Friday mystery object #489 answer

Last week I gave you this specimen from the Dead Zoo to have a go at identifying:

It didn’t take long for Chris Jarvis to drop a great clue to the correct answer, and it seems that overall it was a bit of an easy one for quite a few of you. I admit that I’m not overly surprised by that, since it’s pretty distinctive.

The scapula is long and curved, the humerus is relatively short and robust, the radius and ulna are robust and quite flattened, as are the digits on that wide and splayed-out hand. All of these elements add up to a flipper shape, but unlike the flipper of a cetacean or seal, it has quite short digits.

That’s because this is the left arm of a slow-moving aquatic mammal that plods along under the water (as much as plodding is possible whilst being underwater), rather than a hydrodynamic fast-swimming beastie with a flipper shaped to cut through the water.

There are still a few possible species that fall into this category, but of then all, there is only one with such a curved scapula shape – the Dugong Dugong dugon (Müller, 1776).

Dugong (Dugong dugon) underwater. Image by Gejuni, 2015

I picked this mystery object because it’s from one of several specimens that we’ve been working on recently, in preparation for transport out of the Dead Zoo, as we prepare for a major capital project on the building. The limbs, skull and tail were removed and the vertebrae and ribs stabilised in a structure that we call a “stillage”:

With enough wrapping and packing this specimen will be ready to crane out of the building in the near future, and it’s just one of several thousand specimens that will be making the move. If you’re interested in hearing more about the project, you can listen to an interview I did recently with Sean Moncrieff on NewsTalk.

I hope you enjoyed working out what this limb belonged to, and I suspect that there will be more tales (and possibly tails) from the decant coming up in future posts. Happy Friday!

One thought on “Friday mystery object #489 answer

  1. Hi Paolo,

    I’ve just been reading 6 months worth of challenges and outcomes with interesting articles from you (I was ill and could not acces my mail in the hospital). I’m happy to see this blog is still very interesting and telling us loads of interesting stuff about particular specimens, your activities and your museum which i would LOVE to visit some day and browse for days. Please keep up the good work, I’m sure I speak for many when I tell you how much I appreciate your blog

    Have a nice day, Wouter van Gestel

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