oldrover
Justified & Ancient
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2009
- Messages
- 4,057
The pronounced vertical bouncing of the posterior reminds me of a dog with a rear leg or foot injury.
That's exactly what it is.
The pronounced vertical bouncing of the posterior reminds me of a dog with a rear leg or foot injury.
That is very neat. I think the body looks too short too.Try doing this, go to this webpage and don't cheat by reading the article first, but scroll down to near the bottom of the page until you come to the big image with the three photos (labelled A, B, and C are). Now, one of the images is a still from the film, one is a fox taken from elsewhere and popped into the background, another is a thylacine image from Hobart Zoo dropped in there.
Not being familiar with Eutherian penis's I'll have to take your word for it. Frankly I wasn't aware that one was in evidence. But I think we are all pretty much in agreement the picture does not show a Tasmanian Wolf, dang it.
http://www.ntnews.com.au/news/tiger...d/news-story/7cbf738787bd022c62598d22cb9326a8
A round up of Tasmanian wolf stuff.
Someone made a really nice comparison with fox and tassie which Oldrover posted above here.That video isn't implausible. I definitely don't think it's a dog. And the gait of the run is wrong for a fox. I don't really know what a dingo runs like, mind you.
That video isn't implausible.
What ever it is it seems to be lame.
front right I think. the last clip I saw
looked the same unless they have a
strange gate full stop.
One thing I miss most in my research into this is thylacines. I don't think thylacines have come into my thylacine research for weeks now. It's all osmiridium prices, birth certificates and licensee applications these days. I'm hoping to get my little bio of Elias Churchill out by Thursday, but right now it looks like it's more likely that an actual tiger will turn up on Thylacine Day than that.
I visited Churchill's hut. I wouldn't have liked to say there in a Tasmanian winter.
That's genuinely interesting, and the wildlife seen is fantastic - wombats, kangaroos (or wallabies) lyrebirds. It's brilliant. Shame the supposed thylacine was soooo very elusive!more Tassie Tiger'sightings' http://www.news.com.au/national/tas...r/news-story/f20bbe3080a8426cf39bbe44d65acec2
I've met these guys and seen the film blow up on a big screen tv.
Im on the track of DNA and scat every time i'm in Taz.
It looks fuzzy on a computer screen but i saw it blown up on a big screen at their house and studied it for over an hour. I don't think its a quoll, fox or dog. I think its a Tasmania wolf.
So many nay-sayers out there.
I just happened on the story I linked to; I wasn't even looking for it.Many of whom spend a truly stupid amount of time researching the subject.