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Fortean Headlines

The turtle survived being locked in a box for 30 years?

"The family thought the pet had gone missing during electrical work taking place on the home."

And when it was noticed as missing 30 years prior, nobody thought "hey I locked the turtle in a box to keep it out of the way during the construction work"?
 
What led them to the conclusion that it had been in the box for 30 years?
Just the fact that it went missing that long ago?
 
So the tortoise survived for 30 years in a locked storage box by eating termite larvae found in the same room?
I'd be a bit cautious, walking around up in that loft, considering that there were so many termites.
There wouldn't be much structural wood left.
 
What led them to the conclusion that it had been in the box for 30 years?
Just the fact that it went missing that long ago?
It was found in a locked box according to the report.

" the animal had managed to find a way to survive more than three decades locked inside a storage box, according to Mirror Online."

Presumably it didnt lock itself in there, and no one had seen it for 30 years...
 
My thinking is that a family member found it and cared for it up in the loft and then for some reason, left it there for a couple of years. Perhaps that family member died, hence the neglect.
I can't think that even a tortoise could go without drinking water for 30 years. It's just an impossibility.
 
What led them to the conclusion that it had been in the box for 30 years?
Just the fact that it went missing that long ago?

Journalistic license (to print BS) ...

The current tabloid articles do a good job of blurring facts. Unless you read all of them, and read certain ones closely, you might miss the fact the tortoise was found in 2013 and the current articles are just updates.

You might also miss the clues that all this happened in Brazil.

It seems the article from which the tabloids obtained their mixed-up accounts can be traced back to a 20 May article at The Dodo (an animal news site):

https://www.thedodo.com/daily-dodo/...-in-attic-30-years-later-still-alive-and-well

If you check this (probably) original source you'll find there's no mention of a locked box. The tortoise was found "in the box of an old wooden speaker" (i.e., in a speaker casing among all the junk in the attic), and it had apparently survived for 3 decades in the "storage space" (i.e., the overall attic).

None of the articles offer an explanation for how the tortoise obtained water - something more immediately critical than food.
 
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What led them to the conclusion that it had been in the box for 30 years?
Just the fact that it went missing that long ago?
During that time the tortoise had learned English from the newspaper bedding in the box and when it was found it said, in a squeaky little tortoise voice "30 bloody years you left me in there!!!"
 
During that time the tortoise had learned English from the newspaper bedding in the box and when it was found it said, in a squeaky little tortoise voice "30 bloody years you left me in there!!!"
Was there also a very large rat nearby, and a pipe leaking toxic waste onto the floor? A pile of old pizza boxes?
 
You're getting your tortoises mixed up with your turtles.
British English: a tortoise is solely a land animal, and turtles breed on land but spend most of their lives in water.

American English: a turtle refers also to what the Brits call a tortoise.

Hence the Eddie Cochran song lyric, "Just like that old story, about the turtle and the hare, when Dan crossed over that finish line, he found Shorty waiting there." (Cut Across Shorty.)

Also, the delightful American expression, a "post turtle", used to describe someone who is useless in an elevated position like a politician or incompetent business director. He's like a turtle on a fence post: he doesn't know how he got up there, why he's up there, or what he's going to do now he's up there."
 
So what do you call a Giant Tortoise in America? A Giant Turtle? Surely not?
And how would that differ from an actual giant turtle that is already big?
Cos if I ask google for a picture of a giant tortoise I get many, but they are all actual giant tortoises. A giant turtle only appears if I specifically search for that term. The two creatures are quite significantly different. (see the 2 pics below)
I'm confused now.
Are we absolutely certain that this isn't just an example of 'American English' simply being 'English' but mis-used?
I'm not trying to be pejorative in any way here, just wondering.

A Giant Tortoise.
1654434686553.png

A Giant Turtle.
1654434958430.png
 
So what do you call a Giant Tortoise in America? A Giant Turtle? Surely not?
And how would that differ from an actual giant turtle that is already big?
Cos if I ask google for a picture of a giant tortoise I get many, but they are all actual giant tortoises. A giant turtle only appears if I specifically search for that term. The two creatures are quite significantly different. (see the 2 pics below)
I'm confused now.
Are we absolutely certain that this isn't just an example of 'American English' simply being 'English' but mis-used?
I'm not trying to be pejorative in any way here, just wondering.

A Giant Tortoise.
View attachment 55861
A Giant Turtle.
View attachment 55862
I do think there is a zoological difference between turtles and tortoises, but don't know specifically what. I always thought tortoises were larger and land only animals, whereas, turtles can spend time on land and water - as in Trev's pic, the sea turtle has flippers and swims. I think the way their shells are situated on their bodies in relation to their head and limbs also determine if they are a turtle or tortoise. I could also be talking out of my a**.:dunno:
 
Some of my fellow citizens call land-turtles turtles (technically correct as all tortoises are turtles), others call them tortoises (correct and more specific in differentiating from aquatic turtles), others (incorrect) call them terrapins. I think it depends on the part of the country and one's heritage. And, of course, how one prepares and eats the animal. So, I can see a tortoise, turtle, or terrapin wandering around, but once I decide to catch, kill, cook, and eat it, it is termed a turtle - at least in the region where I was raised.

Here in the hot desert of central Arizona, a few people quietly breed endangered giant tortoises to increase both the numbers and the genetic diversity; the breeders coordinate with wildlife specialists and zoos. Occasionally one of these massive creatures escapes and wanders down the road. More people keep giant African tortoises as pets, and they also get loose and sprint at 0.05 mph down the road.
 
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