Tassie Research Project

The following is a compilation video of all the known footage of the Thylacine.

Unfortunately, no audible recordings of the Thylacine exist.  The only evidence of the sounds made by the Thylacine are from the recollections of people who had seen live specimens prior to 1937.

On ________2023, new footage of a Thylacine from 193__ was discovered, which is not included in the above compilation.  This film clip was found by ________. Instagram: tasmanian_tiger_page

Amir IGuana
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Amir Agama Lizard
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The following is a compilation video of all the known footage of the Thylacine.

Unfortunately, no audible recordings of the Thylacine exist.  The only evidence of the sounds made by the Thylacine are from the recollections of people who had seen live specimens prior to 1937.

On ________2023, new footage of a Thylacine from 193__ was discovered, which is not included in the above compilation.  This film clip was found by ________. Instagram: tasmanian_tiger_page

Amir IGuana
PlayPlay
Amir Agama Lizard
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WHY THE TASMANIAN TIGER?

  • Because of the relatively short time since the Thylacine was declared extinct in 1986. The last Thylacine was trapped in 1933, and the last confirmed living specimen died in 1936.
  • Because of the existence of extensive, remote, and unexplored terrain in Tasmania.
  • Because of the hundreds of Thylacine sighting reports since 1936, many by persons familiar with Tasmania wildlife such as park rangers, biologists, farmers, conservationists, hunters, trappers, and hikers.

PROJECT OBJECTIVES

  • Support the preservation and expansion of critical habitat if the Thylacine is rediscovered.
  • Increase global awareness of the critical need to protect and preserve wildlife habitat, particularly for threatened and endangered fauna and flora.

WHY THE TASMANIAN TIGER?

  • Because of the relatively short time since the Thylacine was declared extinct in 1986. The last Thylacine was trapped in 1933, and the last confirmed living specimen died in 1936.
  • Because of the existence of extensive, remote, and unexplored terrain in Tasmania.
  • Because of the hundreds of Thylacine sighting reports since 1936, many by persons familiar with Tasmania wildlife such as park rangers, biologists, farmers, conservationists, hunters, trappers, and hikers.

PROJECT OBJECTIVES

  • Support the preservation and expansion of critical habitat if the Thylacine is rediscovered.
  • Increase global awareness of the critical need to protect and preserve wildlife habitat, particularly for threatened and endangered fauna and flora.

WHY THE TASMANIAN TIGER?

  • Because of the relatively short time since the Thylacine was declared extinct in 1986. The last Thylacine was trapped in 1933, and the last confirmed living specimen died in 1936.
  • Because of the existence of extensive, remote, and unexplored terrain in Tasmania.
  • Because of the hundreds of Thylacine sighting reports since 1936, many by persons familiar with Tasmania wildlife such as park rangers, biologists, farmers, conservationists, hunters, trappers, and hikers.

PROJECT OBJECTIVES

  • Support the preservation and expansion of critical habitat if the Thylacine is rediscovered.
  • Increase global awareness of the critical need to protect and preserve wildlife habitat, particularly for threatened and endangered fauna and flora.

WHY THE TASMANIAN TIGER?

  • Because of the relatively short time since the Thylacine was declared extinct in 1986. The last Thylacine was trapped in 1933, and the last confirmed living specimen died in 1936.
  • Because of the existence of extensive, remote, and unexplored terrain in Tasmania.
  • Because of the hundreds of Thylacine sighting reports since 1936, many by persons familiar with Tasmania wildlife such as park rangers, biologists, farmers, conservationists, hunters, trappers, and hikers.

PROJECT OBJECTIVES

  • Support the preservation and expansion of critical habitat if the Thylacine is rediscovered.
  • Increase global awareness of the critical need to protect and preserve wildlife habitat, particularly for threatened and endangered fauna and flora.

WHY THE TASMANIAN TIGER?

  • Because of the relatively short time since the Thylacine was declared extinct in 1986. The last Thylacine was trapped in 1933, and the last confirmed living specimen died in 1936.
  • Because of the existence of extensive, remote, and unexplored terrain in Tasmania.
  • Because of the hundreds of Thylacine sighting reports since 1936, many by persons familiar with Tasmania wildlife such as park rangers, biologists, farmers, conservationists, hunters, trappers, and hikers.

PROJECT OBJECTIVES

  • Support the preservation and expansion of critical habitat if the Thylacine is rediscovered.
  • Increase global awareness of the critical need to protect and preserve wildlife habitat, particularly for threatened and endangered fauna and flora.

The Tassie Research Project is the first of nine cryptid projects. The planning for projects in Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Indonesia, Peru, and the United States will begin immediately following the completion of the Tassie Research Project.  Except for Canada, I worked in these countries during my 28-year military career and afterward.

The Tassie Research Project is the first of nine cryptid projects. The planning for projects in Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Indonesia, Peru, and the United States will begin immediately following the completion of the Tassie Research Project.  Except for Canada, I worked in these countries during my 28-year military career and afterward.

The Tassie Research Project is the first of nine cryptid projects. The planning for projects in Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Indonesia, Peru, and the United States will begin immediately following the completion of the Tassie Research Project.  Except for Canada, I worked in these countries during my 28-year military career and afterward.

The Tassie Research Project is the first of nine cryptid projects. The planning for projects in Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Indonesia, Peru, and the United States will begin immediately following the completion of the Tassie Research Project.  Except for Canada, I worked in these countries during my 28-year military career and afterward.

The Tassie Research Project is the first of nine cryptid projects. The planning for projects in Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Indonesia, Peru, and the United States will begin immediately following the completion of the Tassie Research Project.  Except for Canada, I worked in these countries during my 28-year military career and afterward.

I worked in 55 countries, but with more time in South America than in any other region.  It was in remote jungle areas of Bolivia and Brazil in the late 1980s that I first heard similar tales of “extinct” animals from the inhabitants of villages which did not have contact with each other.  These villages, which sometimes consisted of a handful of huts, were only accessible by canoe, and none had electricity, telephones, radios, newspapers, or mail service.  When I returned to some of these locations twenty years later, the stories had not changed despite these villages now having ready access to the outside world (radio, television, and mobile phones).  The stories I heard, in addition to one amazing observation I made on the Bolivia/Brazil border, will be shared when planning commences for those specific cryptid research projects.

I worked in 55 countries, but with more time in South America than in any other region.  It was in remote jungle areas of Bolivia and Brazil in the late 1980s that I first heard similar tales of “extinct” animals from the inhabitants of villages which did not have contact with each other.  These villages, which sometimes consisted of a handful of huts, were only accessible by canoe, and none had electricity, telephones, radios, newspapers, or mail service.  When I returned to some of these locations twenty years later, the stories had not changed despite these villages now having ready access to the outside world (radio, television, and mobile phones).  The stories I heard, in addition to one amazing observation I made on the Bolivia/Brazil border, will be shared when planning commences for those specific cryptid research projects.

I worked in 55 countries, but with more time in South America than in any other region.  It was in remote jungle areas of Bolivia and Brazil in the late 1980s that I first heard similar tales of “extinct” animals from the inhabitants of villages which did not have contact with each other.  These villages, which sometimes consisted of a handful of huts, were only accessible by canoe, and none had electricity, telephones, radios, newspapers, or mail service.  When I returned to some of these locations twenty years later, the stories had not changed despite these villages now having ready access to the outside world (radio, television, and mobile phones).  The stories I heard, in addition to one amazing observation I made on the Bolivia/Brazil border, will be shared when planning commences for those specific cryptid research projects.

I worked in 55 countries, but with more time in South America than in any other region.  It was in remote jungle areas of Bolivia and Brazil in the late 1980s that I first heard similar tales of “extinct” animals from the inhabitants of villages which did not have contact with each other.  These villages, which sometimes consisted of a handful of huts, were only accessible by canoe, and none had electricity, telephones, radios, newspapers, or mail service.  When I returned to some of these locations twenty years later, the stories had not changed despite these villages now having ready access to the outside world (radio, television, and mobile phones).  The stories I heard, in addition to one amazing observation I made on the Bolivia/Brazil border, will be shared when planning commences for those specific cryptid research projects.

I worked in 55 countries, but with more time in South America than in any other region.  It was in remote jungle areas of Bolivia and Brazil in the late 1980s that I first heard similar tales of “extinct” animals from the inhabitants of villages which did not have contact with each other.  These villages, which sometimes consisted of a handful of huts, were only accessible by canoe, and none had electricity, telephones, radios, newspapers, or mail service.  When I returned to some of these locations twenty years later, the stories had not changed despite these villages now having ready access to the outside world (radio, television, and mobile phones).  The stories I heard, in addition to one amazing observation I made on the Bolivia/Brazil border, will be shared when planning commences for those specific cryptid research projects.

Cryptozoology

A pseudoscience and subculture that searches for and studies unknown, legendary, or extinct animals whose present existence is disputed or unsubstantiated. 

Functionally Extinct

A functionally extinct organism is one that may have a few individuals still living but will never recover (think Martha the passenger pigeon or Lonesome George the Pinta Island tortoise). Some organisms are extinct in the wild, meaning they can no longer be found in the areas they once inhabited. 

Cryptids

Animals that cryptozoologists believe may exist somewhere in the wild, but whose present existence is disputed or unsubstantiated by  science. 

Extinct

No longer existing. 

Cryptozoology

A pseudoscience and subculture that searches for and studies unknown, legendary, or extinct animals whose present existence is disputed or unsubstantiated. 

Functionally Extinct

A functionally extinct organism is one that may have a few individuals still living but will never recover (think Martha the passenger pigeon or Lonesome George the Pinta Island tortoise). Some organisms are extinct in the wild, meaning they can no longer be found in the areas they once inhabited. 

Cryptids

Animals that cryptozoologists believe may exist somewhere in the wild, but whose present existence is disputed or unsubstantiated by  science. 

Extinct

No longer existing. 

Cryptozoology

A pseudoscience and subculture that searches for and studies unknown, legendary, or extinct animals whose present existence is disputed or unsubstantiated. 

Functionally Extinct

A functionally extinct organism is one that may have a few individuals still living but will never recover (think Martha the passenger pigeon or Lonesome George the Pinta Island tortoise). Some organisms are extinct in the wild, meaning they can no longer be found in the areas they once inhabited. 

Cryptids

Animals that cryptozoologists believe may exist somewhere in the wild, but whose present existence is disputed or unsubstantiated by  science. 

Extinct

No longer existing. 

The Thylacine Research Project does not do a deep dive into Thylacine history, lore, theories, sightings, and debates because numerous websites, podcasts, Facebook groups, etc., cover these areas extensively.  The following are some of the more prominent and interesting sources of information for Thylacine and cryptozoology enthusiasts.

Be sure to visit our YouTube channel Tassie Research Project for updates on our planning and preparation for Tasmania, including training, equipment, and research.

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