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It took a specimen shot in China by sons of Teddy
Roosevelt to finally convince outsiders that the giant
panda actually existed.
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Fantastic Creatures
Part 3 |
back to part 2
Just because it hasn't been seen in a long time doesn't
mean it doesn't exist.
In 1869, the French missionary Armand David became the first
Westerner to lay eyes on a giant panda, when Chinese hunters
brought him a young panda they had killed. David never saw a
live panda, and in the ensuing decades, as expedition after
expedition failed to turn up the animal, people in the West
began to wonder whether the purported black-and-white "bear"
even existed. A German expedition to southeast Tibet finally
saw one in 1915, but it was not until 1929, when two sons of
Theodore Roosevelt shot one in China and placed its stuffed
skin in Chicago's Field Museum, that the giant panda finally
came into being for many.
Even when scientists have specimens in hand, they may
remain fantastic. One of the most famous of the sea serpents in days of yore
was the kraken, from the Norwegian word denoting a tree
trunk with its roots. Alfred, Lord Tennyson once described the
kraken's many arms:
And far away into the sickly light,
From many a wondrous grot and secret cell
Unnumber'd and enormous polypi
Winnow with giant arms the slumbering green.
Before a fisherman caught one in 1938 off the Comoros
Islands, the coelacanth was thought to have been
extinct for 90 million years.
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Many have felt that the kraken was none other than the giant
squid, a tentacled beast with eyes the size of hubcaps and a
length that can exceed 60 feet. Yet is the giant squid any
less mythical than the kraken? No one has ever seen a giant
squid in its natural habitat; the animal is known only from a
few specimens hauled up by fishermen. In 1997, a $5 million
expedition funded by the Smithsonian Institution and the
National Geographic Society tried to outfit sperm whales with
video cameras in order to observe their chief prey in its
abode 2,500 feet down. Alas, they saw no giant squid.
Sometimes animals thought long extinct turn up alive.
The idea that Nessie might be a surviving marine reptile of
the Age of Dinosaurs is not as far-fetched a notion as many
might believe. The five-foot-long fish known as the coelacanth
was thought to have died out a full 25 million years before
the dinosaurs vanished, until a fisherman caught one off the
African coast in 1938. (The coelacanth has recently turned up
in Indonesian waters as well.) Long-lost creatures are still
found on land, too. In 1995, the French ethnographer Michel
Peissel discovered what appears to be an ancient breed of
horse in a remote valley of northeastern Tibet. The Riwoche
horse, as his team named the animal for its home region, looks
just like horses in cave paintings of the European Stone Age.
If an ancient horse can be found in a remote Tibetan valley,
is it possible that the fabled giant sloth might one day be
found in the remote Amazonian jungle?
Despite common wisdom, the world has not been fully
explored. In 1812, the renowned French naturalist Baron Georges
Cuvier boldly asserted that "there is little hope of
discovering new species of large quadrupeds." Wrong. A short
list of large mammals that have been identified since 1812
might include, in addition to all those mentioned above, the
mountain gorilla, Indian tapir, black ape, siamang, gelada,
Himalayan takin, Père David's deer, Przewalski's horse,
white rhinoceros, pygmy chimpanzee, and Kodiak brown bear.
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Every large animal on Earth has already been
discovered? Hardly. The pseudo oryx was only
identified in the 1990s.
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Surprisingly for many, discoveries of large, previously
unknown animals continue to occur. Since 1986, several new
species of primate have turned up in Madagascar. In the past
few years, in a single, mountainous region on the border
between Vietnam and Laos, scientists have identified a new
species of giant barking deer, a new kind of pig, and a
200-pound bovid, or cow-like animal, known as the pseudo oryx.
The seas, in particular, continue to reveal secret beasts,
some of them quite sizeable. Marine biologists have identified
three new species of beaked whale off Japan in 1958, off
California in 1966, and off Peru in 1991, respectively. And in
1976, fishermen near Hawaii hauled up a 15-foot shark weighing
just under a ton. Never before seen, this monster
plankton-feeder has since been dubbed "megamouth."
The great 19th-century American naturalist Louis Agassiz once
held that "[e]ach time that a new and surprising fact is
revealed by science, people say first that 'it is not true,'
then, that it 'disagrees with religion,' and, finally, that
'everyone has always known it.'" Those who hold no truck
with notions of Nessie or Sasquatch or the Abominable Snowman
may do well to consider these words, just as they may do well
to remember the story of that fantastic
antelope-donkey-anteater-giraffe, the okapi.
Peter Tyson is Online Producer of NOVA.
Photos: (1) Mark Dell'Aquila; (2,6,10) Wildlife
Conservation Society; (3) VU/Science VU; (4,9) VU/Ken Lucas;
(5) VU/Gerald and Buff Corsi;
(7) BBC.
Fantastic Creatures
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Birth of a Legend
Eyewitness Accounts
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Experimenting with Sonar
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| Updated November 2000
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