Bizarre and Extinct Thylacine Creatures
The little internationally-known Thylacine resembled a large, short-haired dog with distinctive dark stripes across its back, rump and the base of its tail, which earned the animal the nickname “Tiger,” dating back as far as the early Miocene, and thought to have become extinct in the 20th century, although sightings are still allegedly reported in current times.

Thylacine “Benjamin” yawning in 1933. Photo author unknown, license expired.
Thylacines — Greek for dog-headed pouched one — were the largest known carnivorous marsupial of modern times, top-level predators native to continental Australia, Tasmania and New Guinea.
They were 1 of only 2 marsupials to have a pouch in both sexes — the other is the Water Opossum. The male Thylacine had a pouch that acted as a protective sheath, protecting the male’s external reproductive organs while running through thick brush.
Commonly known as the Tasmanian Tiger due to its striped back, the Tasmanian Wolf, and colloquially the Tassie (or Tazzy) Tiger, or simply the Tiger, they were the last extant member of their genus, Thylacinus. Their closest living relative is thought to be either the Tasmanian Devil or Numbat.
These creatures became extinct on the Australian mainland thousands of years before European settlement of the continent, but survived on the island of Tasmania. It’s thought that intensive hunting encouraged by bounties to be blamed for their extinction, but other contributing factors may have been disease, the introduction of dogs, and human encroachment into their habitat.

Photo E.J. Keller, from Smithsonian Institution archives 1906
About Thylacines
Thylacines bore a resemblance to a large, short-haired dog with a stiff tail which smoothly extended from the body similar to that of a kangaroo, but many Europeans compared them to the Hyena.
Their yellow-brown coat varied from light fawn to a dark brown with a cream-colored belly, with dense and soft body hair up to .6 inches (15 millimeters) in length. In juveniles the tip of the tail had a crest.13 to 21 distinctive dark stripes ran across the back, rump and the base of the tail — 1 of which extended down the outside of the rear thigh, and were more marked in younger animals which faded as they got older. Their rounded, erect ears were about 3 inches (8 centimeters) long and covered with short fur.
Mature Thylacine ranged from 39 to 51 inches (100 to 130 centimeters) long, plus a tail of about 20 to 26 inches (50 to 65 centimeters). The largest measured specimen was 9.5 feet (290 centimeters) from nose to tail. Adults stood about 24 inches (60 centimeters) at the shoulder and weighed 40 to 70 pounds (20 to 30 kilos).
The female Thylacine had a pouch with 4 teats, but unlike many other marsupials, the pouch opened to the rear of its body. Males had a scrotal pouch, unique amongst the Australian marsupials.

Photo National Archives of Australia 1933
These creatures had an unusual capability to open their jaws to an extent of up to 120 degrees — which can be seen in David Fleay’s short black and white film of a captive Thylacine from 1933 — and had 46 teeth with muscular and powerful jaws.
The Thylacine’s footprint is easy to distinguish from those of native and introduced species. Image Yomangani. Thylacine footprints could be distinguished from other animals — unlike foxes, dogs, wombats or Tasmanian Devils, they had a very large rear pad and 4 obvious front pads, arranged in almost a straight line. The hind feet were similar to the forefeet but had 4 digits rather than 5, with non-retractable claws.
Early scientific studies suggested they possessed an acute sense of smell which enabled them to track prey, but analysis of their brain structure revealed that their olfactory bulbs were not well developed, and likely to have relied on sight and sound when hunting instead. Some described them having a strong and distinctive smell, others described a faint, clean, animal odor, and some no odor at all. It’s possible that these animals gave off an odor when agitated, similar to their relative the Tasmanian Devil.
Thylacines were noted to have a stiff and somewhat awkward gait, making them unable to run at high speed. They could also hop in a similar manner as a kangaroo, which was depicted various times by captive specimens. Guiler speculates that this was used as an accelerated form of motion when they became alarmed. They were also able to balance on the hind legs and stand upright for brief periods.
Although there are no recordings of Thylacine vocalizations, observers of the animal in the wild and captivity noted that it would growl and hiss when agitated, often accompanied by a threat-yawn. During hunting they would emit a series of rapidly repeated guttural cough-like barks, likely for communication between the family pack members. They also had a long whining cry, probably for identification at distance, and a low snuffling noise used for communication between family members.
Life expectancy in the wild is estimated to have been 5 to 7 years, although captive specimens survived up to 9 years.

2 Tasmanian Tigers before their extinction in the 1930’s (female in foreground) in Hobart Zoo
prior to 1921. Photo author unknown, license expired.
Behavior and Habitat
Little is really known about the behavior or habitat of the Thylacine. A few observations were made of the animal in captivity, but only limited evidence exists of the animal’s behavior in the wild, mainly based on hearsay. Most observations were made during the day, but these creatures were naturally nocturnal. Some behavioral characteristics have been derived from the behavior of their close relative, the Tasmanian Devil.
They likely preferred the dry eucalyptus forests, wetlands, and grasslands in continental Australia. Indigenous Australian rock paintings indicate that these animals lived throughout mainland Australia and New Guinea. Proof of their existence in mainland Australia came from a desiccated carcass that was discovered in a cave in the Nullarbor Plain in Western Australia in 1990. Carbon dating revealed its remains to be about 3,300 years old.
In Tasmania they preferred the woodlands of the midlands and coastal heath. Their striped pattern may have provided camouflage in woodland conditions, but it may have also served for identification purposes. They appear to have kept to their home range without being territorial, and groups too large to be a family unit were occasionally observed together.
As a nocturnal creature they primarily hunted during twilight at dawn and dusk, spending the daylight hours in small caves or hollow tree trunks in a nest of twigs, bark or fern fronds. They tended to retreat to the hills and forest for shelter during the day and hunted in the open heath at night. It was said that they were typically shy and secretive, with awareness of the presence of humans and generally avoided contact, though they occasionally showed inquisitive traits.
There is evidence for year-round breeding, although the peak breeding season was in winter and spring, producing up to 4 cubs per litter (typically 2 or 3), carrying the young in a pouch for up to 3 months and protecting them until they were at least half adult size. Early pouch young were hairless and blind, but they had their eyes open and were fully furred by the time they left the pouch. After leaving the pouch until they were developed enough to assist, the juveniles would remain in the lair while the female hunted.
The modern Thylacine first appeared about 4 million years ago, with species of the Thylacinidae family dating back to the beginning of the Miocene. Since the early 1990’s, at least 7 fossil species have been uncovered at Riversleigh, part of Lawn Hill National Park in northwest Queensland. Dickson’s Thylacine is the oldest of the 7 discovered fossil species, dating back to 23 million years ago.
Thylacine showed many similarities to the members of the dog family — sharp teeth, powerful jaws, raised heels and the same general body form — but they were unrelated to them. They are easy to tell from a true dog because of the stripes on the back, but the skeleton is harder to distinguish — the easiest way is by the 2 prominent holes in the palate bone, which are generally characteristic of marsupials.

Thylacine with 3 cubs, Beaumaris Zoo in Hobart, 1909. Photo author unknown, license expired.

The Thylacine family a year later, in 1910. Photo author unknown, license expired.
Diet
The Thylacine was solely carnivorous. The stomach was muscular with an ability to distend to allow them to eat large amounts of food at one time, likely to compensate for long periods when hunting was unsuccessful and food scarce. Trappers reported them as an ambush predator — some studies conclude that they may have hunted in small family groups, with the main group herding prey in the direction of an individual waiting in ambush, or a single Thylacine pursuing the animal until it was exhausted.
Prey included kangaroos, wallabies, wombats, birds and small animals such as possums, and their favorite prey may have been the once-common Tasmanian Emu which was hunted to extinction around 1850, possibly coinciding with the decline in Thylacine numbers.

Thylacine from the Natural History Museum at Oslo. Photo L. Shyamal
Thylacine’s Extinction
The Thylacine is likely to have become extinct in mainland Australia about 2,000 years ago, and possibly earlier in New Guinea, being attributed to competition from indigenous humans and invasive dingoes. The adoption of the dingo as a hunting companion by the indigenous peoples would have put the Thylacine under increased pressure.
Thylacine survived in Tasmania into the 1930’s. From the early days of European settlement they were rarely sighted but slowly began numerous attacks on sheep, which led to relentless bounty schemes to control their numbers. The Van Diemen’s Land Company introduced nearly 2,200 bounties on these animals from as early as 1830, and between 1888 and 1909 the Tasmanian government paid a lucrative £1 per head and 10 shillings for pups.
Their extinction is popularly attributed to these unrelenting efforts by farmers and bounty hunters. It’s also likely that other factors led to their extinction, including competition with wild dogs introduced by settlers, erosion of habitat, the parallel extinction of prey species, and a distemper-like disease that also affected many captive Thylacine at the time.
Whatever the reason, the animal had become extremely rare in the wild by the late 1920’s. Several efforts to save them from extinction include records of the Wilsons Promontory management committee dating 1908 with recommendations to be reintroduced to several suitable locations on the Victorian mainland. In 1928, the Tasmanian Advisory Committee for Native Fauna had recommended a reserve to protect any remaining Thylacines, with potential sites of suitable habitat including the Arthur-Pieman area of western Tasmania.

This 1921 photo by Henry Burrell of a Thylacine with a chicken was widely distributed and may have helped secure the animal’s reputation as a poultry thief. The image is cropped to hide the fenced run and housing, and analysis by one researcher has concluded that this Thylacine is a mounted specimen, posed for the camera.
The last known wild Thylacine to be killed was shot in 1930 by farmer Wilf Batty in Mawbanna, which had been seen around his hen houses for several weeks.
The last captive Thylacine, later referred to as “Benjamin,” was thought to actually have been female despite the name, based on photographic evidence. Ben was captured in 1933 and sent to the Hobart Zoo where it lived for 3 years, and died on September 7 1936. It’s believed to have died as the result of neglect — locked out of its sheltered sleeping quarters, and exposed to a rare occurrence of extreme Tasmanian weather of high heat during the day and freezing temperatures at night.
National Threatened Species Day has been held annually since 1996 on September 7th in Australia to commemorate the death of the last officially recorded Thylacine.
Although there had been a conservation movement pressing for the Thylacine’s protection since 1901, political difficulties prevented any form of protection coming into force until 1936. Official protection by the Tasmanian government was introduced on July 10 1936, 59 days before the last known animal died in captivity.
Results of subsequent searches indicated a strong possibility of the survival of the species in Tasmania into the 1960’s. Searches by Dr. Eric Guiler and David Fleay in the northwest of Tasmania found footprints and scats that may have belonged to the animal, heard vocalizations matching the description of the Thylacine, and collected unsupported evidence from people reported to have sighted the animal. No conclusive evidence was ever found to prove their continued existence in the wild.
Thylacine held the status of endangered species until 1986. International standards state that any animal for which no specimens have been recorded for 50 years is to be declared extinct. Since no definitive proof of the Thylacine’s existence had been found since Benjamin died in 1936, it was declared officially extinct by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) is more cautious, listing them as “possibly extinct.”

Bagged Thylacine, 1869. This iconic image featuring Mr. Weaver in a studio portrait is repeatedly published, yet it is not attributed. It may have been taken by Victor Prout who sojourned briefly in Tasmania in the late 1860’s.
Unconfirmed Sightings
Although the Thylacine is considered extinct, many believe the animal still exists. Sightings are regularly claimed in Tasmania, other parts of Australia and in the Western New Guinea area of Indonesia near the Papua New Guinea border.
The Australian Rare Fauna Research Association reports 3,800 sightings on file from mainland Australia since the 1936 extinction date, while the Mystery Animal Research Centre of Australia recorded 138 up to 1998, and the Department of Conservation and Land Management recorded 65 in Western Australia over the same period. Researchers Buck and Joan Emburg of Tasmania report 360 Tasmanian and 269 mainland post-extinction 20th century sightings. On the mainland, sightings are most frequently reported in Southern Victoria.
Some sightings have generated a large amount of publicity. In 1973, Gary and Liz Doyle shot 10 seconds of 8mm film showing an unidentified animal running across a South Australia road, but attempts to positively identify the creature as a thylacine have been impossible due to the poor quality of the film.
In 1982 Hans Naarding, a researcher with the Tasmania Parks and Wildlife Service, observed what he believed to be a Thylacine for 3 minutes during the night at a site near Arthur River in northwestern Tasmania, which led to an extensive year-long government-funded search. In January 1995, a Parks and Wildlife officer reported observing a Thylacine in the Pyengana region of northeastern Tasmania in the early hours of the morning. In 1997, it was reported that locals and missionaries near Mount Carstensz in Western New Guinea had sighted Thylacines.
In February 2005, German tourist Klaus Emmerichs claimed to have taken digital photographs of a Thylacine he saw near the Lake St Clair National Park, but the authenticity of the photographs has not been established. The photos were not published until April 2006, 14 months after the sighting, which showed only the back of the animal, and said by those who studied them to be inconclusive as evidence of their continued existence.

Stuffed specimen at National Museum of Australia in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory.
Photo Bidgee
Discovery of Thylacine
The indigenous peoples of Australia made first contact with the Thylacine, with numerous examples of Thylacine engravings and rock art dating back to at least 1000 BC. Petroglyph images of the Thylacine can be found at the Dampier Rock Art Precinct on the Burrup Peninsula in Western Australia.
By the time the first explorers arrived, the animal was already rare in Tasmania. Europeans may have encountered them as far back as 1642 when Abel Tasman first arrived in Tasmania, and his shore party reported seeing the footprints of “wild beasts having claws like a Tyger.” The first definitive encounter was by French explorers on May 13 1792, noted by the naturalist Jacques Labillardiere, in his journal from the expedition led by D’Entrecasteaux.
But it wasn’t until 1805 that William Paterson, Lieutenant Governor of Tasmania, sent a detailed description for publication in the Sydney Gazette. The first detailed scientific description was made by Tasmania’s Deputy Surveyor-General, George Harris in 1808, 5 years after first settlement of the island.
Several studies support the Thylacine as being a basal member of the Dasyuromorphia and that the Tasmanian Devil is its closest living relative. However, research published in Genome Research in January 2009 suggests that the Numbat may be more basal than the Devil and more closely related to the Thylacine.

Photo Henry Constantine Richter after John Gould, colorist Gabriel Bayfield 1863, which shows what’s regarded as the most famous and reproduced image of the then extant species.
Modern Research and Projects
The Australian Museum in Sydney began a cloning project in 1999, with a goal to use genetic material from specimens taken and preserved in the early 20th century to clone new individuals and restore the species from extinction. Several microbiologists have dismissed the project as a public relations stunt and its chief proponent, Professor Mike Archer, received a 2002 nomination for the Australian Skeptics Bent Spoon Award for “the perpetrator of the most preposterous piece of paranormal or pseudo-scientific piffle.”

Thylacine skeleton, Muséum national d’histoire naturelle, Paris. Photo FunkMonk

Analysis of the skeleton suggests that when hunting, the Thylacine relied on stamina rather than speed in the chase. Photo Beatka Brehms Thierleben Verlag des Bibliographischen Instituts, 1883.

The skulls of the Thylacine (left) and the Timber Wolf are almost identical although the species are unrelated. Studies show the skull shape of the Red Fox is even closer to that of the Thylacine. Photo Fritz Geller-Grimm
In late 2002 the researchers had some success as they were able to extract replicable DNA from the specimens. On February 15 2005, the museum announced that it was stopping the project after tests showed the DNA retrieved from the specimens had been too badly degraded to be usable. In May 2005, Professor Michael Archer, the University of New South Wales Dean of Science, announced that the project was being restarted by a group of interested universities and a research institute.
In what they describe as a world first, researchers from Australian and U.S. universities extracted a gene from a preserved specimen of the doglike marsupial, and revived it in a mouse embryo.
In 2008 researchers Andrew J. Pask and Marilyn B. Renfree from the University of Melbourne and Richard R. Behringer from the University of Texas reported that they managed to restore functionality of a gene Col2A1 enhancer obtained from 100 year-old ethanol-fixed thylacine tissues from museum collections. The research enhanced hopes to eventually restore the population of thylacines.
That same year, another group of researchers successfully sequenced the complete thylacine mitochondrial genome from 2 museum specimens. Their success suggests that it is feasible to sequence the complete thylacine nuclear genome from museum specimens, and their results were published in the journal Genome Research in 2009.
The International Thylacine Specimen Database was completed in April 2005 and is the culmination of a 4-year research project to catalog and digitally photograph all known surviving Thylacine specimen material held within museum, university and private collections.

One of only 2 known photos of a Thylacine with a distended pouch, bearing young, Adelaide Zoo, 1889. Photo author unknown, license expired.
National Symbols
The Thylacine has been used extensively as a symbol of Tasmania, and is featured on the official Tasmanian Coat of Arms. Since 1998, it has been prominently displayed on Tasmanian vehicle number plates, and has appeared in postage stamps from Australia, Equatorial Guinea, and Micronesia.
The plight of the Thylacine was featured in a campaign for The Wilderness Society entitled, “We used to hunt Thylacines.” Tiger Tale is a children’s book based on an Aboriginal myth about how the Thylacine got its stripes. The Thylacine character ‘Rolf’ is featured in the extinction musical, Rockford’s Rock Opera.

Possible Aboriginal cave painting of a Thylacine and its cub in the Pilbara region of
West Australia dating back 6,000 years. Photo author unknown, license expired.

Illustration of the Powerful Thylacine, which existed during the Miocene, the Thylacine’s largest known relative. It preceded the modern thylacine by 4 to 6 million years, and was 5% larger, was more robust and had a shorter, broader skull. Its size is estimated to be similar to that of a grey wolf – the head and body together were around 5 feet long, and its teeth were less adapted for shearing compared to those of the modern thylacine. Created by Michael Ströck on January 17, 2006.
Ben – Last Captive Thylacine
This Thylacine features in the last known motion picture footage of a living specimen – 62 seconds of black-and-white footage showing it pacing backwards and forwards in its enclosure in a clip taken in 1933 by naturalist David Fleay.
Source: Wikipedia












Hey man your article was really interesting and it was very relevant to me!Thanks for answering my questions!I will definitely read more of your posts in the future!
Just how gullible are humans? We seem intent on killing anything that is rare and precious. This would make an excellent Squidoo lens Deborah if that was your gig.
Cheers
RR
Reasonable Robinson’s last blog post..UK to Become Banana Skin Republic
If the world continues the way its going there will be no animals left in the wild for our future chirldren to see. How sad such beatiful animals. Great article.Please stop by http://bloginteviewer.com/animals/dogcents-ruth an vote for me fight against animal cruelty . Your votes count and you can vote each day. thank you @lilruth
I find it really heartbreaking to see extinctions like this at the hands of man, RR. I’ll be publishing a post on another unusual creature that became extinct in the late 1800’s in the near future. Thanks for the idea of making a Squidoo lends, but I’ve never actually tried it.
Thanks Lilyruth. I’ve voted for you a number of times, and I will again
Actually, I just tried, and the link appears to be broken. Actually, it seems to be a typo, here’s your link:
http://bloginterviewer.com/animals/dogcents-ruth
You know what Deborah, I felt the same too! I’m a human.. we’re all humans but we as human should act as the protective masters of these wild but those no-conscience monsters are also called humans are very cruel and they only think for their personal pleasures.
Deborah, these are certainly unusal looking creatures, they seem to bear some traits of the Australian Dingo, probably a distant cousin. Many animals have become extinct over the years, man has had some influence, but then on the other hand nature always have the greater effect and the final word. Years ago while a young boy in southwest Mississippi, I recall reading about the Ivory-billed Woodpecker in books at school. According to the books the bird became extinct in the 1920’s or ’30’s I can’t recall the specific date. But to the point, I often ventured deep into the woods, my grandfather’s farm border on a large national forest. There I found the extinct Ivory-bill woodpecker. I told friends about it, but they all said I was mistaken and it was probably some similar bird. Well years passed and I never thought about it much until just a few short years ago the Ivory-bill was reportly seen in southeaster Arkansas. At this time those reports have not been confirmed, but the hunt for the elusive woodpecked has intensified in that part of Arkansas. Makes me wonder about my sightings as a young boy in southern Mississippi. I enjoy visiting your site from time to time you always have detailed unusal items.
Ron Russell’s last blog post..The Old Gun Fighter
The article was surely long but interesting. Thanks for the effort of writing and publishing this.
WOW! Thank you for sharing that detailed article. Personally I love animals both alive and extinct. Your post has inspired me to create an art project around the Thylacine. Thanks again for your informative, well written article. Cheers!
It is my first time to see such Bizarre and Extinct Thylacine Creatures.I think more and more animals will be extinct in the next decades.
Deborah, in this case, I must say that human being is the most cruelty living creature of all! I have a bravely thought here that the Tasmanian Wolf and other already extincted animals, such as Dodo, King Island Emu, Paradise Parrot, Desert Bandicoot and much more won’t extinct so fast, if people didn’t hunt them rapidly!
wilson’s last blog post..For The Health’s Sake, You Should Stop Eating the Hot Breads Fresh Out of the Oven!
I have really never seen anything like this, but to me it looks a lot more like a cat or a rat??
amazing stuff.
cool to find some interesting offbeat news that’s well researched and well thought out.
will check back again soon
respect
alex
Alex’s last blog post..3AM Speed Chess Focus
This gave the feel that we humans have always been cruel wit animals and so on we have lost lots of creatures and one of them is snow leopard. i will be thankful to you if you could write some good article on snow leopards so people all around the world will come to know what has nature given us and what are we loosing
Best Regards,
Leif
Those animals look aggressive.
blinkky’s last blog post..Change Your Firefox Theme With Personas
Very, very sad that this poor animal, the last known of it’s kind, died of neglect.
I’m not sure if I agree with the whole “Awwwwwww poor animals. MANKIND SUCKS!” Thousands of species go extinct everyday even without the help of man.
It’s called survival of the fittest for a reason.
Thanks for forwarding this useful information about almost forgotten creature Thylacine. I belive many of the new generation wouldn’t have heard even the name.
Wow, thanks for the report. I’ve never really read much about the animal (that I’ve only ever known as the Tasmanian Tiger). It does seem to remind me more of a hyena/marsupial than anything else.
Просто замечательно – очень интересные мысли
Oh my God, I’m so sad and feel hurt when I know this animal become extinc…
Bisnis Online’s last blog post..Manchester United Resmi akan Melawan Indonesia
За такие посты надо награды давать, на полном серьезе!
This is one of the finest art work, i even love my self in indulging in some creative work like painting and poetry. and every artistic painting conveys a deep meaning for all of us.
Добавил в закладки. Теперь буду почаще читать!
I want to say i love your articles , and your website design also. Good luck in the future. With respect A.Razvan.
A.Razvan’s last blog post..Jocuri de Strategie
extinction of an animal from the hands of men is very shameful to all of us, i was really surprised to see this animal i didn’t have seen this animal before now, but extinction of this animal is very bad news. these animals are one of the creatures who make this universe beautiful, if we can’t give life to any one we don’t have a right to take any ones life.
I greatly appreciate work like this, I know how hard it is to collect information about extinct animals and make a featured article like this.
Its a great work.
Хм… Как раз на эту тему думал, а тут такой пост шикарный, спасибо!
animal are as important as men in this ecosystem so one must live & let them live to create a balance , otherwise this whole earth will face ecological imbalance & will distroy
Technology’s last blog post..Lenovo launches IdeaPad S12 with full-size keyboard
there are still many mysteries waiting to be discovered in this world. those creatures you mentioned above could have lived or maybe still living here but we dont know yet. they maybe hidding from the sight of mankind.
I for one wish that they will remain hidden untill makind ls ready. If these creatures come out, those scientist will just swarm on them and do various experiments that could desroy their genetic structure therby resulting in the collapse of their natural genetic pattern.
I wish that if ever these creatures come out of hiding, humans must learn to respect their lives. Respect and you will be respected in return.
хороший рассказ, все разложено по полкам
Animals are as important as humans in our ecosystem, but ironically we are seeing more animals getting extinct and even its on the rise. Anyway, thanks for letting us see those pictures which i have not seen before and i would not been aware of such a creature without those picture. thanks.
Wniosek o udzielenie kredytu Złożenie wniosku poprzedzone powinno egzystować rokowaniami pośrodku przedsiębiorstwem, a bankiem w sprawie wstępnego uzgodnienia treści poszczególnych postanowień umowy. Negocjacje te pozwalają ocenić przedsiębiorstwu swoje szanse na uzyskanie kredytu. kredyt gotówkowy Wniosek kredytowy jest informacją zawierającą charakterystykę przedsiębiorstwa oraz ekonomiczne powód rodzaju i kwoty potrzebnego kredytu. Wniosek ma obowiązek zawierać: Ogólną charakterystykę firmy, firma cel, Kwotę kredytu, Przeznaczenie, Proponowane terminy spłaty, Propozycje firmy dotyczące zabezpieczenia ; Umowa kredytu powinna zawierać: Strony umowy, kwotę a walutę kredytu, Cel, na który zobowiązanie zostanie udzielony, Zasady oraz terminy spłaty kredytu, kredyt gotówkowy Wysokość oprocentowania tudzież kontekst jego zmiany, Sposób zabezpieczenia spłaty kredytu, Zakres uprawnień banku związanych z kontrolą wykorzystania tudzież spłaty kredytu, Terminy tudzież sposób pozostawienia do dyspozycji kredytobiorcy środków pieniężnych, Wysokość prowizji, Warunki dokonywania zmian tudzież rozwiązania umowy (art. 69 ust.2 pr. bank.) Zdolność kredytowa Zdolność kredytowa jest to dar do spłaty kredytu co do jednego według odsetkami w przyrzeczonych umową terminach. kredyt samochodowy Aby zdawać sobie sprawę zdolność kredytową bank żąda przedłożenia za pomocą kredytobiorcą dokumentów a informacji charakteryzujących jego stan majątkowy, obecną zaś przyszłą działanie, jak również inicjatywa, które ma znajdować się sfinansowane. (art. 70 ust 1 pr. bankowego) Wymagane dokumenty zależą odtąd rodzaju linii kredytowej aczkolwiek z reguły wymagane są dokumenty stwierdzające dotychczasowy status ( streszczenie według rejestru sądowego czy też poświadczenie o wpisie do ewidencji działalności gospodarczej, statut, umowę spółki, koncesje itp.), dokument o nadaniu numeru statystycznego – REGON, poświadczenie o nadaniu numeru identyfikacyjnego NIP, statystyczne sprawozdanie finansowe ( bilans ) za ubiegłe lata ( dwanaście miesięcy ) i bieżące sprawozdania sporządzane wg wymogów GUS, W przypadku nowo powstających przedsiębiorstw, opinię bankową o kredytobiorcy od banku prowadzącego wierzytelność, deklarację podatkową potwierdzoną przy użyciu należyty Urząd Skarbowy oraz kwartalne pismo o terminowym regulowaniu zobowiązań, aktualne pismo o terminowym wywiązywaniu się ze zobowiązań w obliczu ZUS, Zabezpieczenia kredytów, kredyt samochodowy Podstawową gwarancją spłaty kredytów jest majątek ziemski sytuacja ekonomiczno – finansowa przedsiębiorstwa.
Hi…I am Sovi..I wily concern about animal especially extinct animal..seem I found a new friend..
. You know, I live in country with extraordinary nature wealth both flora or fauna. Some of them now endangered because human don’t act wisely. I have no power to do a ‘big’ thing to save them but I usually write down about this case in my site. Reading your site give me a support…regards.
stormcharity’s last blog post..Where We Can Find Out The Macaw?
Thank you verey much for the beneficial informatin .
thanks.. good look
radiomoon vb
Wow…great info….
I really like it
KampungBoy’s last blog post..Kenaikan Harga Minyak??
Strange scary looking creatures. They look like something form the dinosaur era.
yeah you are right, strange and scary. but i think they are not existing as of this moment so there is nothing to worry. (www.kika.ca)
I do hope they manage to clone the Dodo and other extinct species as well by using those techniques
I’m glad I do not live at the same time as these animals. This creature does not look so scary until it open the mouth but it is just another proof that things are not always as to look like.
Sara’s last blog post..Archipelago Candles for Christmas
It’s just amazing that we had so many different types of animals. Thanks for this article!
wow… you must be work hard to make this post, and I wily appreciate it. You know that I am very concern about animal and the science of history, including about the history of animal.. this is a great post..!
dancesportsuperbowl’s last blog post..Become Part Of The Clouds When You Learn To Skydive
animal are as important as men in this ecosystem so one must live & let them live to create a balance , otherwise this whole earth will face ecological imbalance & will destroy
i want one for my house security
We seem intent on killing anything that is rare and precious. This would make an excellent Squidoo lens Deborah if that was your gig.
This is something extraordinary!…I mean many people have commented about animal importance, they indeed are!…but I wonder what it took for author to collect such an info about a rare ‘Thylacine’ in its entirety!..hats off!
We should take care of animals and should try not to kill them and help them from getting extinct. Those animals which have got extinct are a result of human greediness and carelessness. I hope government also plays its vital role in helping these animals to survive.
Sad that people cannot control their urge to kill.
speak’s last blog post..18 Best Rugs, Carpet Tile and Caperts
very touching article..i request everyone to join hands together and save the animals who are on verge of extinction like blue whale, white tigers etc..we human should understand that animals are equally required in this ecosystem….without them the cycle is incomplete..
It’s the really nice story and info
from your great blog
I really, really enjoy
keep it up……
I’ll follow u.
Thank you verey much for the beneficial informatin .
thanks.. good look
Acemi webmaster Blogu’s last blog post..Sadece Seni sevdim
Thank you for a fascinating post on these creatures. I had never heard of thylacines before and it is a crying shame that man has driven them to extinction. As soon as we encroach on the habitats of others there seems to be only one inevitable conclusion I’m afraid. I can understand that farmers would want to protect their livestocks and livelihoods, although looking back I can’t help wondering whether there wasn’t an element of unnecessary babaricism in their ‘culling’. Killing for human need or for human pleasure? Anyway, thank you again for an interesting read.
baby gender predictor’s last blog post..Chinese Lunar Pregnancy Calendar – Fact, Fiction or Fun?
that thing looks like a laughing hyena body? this is a very interesting post, since i’ve never heard of thylacines before. Also, they look like a desert creature we have here in Sedona Arizona, kinda like a coyote, kinda like a jila monster!
thanks for a fascinating story.
to be honest they are alive there extinct date was lie which was 1936 there have been reports that they were seen. there was one photo taken by a guy in Australia in some village he said he saw a thylacine to a officer and the people felt like they were mocked or pissed off the officer wanted him to leave when he showed him the photo. they dont want the US government, media, or science researches to get involved. the guy that took the photo should have have made contact to the US and become a hero showing that there is existance of these so called extinct animals. there are to many reports online about this but this guy really showed the photo online.
to be honest they are alive there extinct date was lie which was 1936 there have been reports that they were seen. there was one photo taken by a guy in Australia in some village he said he saw a thylacine to a officer and the people felt like they were mocked or pissed off the officer wanted him to leave when he showed him the photo. they dont want the US government, media, or science researches to get involved. the guy that took the photo should have have made contact to the US and become a hero showing that there is existance of these so called extinct animals. there are to many reports online about this but this guy really showed the photo online. interesting article either way even if there facts made by scientists
Hi,
This is a great post. This is something I was looking for. Its hard to believe that such animals were extinct in this world. The skeleton reminds me about jurassic park!
Really enjoyed your post very intresting pretty bizarre
These are beautiful animals and its heart breaking to know that they bare on verge of extinction, human have become selfish that he wants all the earth to himself but animals are important part of our ecosystem,its very important to strike a balance.But its seems like we are ready to let this creature extinct.There are so many animals in the world who are on verge of extinction, should’t we conserve them so that out future generations also know about such beautiful things.
It’s really disgraceful isn’t it, what humans have to turn to for sport? The Victorians were so fantastic at documenting all these weird and wonderful animals but also had a particularly strange streak of wanting to kill them all too. Pity things don’t change either…
Topbuygucci.com is the premier online fashion retailer, offering Gucci Necklaces,Gucci Bracelets,Gucci Earrings,Gucci Rings,Gucci Cufflinks,Gucci Accessories and Gucci Sets.
It is very shamefull that such species are on the verge of extinct,
Thou their extinction due to competition with wild factors can be considered as a natural, but if farmers and bounty hunters are responsible for this, then it should be stopped and they should be punished severly.
And reading all above comments it can be clearly seen that humanity has not yet distinguished, its yet there inside us, this just need to grow and glow
I love the blog layout design, cool graphic and unique
Great post, thank you for this informations. What a remarkable creatures, great pity that they died…
Very interesting post and creature that I never knew or could have imagined! Thank you.
Hi,
This is a great post. This is something I was looking for. Its hard to believe that such animals were extinct in this world. The skeleton reminds me about jurassic park!
I love the blog theme, btw, cool graphic and unique
very very very useful information. Thanks a lot
Great article. Man’s stupidity never ceases to amaze. WE should be cherishing and nurturing, not destroying and defiling.
Phil
This is amazing, How could we allow such animals to be extinct in this world.
Its really sad that these animals are now extinct. Truly amazing creatures..
i’m starting to like your blog. a lot of interesting / bizzare / fun / etc of information. I don’t know how to describe. :p
its a good looking animal .half of this animal just like tiger.so i like it thank u.
search the google then find your site.
that is a really excellent post.
Thanks for the post.
Great article. Man’s stupidity never ceases to amaze. WE should be cherishing and nurturing, not destroying and defiling.
i believe , the animal exist , but where ?
thank you ,
I just came across this website earlier and I must say, I’m addicted.
nicpost guys. I like this article
thanks
Congrats on doing such a great job on your blog!
Sad that we keep wiping out species even today, isn’t it? You’d hope that as supposedly the most intelligent creatures on the planet we’d have learned our lesson by now. This is just another cautionary tale I guess.
what a wikid looking creature.
Great post!!i love animals…Thanks for sharing this post
Your posts are meaningful to our human beings.
Thanks!
It’s such a shame to see the extinction of a species. I enjoyed watching the YouTube video.
hi, nice article. animal is very important for us. Great idea. Thank,s
Deborah! Where have you been! I miss your articles!!
Alan, thanks so much. So nice of you so say, and it means a lot
I’ve been on hiatus from the blog all summer, but I do intend to return as soon as I’m able to (hopefully relatively soon). It won’t be in the capacity that I had in the past though, my postings will remain a little irregular.
My little dog Daisy’s death earlier this year hit me pretty hard — she was my companion 24/7 for 10 years. Since then I’ve been devoting a lot more time to family and home. We got a little shih tzu puppy named Bo earlier this year, so a lot of my time is dedicated to him. Puppies are surprisingly nearly as much demanding of time as little toddlers
In addition to him, we have another little sister for Bo which we’ll be bringing home, who will be born any day now.
Due to this, I’ve had little time for the puter, most of which is spent supporting friends in social media.
I hope that you’ve been having a great summer
I figured you were having a rough time. I remember you mentioning the death, so I was worried, but I’m really glad you are doing ok and enjoying the new puppy. I keep telling myself that when my cat goes that I won’t have another pet because the first one’s death was just so hard. But I am having a great Summer, and glad you are taking some time off! Good to hear from you!!
Alan
I greatly appreciate work like this, I know how hard it is to collect information about extinct animals and make a featured article like this. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for your concern, Alan
Things are going well, I’ve simply changed my priorities
You may find that you’ll change your mind down the road. As painful as the heartache is, pets bring so much magic into the home, which makes it all so worthwhile. We said the same thing last summer when our German Shepherd died from old age. But once Daisy was gone, the house was unbearably desolate of life, so we decided to get 2 puppies. I can’t tell you how happy we are that we made the choice.
Yes, there will be much heartache when they’re gone as well, but I take some solace in my belief of life after death, and that they’re happily romping around on some other plane
Glad to hear you’re having a good summer, and it’s great to hear from you too
Thank you Tiranga
hang in there deb, looking forward to seeing you online and hopefully some new content from you soon!! But take your time and be well…
Alan
Really nice blog. An interesting article
Wow these are some interesting animals. I’ve never seen one like this before.
This is my first time hearing about the Thylacine. Those were some beautiful animals. What a shame they hunted them to extinction.
Its really sad how we are leaving scars all around the planet… thehuman being is the worst thing that could happen to the planet.
This looks like a mix between a cat and a dog. Too bad they are no more, yikes.
is not called playing with nature? What we are trying to do? some day some psychic scientist will create a mixx of animal and human. Se should strongly discourage such things.
This video is really worth. However, I am glad that I did not live at this time. I am a big fan of animals, but the Thylacine I do not like.
Thanks for writing such an in depth article on the Thylacine, a creature that was also known as the Tasmanian Tiger. It’s unfortunate that the animal that is man, can’t seem to live in any relative peace or harmony with nature’s other animals. Just because you have the capability to extinguish life, doesn’t mean that should or that you simply have the right too.
man, seems to me quite a few of them eggstinct kinda animals is showin up, some fellow in texas been seein some wierd dog too. what you reckons causin this, i ain’t never heard of such before.
.-= bob byford´s last blog ..what bess wants bess gets =-.
Hello!
It is awesome how many species dissapared, as humans we must take care and encourage others do the same. And always support org that care of animals and habitat.
impossible that these animals are true
.-= oskar8´s last blog ..Płaski brzuch =-.
Основная задача Яндекса — давать ответы на вопросы пользователей!
Wow, crazy creatures. Guess you learn something new every day, and todays no exception!
To get an English education Proffesyonel us contact us
Nice story and the video was interesting. I wonder how many other creatures are out there that we haven’t discovered yet?
Thanks for the article !
Apparently thousands of animals got wiped out due to the ice age, it would be amazing to know what different types of variations we would of had if it wasn’t for that.
It goes to show how sensitive animals from Australia really are. But I hope some of them still survive in deep parts of Australia.
Definitely a sad note. I wish more people understood the level of what we’re really losing when something disappears from this world forever.
Well, it looks like a cat with a dog’s head on it to me. It’s still stinks that they are extinct. Although I guess some other animal could have taken their place in the food chain.
.-= Keith´s last blog ..Sep 22, Canada Lipitor Price Comparison From Canadian Pharmacies =-.
This blog is too good to be left without updateding, you can give us small posts while we are waiting.
.-= dawkinswatch´s last blog ..27 Fantastic HDR Photographs =-.
Dawkinswatch, thank you so much for your comment.
My intentions had been to be publishing by now. I had a bit of a bomb go off for my business a few weeks ago which has prevented me from being able to find time to write. The biz is what puts a roof over my head, so for now, it needs tending to
My hopes are to be back in the groove to some degree within several weeks time.
Thank you so much for your patience to hang in there for so long already
This is really unique for this to happen. I am shocked.
.-= Gourmet Candles´s last undefined ..If you register your site for free at =-.
Wow.
Thats good.
Thanks.
.-= yuNus´s last blog ..Kan Gölü İzle =-.
The animal strips are very clear in the picture. Nice collection of pictures here.. I need to add more..
.-= Tom adrenal fatigue´s last blog ..Twitter Weekly Updates for 2009-09-27 =-.
I use to be a shark fishermen and from what I have seen at least in the ocean it is impossible for overfishing to end a species. The shark has been fished to near extincsion 2 different times by humans and there numbers are back again. In the world of fishing it’s to expensive to go fishing to catch everyone of them and we always knew where they would be as they love routine.
It takes ruining there habitat or killing down to low numbers what like to hunt and eat to make them exstinced.
What a strange creature!. I did not like to see the pictures of it hanging up and being stuffed though. A good article, well done.
Well I can truly say I have never seen or heard of such a thing.
The Thylacine Creatures really seem like something of the dinosaur days!
Thanks for the post very interesting!
wow what a unique looking animal this is . I definitely have never seen this before in my entire 70 yrs.
.-= cutecute´s last blog ..A Good Dog Bed =-.
An Excellent blog! The internet would be a better place if people could write as well as you. Keep it up.
Hi! I’m from the Philippines. Thank you very much for the interesting post!It’s very helpful and very informative.
I saw an exhibit on the thylacine when I was on vacation in Australia last year (a lot of the awesome pictures you used were in the exhibit). I was fascinated by it. It’s pretty amazing that they are more closely related to the koala than the dingo. Thanks for sharing all that information!
Wow, talk about a strange looking animal. I wish I had one as a pet ; )
Very cool animal! Though it is sad that it is extinct, at least we have excellent documentation of the animal, many recent extinctions have not been so fortunate. The stuffed one looks in mint condition even.
.-= Josh @iDTech´s last blog ..Green Blog Action Day! =-.
Hi dude.. your article is good and interesting. It was good to read what happened long time before to Thylacine creatures and feel pity for them.
I heard about this animal and this is the first time I’m seeing it. Thanks for posting it here and hope you’ll have more stuffs like this!!
- Frankie
Thanks for the article, very interesting blog you have!
Very amazing article. I didn’t ever seen such a animal. It just looks like a dog with strips. Extinction of such rare animals is very sad and that is also with the hands of human. Very petty about that.
That is quite the animal. I am pretty sure I have seen a nature television program about these little guys. Their striping is pretty cute, though I’d say it’s more like a zebra than a tiger or other cat style.
This should be the wikipedia page. I’ve never seen such a detailed description on it.
As far as extinct animals go, I’m more partial to the Dodo.
It really gives me a very uncomfortable feeling whenever I read about extinction of animals. Not really very nature loving, but suddenly I start admiring the artistry of nature by looking at the animal and wonder how inhuman we humans have become. It gives me a heavy heart.
.-= Mohsin´s last blog ..Best Locations in Navi Mumbai to Buy Residential Property =-.
thanks you for informations. rusça tercüme – romence tercüme – images upload – şifalı bitkiler – bodrum otelleri
nice article….
not yet, to see this animal
.-= diqky´s last blog ..American Bobtail Cat Breeds Pictures =-.
Well I can truly say I have never seen or heard of such a thing.
The Thylacine Creatures really seem like something of the dinosaur days! Thanks for the post very interesting!
I have 5 years of fond CSS, I believe that this endless possibilities for creativity
I have a few videos of these on my computer at home, actually – This would truly make an awesome pet :\
Have you checked out the story about the find in England. WoW..trying to grab a link for that and re-post. It’s awsome..exited..who me? Lol..
Great article though, looks like the little guy could swallow a football!
it is so sad to hear that. thanks for letting us know about them.
source of information very interesting, I am very interested in this
Wow Great Article!! Hopefully these creatures aren’t extinct and that all the reports of people seeing these creatures will some day be backed up by proof that they still exist. Thanks for a great read!
.-= Surfer Jerry´s last blog ..Plum Crazy Cuda =-.
Those are incredible pictures. I love them probably because I have a dog myself and like to think that she slightly resembles this creature. It’s almost like a cross between a dog and a tiger with those distinctive stripped markings.
great share thank for the info because I don’t know about this animal
I’m fairly sure if I saw this animal in the wild, I’d be scared out of my mind! But I have to admit, stripes do add an element of beauty.
Thanks for the post
Thats cool.
Thats cool.
Great blog.
Nice blog. Thanks for sharing, wish to see more from you.
Nice blog, All should think about creatures. It is sad that animals life are endangered,It is time to preserved them otherwise environment will not be well-balanced.
A nice post. Its like a tiger but not tiger.
really cool looking animal. Loved it!
.-= Aaron Shaw´s last blog ..Baby Animal of the Day! Lemur! =-.
Let us love animals value their lives. Care of our planet.
the article is very interesting Thanks for the effort of writing and publishing this.
wew amazing
I just know about this
.-= afwan auliyar´s last blog ..Tips dan trik memanipulasi plugin dagon design sitemap generator =-.
whoa…i am also an animal lover.and sadly this specimen was long gone. nice content…i enjoy reading the infos..cheers
Spanish Singles
these things are beautiful why do we have to destroy so much
Those Tasmanian Tigers are incredible, such a shame they are long gone.
Hi, interesting blog you have here. We invite you to share it with others by listing it in our Blog Directory
wow! a little more heartbreak. It’s too sad for the lovely animals. what can a laser lover do for this?
some absolutely amazing pictures there thanks for posting them.
.-= ron´s last blog ..puppy playpen updated Sat Nov 28 2009 3:10 pm CST =-.
What a shame this lovely-looking animal has been wiped out because of the moronic behaviour of man.
.-= Dean Saliba´s last blog ..About To Make Use Of A Dead Domain =-.
I like the plugin that fetches the first post of my blog!
.-= Javier Cardenas´s last blog ..FAP Turbo in the spotlight =-.
Good afternoon … my friends and I love this site, very good, congratulations, always visit.
thanks for providing such a useful information..
.-= fico´s last blog ..Jasa SEO di Palembang, Sudah Saatnya =-.
I felt the same too! I’m a human..but we as human should act for protecting these wild, it’svery cruel to kill thess wild for only pleasure
.-= streaming´s last blog ..17 ans encore Streaming =-.
Those are incredible pictures. I love them probably because I have a dog myself and like to think that she slightly resembles this creature. It’s almost like a cross between a dog and a tiger with those distinctive stripped markings.
.-= http://www.konferensguide.com´s last blog ..Konferens på Krägga herrgård =-.
Nice blog, All should think about creatures. It is sad that animals life are endangered,It is time to preserved them otherwise environment will not be well-balanced.
.-= tommys´s last blog ..Tips For travel Gifts at Christmas =-.
Thank you very good and a healthy writing. I will definitely keep track of posts and the occasional visit.
.-= Mesut´s last blog ..Harrby =-.
That is a really strange looking animal, but kind of cute too. I had never seen it before so I’m glad you shared the pictures here.
what a weird animal.. hope I can see them with my own eyes, but they have already gone..
.-= Antony´s last blog ..Understanding the BlackBerry Ecosystem =-.
Great article. Thanks for sharing.
Well its really a very nice article. Its very informative for me. Thanks a lot for sharing such a nice article.
I feel sad for this extinct creature. If were God I would have release it and make it live peacefully. Thanks Deb for bringing this creature here alive before us.
Deborah, Thanks for sharing about this animal. Couple of weeks back my son asked about extinct animals. I’ll inform about this to him.
Interesting, waiting your next article!
.-= Tio Hasegawa´s last blog ..Tegalalang Rice Field =-.
Hi there, your post is very amazing, I’m really impressed. As a student of LSBF I always looking for rare and interesting info. I love your blog and looking forward to your new posts. Thanks for your work!
.-= MBA Lady´s last blog ..GGSB ranked within the top 20 Best European Business Schools =-.
Nature has many surprises for us . the dog looks very different and these kind of animals must be protected.
WOW! This is a good stuff. Thanks for sharing such a article on this site
This is amazing!! I have never seen this type of animal in my life, every interesting of what types of animals are not around right now. I’m amazed how I have never heard of this animal even in school. Schools should start teaching children about animals who have become extincted because then they will learn how important it is the keep animals in this age to not become extinct.
glad you shared the pictures here.
thanks for sharing buddy keep posting!
cool article, really!
One of the best artilce that I had ever read.
Thanks for sharing.
Wow, they looked fierce and aggresive.