video on topics like this, so do keep it up. Excellent work.

  • @AlexMartinez-fu5nb
    @AlexMartinez-fu5nb Рік тому +9

    Ooh, another amazing small educational channel! Keep up the great work!

  • @blondbraid7986
    @blondbraid7986 Рік тому +19

    The alledged sightings remind me of when I was in the alps, and the marmots would happily stick around only to vanish just as I got my camera up, all the time.

  • @franhansen5507
    @franhansen5507 Рік тому +8

    Just came across your videos and was thoroughly engrossed in your Thylacine documentary. Very informative! So glad I happened upon it and look forward to seeing many more. Oh, and don’t worry about the documentary being ‘too long’, if the subject is worth the telling then the story needs to be told regardless of the length. Good job! Loved it! Keep doing what you are doing 😊👍

  • @emilycarey7667
    @emilycarey7667 Рік тому +14

    Brilliant work. Keep it up, man! I love your films.

  • @ladykoiwolfe
    @ladykoiwolfe Рік тому +33

    There was way more info here than I ever expected to get. I'm absolutely thrilled.
    I want them to be out there, but I have serious doubts. I hope the reintroduction of the species works.

    • @Robochop-vz3qm
      @Robochop-vz3qm Рік тому

      ua-cam.com/video/lycOs0zxyvI/v-deo.htmlsi=u4tatZxtU-I_6ZnH

    • @sheilatruax6172
      @sheilatruax6172 Рік тому +3

      Same here. They were so cool looking.

  • @taze27
    @taze27 7 місяців тому +2

    I love long format UA-cam videos. Its much more immersive than short videos. Keep up the exceptional work. Its very enjoyable stuff. God bless you sir.

    • @all.about.nature1987
      @all.about.nature1987  7 місяців тому

      Thanks for your comment. I love the longer format too. It's just hard to keep up a weekly upload schedule doing this. This particular video took over 100 hours to research and produce.
      But hopefully more like it will be made soon.

  • @curiousmind8065
    @curiousmind8065 11 місяців тому +2

    As a wildlife biologist I have huge respect for the mighty effort you have put in for this video. This is definitely a valuable, thoroughly researched documentary I've seen. Keep up the amazing work! Well done!! Thank you for this information treasure trove! 😊🙏🏽

  • @jillianblake575
    @jillianblake575 Рік тому +3

    I have just found you and have watched a few videos and subscribed. This one was outstanding. I enjoyed every minute.

  • @coryfice1881
    @coryfice1881 Рік тому +23

    The out of Australia sightings are wild cause if it turns out to be true that means someone has been aware of their continued existence and has either sold some into black market sales selling them for high prices and in secret, or is trying to relocate a specimen in some bizzare experiment. The fact that they show zero fear of humans when wild breeds would "cower" away tells me if these are Tigers than they must of been bred and are very used to humans.

    • @jonniefast
      @jonniefast Рік тому +4

      mammals have personality/individual temperment
      ive approached foxes at work in the orchards- some walk right up to me within a few yards
      some flee from hundreds of yards away

    • @brittanymchaffie7604
      @brittanymchaffie7604 Рік тому +5

      Having no fear of humans does not mean that they've had previous human contact, it only means they haven't experienced humans as a threat. The Dodo was notorious for allowing human to approach it and kill it. The Galapagos animals, mainly the reptiles, will all humans to approach. This is especially true for remote island animals as there often can be a lack of predators. Thylacines were the apex predator on Australian/Tasmania and lived a nocturnal life and previous creatures who had not had exposure to humans would have no reason to fear them.

  • @angelinanguyen8690
    @angelinanguyen8690 Рік тому +6

    This video was AMAZING I couldn’t stop watching it and enjoyed every moment of it ♥︎♥︎

  • @oulangkous718
    @oulangkous718 Рік тому +7

    It was interesting and i watched all the way through even though it's not a subject I'm interested in. Don't apologise for making it long. If a topic is something your passionate about and you're giving it your best effort then there surely will be those who will appreciate it.

  • @MMfan8919
    @MMfan8919 9 днів тому

    I'm surprised not more people have subscribed to your channel, but you have two new followers. Keep up the good work. You truly are an inspiration to the younger viewers to help consevrve nature ❤

  • @xBiOvOrEx
    @xBiOvOrEx Рік тому +6

    Easily the best Thylacine doco on the net.

  • @TKainZero
    @TKainZero Рік тому +1

    Great video man!
    I clicked on it after watching another of your videos, was totally engrossed in the video and paused it to use the restroom to see it had 40 mins more to go! Love the long form video!
    Keep up the great work!

  • @craighaldane-gy3mk
    @craighaldane-gy3mk Рік тому +2

    Just found this channel I enjoyed the content so subscribed and liked 👍.
    Looking forward to viewing some of your past post's and the future ones as well.

  • @anteater555
    @anteater555 9 місяців тому

    This video really covered everything you could want to know and more about the Thylacine. Such a great documentary. I appreciate the 3 weeks of time you dedicated.

  • @jeremiahdavis6012
    @jeremiahdavis6012 Рік тому +6

    love the video, theres not enough video of this animal, thanks.

  • @JarydChambers
    @JarydChambers Рік тому +2

    LOVED the deep dive! well done!

  • @systemofaslipstatic
    @systemofaslipstatic Рік тому +1

    So sad! The video was amazing! Excellent work!

  • @felixVanDiemen
    @felixVanDiemen 7 місяців тому

    Firstly let me say that I very much appreciate the length and thoroughness of this video, thank you!
    I have recently moved to Tasmania and I have gone from a very skeptical but hopeful to very optimistic. I especially found the reports you gathered from North America both surprising and very promising. Keep them coming, cheers 🙂

  • @andrewcalleja4642
    @andrewcalleja4642 Рік тому +37

    What no one talks about is the Mainland Thylacine. I am one of the people who reported the sighting in Victoria.
    It’s most likely something similar to Thylacinus Potens. What is on the fossil record. The assumption is they went extinct on the mainland however many people have sightings and don’t report them.
    They have longer hocks
    Longer legs
    A more grey hound shape
    And less of the cone shape at the base of the tail.
    A tan colour with stripes only noticeable from the sides and Not from behind.
    They also have long pointy ears which are identical to the pointy ear found on the thylacine at the mammoth caves in Western Australia. If you look at the corpse you see the longer hocks too and also a different shaped but longer snout.
    It does bipedal hops like a kangaroo at full speed.
    And when DSE and parks Victoria took my photos to a professor of biology
    The photos created much hype in the departments I was told. However photos were not classed as conclusive proof. Yet they kept calling me back asking many questions.
    Thing is I took photos of photos on my crap Chinese desktop screen and sent it to them not really thinking about pixels but since then only this year I looked at them on my new HD computer screen and the pixilation on HD is amazingly better than what anyones seen before.
    Other thing the departments only viewed 3-4 photos and I had 12 so don’t think they investigate as they didn’t want to or requested more to look at.
    They stick to their red mange fox narrative and that’s that.
    They also acknowledged the Thylacine photos had stripes however they wanted to label it as a fox that lost its fur from mange disease in stripes that gave the appearance of stripes however Must not be stripes as the animal was considered extinct.
    Yet they acknowledged the stripes and said there was no other evidence of Foxes having stripes from mange disease.
    In layman’s terms it’s a political answer that answers a question about the stripes and denies the stripes whilst acknowledging they were actually stripes.
    So it’s not the sightings that count it’s he who counts the sightings.
    Maybe they own shares in the 1080 bait program which was the reason I sent them photos and said have you got any idea what your doing with baits and told them and showed photos of what’s in the area.

    • @Americansfinest21
      @Americansfinest21 Рік тому +5

      Not from Australia, but I've read Victoria is a hot spot for sightings. Any reason why?

    • @kickazz9473
      @kickazz9473 Рік тому +11

      I live in America we've been told black panthers haven't existed in our state and surrounding states in over 100 years. Discounting all reports sightings and pictures livestock murder etc. After finally being caught on game cameras a few years back wildlife officials finally admitted they are here. So yes I'd say this happens frequently and all over the world

    • @aaronwelch6790
      @aaronwelch6790 Рік тому +7

      @@Americansfinest21 yes , apparently during colonisation species were brought back from tassie - including tassie devils and put at a very similar environment, little known fact and a very large natural undisturbed area to this day . I’m not going to say where for obvious reasons . I grew up in Victoria

    • @andrewcalleja4642
      @andrewcalleja4642 Рік тому

      @@Americansfinest21
      Yeah mate it’s because Victoria has a lot of bush land and mountain ranges and also what most people don’t know is that in Victoria there is 2-3 species but at least 2 that are common one is the Tasmanian breed.
      The other is what people describe as a grey hound looking Thylacine that is reported to be much bigger. That’s the one I seen. They are extremely agile and quick and probably way more elusive than the Tasmanian ones.
      Victoria has a similar climate to Tasmania and what most people don’t take into account is the dingo fence removed dingoes from the south east part of the country. There is an over supply of kangaroos and game over here with no dingoes around to thin them out. Sure there is a few wild dogs getting around but there is that much food out there that Thylacines have a great chance of survival.
      Problem is the 1080 baits that kills wild dogs dingoes and thylacines.
      Parks Victoria are behind the baiting program and plenty of big bag of fresh air worthless biologists.
      They have no clue and all most people talk about is the Tasmanian species.
      Truth be told there is 6 Thylacines know on the fossil record and probably a few more never known by science.
      The mainland thylacine in Vic could be arguably Thylacinus POTENS however its reported to have a longer snout so it’s potentially a whole new species unknown to science.

    • @okiedokieartichokie772
      @okiedokieartichokie772 Рік тому

      ​@kickazz9473 big Ole Same. I just saw a normal panther in an area of Texas that for some reason they insisted thy don't live. They act like I said I saw Bigfoot. I know what I saw.10 years later, I'm now a park ranger at that same area and I was thrilled when someone told me they saw one too.

  • @mrgravity64
    @mrgravity64 Рік тому +4

    Always appreciate your videos! Much love!

  • @timx377
    @timx377 9 місяців тому +2

    Enjoyed this very much ~ Since I was a kid I have always been interested in the Tiger. Hopefully it will make a comeback ~

  • @wendywesley7423
    @wendywesley7423 4 місяці тому +2

    Nice Job!!! I think we must also pay attention to animals on the brink of extinction. I would love to see a few videos in that direction. Who knows maybe it could make a difference. As for the Thylacine I hope in some remote area they survive. ❤

  • @YouDontGnomeMe
    @YouDontGnomeMe 10 місяців тому

    Wow! I love the long form video but I understand the strain it can have on you as a content creator. Thank you for making awesome content!

  • @debg7710
    @debg7710 Рік тому +3

    Loved it, not too long when it's so well done, and also about thylacines.

  • @atepdell
    @atepdell Рік тому +7

    Great one! Appreciate your hard work

  • @julescaru8591
    @julescaru8591 Рік тому +1

    Ok, I have just found your channel, and I’m just about to watch everything you’ve posted, I love a long informative video, and look forward to future uploads, subed, liked and shared!
    All the best Jules 👍

  • @malfestioscafe404
    @malfestioscafe404 Рік тому +15

    aye, this vid is pure gold, the editing, research and engaging commentary, i was unable to stop watching haha. you gained a new subscriber, thanks for this great video, i learnt a fuck ton today. honestly i'm very skeptical towards the existance of the thylacine, in the present times, i consider personal experience an unreliable source of proof, because you can just go ahead and make it up. the de-extinction program seems... interesting however.

  • @samanthahall8939
    @samanthahall8939 8 місяців тому

    I loved this video so much. I have such an interest in the thylacine and enjoyed the lengthy, well organized, and quite calming video

  • @Ched_D_Bitcoiner
    @Ched_D_Bitcoiner Рік тому +2

    Great Documentary I cant wait to see more in this format. I was also wondering what was the music playing in the background?

  •  8 місяців тому

    A very well produced and well balanced documentary. All credit to you.
    One of the best I've seen on social media or on TV.
    I agree with your assessment of Forest Galantaaaay. He is not to be trusted.
    Again, well done on this excellent production !

  • @chasepirtle8662
    @chasepirtle8662 Рік тому +1

    Fantastic Video! Most detailed film I've seen on the Tassie Tiger.

  • @Morgan-pf8nu
    @Morgan-pf8nu Рік тому +3

    I loved this video! Great work

  • @vietcuonguonginh3963
    @vietcuonguonginh3963 9 місяців тому +1

    i really feel like you make every thing really fair for anyone , by the way such a good and informative video

  • @ChristopherDuifhuis
    @ChristopherDuifhuis Рік тому +4

    I loved it!
    Do it again!

  • @SnoMor62
    @SnoMor62 Рік тому +1

    I do like what I’ve seen up to now. Keep up the good work 👍🏾

  • @tayarts12
    @tayarts12 Рік тому +2

    Thank you so much for this video, it was very informative and interesting! 🙂

  • @leonoraradovcic4328
    @leonoraradovcic4328 4 місяці тому

    Hi. Wonderful video. I learned so much. I never knew we even had Thylacines before. Sorry this length took so much of your time, but I did like having a lengthy video.

  • @pyronimble2810
    @pyronimble2810 7 місяців тому

    Thankyou for your effort .I particularly enjoyed the video because of the length and the presentation. II have watched many presentation and you managed to keep it interesting. I have not seen some of the evidence you found. thankyou

  • @kimielove8179
    @kimielove8179 Рік тому +2

    Thank you for making this video I’m a big fan

  • @gargeely4901
    @gargeely4901 Рік тому +1

    your channel is incredible the combination of imagery, epic slightly melancholic synthwave soundtrack and the easy to follow naration is great. i love taking psychadelic drugs and watchin ur vids

  • @GinnyYork-cx2rm
    @GinnyYork-cx2rm 6 місяців тому

    I loved the video and all the information about the history from where it began and where it was populated. I do believe they are out there still alive....somewhere....and i'm hoping that someone can get a great shot of one. I'm not sure about the cloning, but if they can actually bring back a pure one I would love to see it being done. Thank you for all the time it took you to make this video. i hope you will keep up to date with all the new sightings and images.

  • @cameronc-r9224
    @cameronc-r9224 Рік тому +6

    I absolutely love the thylacine! I hope the scientists bring them back! I believe we should bring species back from extinction that were humans caused, weather they were directly or indirectly effected because of us! They didn’t deserve what happened to them!

  • @maddyg3208
    @maddyg3208 Рік тому +13

    The fact that Thylacines haven't turned up in the roadkill is the decider for me

  • @alexandermattock8300
    @alexandermattock8300 7 місяців тому

    Second time of watching, I enjoyed more.
    Great video, keep up the great work

  • @branchsnapper2228
    @branchsnapper2228 Рік тому +2

    Brilliant, love the long form. Subd

  • @nyarlathoteporlyeh6158
    @nyarlathoteporlyeh6158 Рік тому +7

    I like videos as long as this. Showing your research and documentation is good, isn't it?

  • @donaldbriola7772
    @donaldbriola7772 6 місяців тому

    I definitely think they're out there somewhere, thanks for the video, great work.

  • @phil5592
    @phil5592 Рік тому

    you ticked to 10 k subscribers while i watched this vid, one video after i subbed. Congratulations dude! and theres a non 0% chance that i was number 10000 :P

  • @justinschieffer
    @justinschieffer Рік тому +1

    I loved the video and the length. I think maybe a few less quotes in the next one. Keep up the excellent work. 😊

    • @all.about.nature1987
      @all.about.nature1987  Рік тому +2

      Thanks for the feedback. I actually cut about 1/3 of the original quotes. :/
      I had a hard time editing on that one for sure because I thought the sightings were interesting.
      Noted for next time.

  • @AS-qg1xu
    @AS-qg1xu Рік тому

    Loved this video and i love the long form. Thank you

  • @Tactical_Turtwig
    @Tactical_Turtwig Рік тому +2

    😂 saying the quotes in a French accent wasn't necessary but I'm so glad you did it.

  • @mtcoiner7994
    @mtcoiner7994 Рік тому +29

    My understanding is that Forrest wants to look for the Tasmanian Tiger but can't get funding even from the networks. He claims to have some solid leads in some very remote areas but hasn't had the opportunity to follow up properly dues to the pandemic and funding. I hope he gets a chance to go to new Guinea and follow up. If there is a chance that it is still out there then the clock is ticking away on our final chance to preserve the species.

    • @Robochop-vz3qm
      @Robochop-vz3qm Рік тому

      ua-cam.com/video/lycOs0zxyvI/v-deo.htmlsi=u4tatZxtU-I_6ZnH

    • @IceGangsta
      @IceGangsta Рік тому +2

      I'm wit it

    •  8 місяців тому

      Forrest Galantaaaay is a shyster and even faked the trail cam footage of the Zanzibar Leopard he was supposed to have rediscovered. He claims to have rediscovered a Tortoise that had never been declared extinct. A man not to be trusted

    • @MybeautifulandamazingPrincess
      @MybeautifulandamazingPrincess 6 місяців тому

      If the Tazzy tiger is still alive it's best left undisturbed. Don't go looking for them, just leave them alone

  • @symanthar.3314
    @symanthar.3314 5 місяців тому

    Loved this video! Great job!

  • @mds_main
    @mds_main 9 місяців тому

    Great video as usual, I love your deep dives about extinct animals like this one or your dodo video.
    I especially liked your scientific approach in the section about the possibility of it being still alive.
    As for the deextinction, it is a complicated topic and I say that we better help the current living species instead of bring back new ones after so much time.

  • @darylsmyth434
    @darylsmyth434 6 місяців тому

    Well done keep them coming Dazza

  • @jusfamilyvideos2064
    @jusfamilyvideos2064 3 місяці тому

    Great video. Well done!!

  • @mikaaspinall7816
    @mikaaspinall7816 5 місяців тому

    I watched the whole thing starting off as optimistic, your concrete facts and well documented evidence has shattered that hope and broken my heart but hey, truth hurts and we did this ourselves. Amazing video glad I came across this and I'll be watching all your others now to renew some optimism lol

  • @phillipbell4394
    @phillipbell4394 Рік тому +5

    I think that this is a species where it is somewhat reasonable to assume that it's not extinct. The tasmanian tiger kind of has a lot going for it. It already had experience with humans prior the british setting up shop, and it knew to be skittish. It was skittish enough to elude the british when they first landed there. It is fairly reasonable to believe that it eventually learned to be as far away from civilization as possible especially if it wasn't big enough to hunt sheep. Although the fact that there are ferral dogs on the islands means that it could have definitely been outcompeted to extinction sometime in the 20th century.

  • @cynthiamurphy3669
    @cynthiamurphy3669 Рік тому +3

    Fascinating to me in particular was the mention of a lady and her daughter in New Jersey sighting what they felt was a thylacine. Wow. I'm in SW Ohio and recently spotted three coyotes nearby where I live and walk early in the day (I know, not so unusual). Until recently, I also had not realized there were so many feral swine present in the southern U.S. states and even up into Ohio. Anyway, I love learning about these critters and am really enjoying your videos.

  • @peterdore2572
    @peterdore2572 Рік тому +60

    I live in BC for like 6 years now, and Ive seen a Coyote only ONCE. Had them surround me in the dark, and hear their calls at night, but you just cant see them! In the case of the Thylacine, my best bet is the remote mountains of Papua New Guinea. They can easily hide there. And there is a Cultural Gap between the somewhat Primitive Native Folks, and Modern People like us. They wouldnt tell us about this one elusive animal. They probably dont know we think its extinct.

    • @irw8367
      @irw8367 Рік тому

      That’s why sightings from the locals are the best evidence. They don’t know how much it means to people in the western world, so when they’re shown an image of a thylacine and they say they’ve seen one or two and even describe the behaviour (one particular well described report) than it’s better evidence than any and 10x more likely to be genuine and truthful than any reports from Australia and Tasmania.

    • @Redfern4
      @Redfern4 Рік тому +3

      Love the little racist ending you had there they wouldn’t tell you because they wouldn’t want poachers or people to use them for profit maybe
      To assume that people just because they are from a different culture can’t understand the things that are happening around them it’s just incredibly insulting especially when that is just a stereotype that white people people like to believe like yourself Mr. colonizer if you didn’t you know see that section
      They actually the people that are native to the area understand it way more than you ever would and probably care about it more than you would because all it does is give you some notoriety right a cool party story when they actually care about their home and the animals that live there

    • @spegaa2-994
      @spegaa2-994 Рік тому +20

      @@Redfern4I’m not sure if you’re low or not but there has been multiple cases of local tribes not understanding what animal we are looking for only for them to bring it home for dinner nd also multiple examples of them just straight up lying lol

    • @joeswarson4580
      @joeswarson4580 Рік тому +11

      ​@@Redfern4found the dweeb who got bullied in highschool

    • @thomasmills3934
      @thomasmills3934 Рік тому +6

      I live in rural Illinois and I hear the coyotes every night in the corn. NEVER actually seen one.

  • @thomasmills3934
    @thomasmills3934 Рік тому +4

    I have lived in rural illinois for most of my life. There is nothing but corn as far as u can see from town in every direction. We hear coyotes every single night in the warm months. But ive never in my life seen one.

    • @jonniefast
      @jonniefast Рік тому

      they're close here in the almond orchards in cali
      but they flee on sight
      closest i can get is a few hundred yards

    • @jonniefast
      @jonniefast Рік тому

      im out here EVERY night though
      and their calls are constantly moving
      sometimes miles away 😅

  • @SuperTurtle0
    @SuperTurtle0 Рік тому +2

    I love the palpable oomph of the term “De-extinction” it sounds so much more powerful that just saying we brought it back. It sound like we have physically reversed the divine hand of time with the strength of our grip on nature itself

  • @CrueMagnon
    @CrueMagnon 9 місяців тому

    I was shocked to hear of a citing in Toronto, which is where I live? Excellent job on creating this video. It was insanely interesting. Thanks for your 3 week sacrifice. Well worth it!

  • @lexiequinus55
    @lexiequinus55 Рік тому +1

    Thank you, great subject.❤

  • @Todomo
    @Todomo Рік тому

    i enjoyed the long video, i use your channel for background sound while playing games - but you don’t have to make them THIS long!

  • @blue2mato312
    @blue2mato312 Рік тому +3

    I liked this long video ☺️

  • @taskupluto
    @taskupluto 11 місяців тому +1

    This was an hour well spent! Well detailed, and I especially liked the breakdown of the possible sightings and the people's backgrounds. I wish some day we will find thylacines in the wild again.

  • @Wasabialt
    @Wasabialt 5 місяців тому +1

    Amazing job!

  • @DanielF3024
    @DanielF3024 7 місяців тому

    Melhor video/documentario que ja vi do tilacino. Best video/documentary that i saw about the thylacine. Hope he's still alive

  • @rosypearson5167
    @rosypearson5167 Рік тому

    I loved it! Watched the whole thing! I'd like share some thoughts for your consideration, but my motivation is to be helpful for your process, not make demands on your content.
    There might be diminishing returns after maybe about 40ish minutes?
    I enjoyed how thorough you were reading the accounts of sightings, but i think you could have picked fewer examples, and/or summarized more of them and then provided links for people to read them themselves.
    But, devil's advocate to my own point - one thing I found impactful about your video is that humanized the reporters of the sightings so they're not just "crazy big foot believers" (which I sometimes am too, i go back and forth.) Getting more context for what a reported sighting sounds like was really interesting!
    I feel like you could do an entire video about the process, analysis, common motivations, and likelihood of accuracy of sigitings of rare or extinct animals. Like, from a socialogical perspective.
    Thanks for reading 😊 and for creating! Amazing work you've given us!

  • @mdh1196
    @mdh1196 7 місяців тому

    Although I live in the United States 🇺🇸 I have always been very intrigued by the Thylacine, and greatly appreciated your creating your informative findings in this elusive creature. I hold onto the hope that the Tasmanian Tigers will once again roam this earth, and protected by law.

  • @GODZILLA2915
    @GODZILLA2915 Рік тому +3

    It was a great 1-hour video, but if you want to do more but don’t want to over work yourself, just make multiple parts.

  • @christinem2511
    @christinem2511 Рік тому +3

    Literally in tears over the loss of the beautiful creatures that are, or are thought to be, extinct because of humans. 💔

  • @pietropes1322
    @pietropes1322 5 місяців тому

    Amazing work! Not too long at all

  • @SteveSandersonArt
    @SteveSandersonArt 6 місяців тому

    brilliant video well done!

  • @truffles2721
    @truffles2721 Рік тому +1

    I love your videos. 😊