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Australia Zoo Mourns Harriet, 176 |
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Written by Deutsche Presse-Agentur
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Friday, 23 June 2006 |
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World's Oldest Creature Dies at 176
A giant tortoise called Harriet whose 175th birthday party last year
made headlines around the world died Friday at Steve Irwin's Australia Zoo.
Believed to be the world's oldest creature, Harriet lived a long and eventful life on three continents. Harriet died in Brisbane at 176, well short of the longevity record
of 188 years set by another Galapagos-born tortoise that until his
death was the pride and joy of the King of Tonga.
Harriet was born before the motorcar was invented, before commercial
steam trains, and before the industrial revolution got properly
underway.
She is believed to have been five years old when English naturalist
Charles Darwin visited South America's Galapagos Islands in 1835. He
took her back with him aboard HMS Beagle. Darwin took three tortoise -
Tom, Dick and Harry - unaware the trio were not all boys.
It wasn't until the 1950s, after living for more than a century as a
male, that Harriet got her new name to accord with her gender.
Civil servant John Wickham brought the Galapagos exhibits with him
from London when he came out to the colony in the 1850s to take charge
of municipal affairs in what was then the small township of Brisbane.
Some disputed Harriet's story. But DNA testing vouched for her age and her birth in the Galapagos.
© 2006 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 03 July 2006 )
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