2.5 Centuries

cheerful_deviant

Head of the Flock
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Apr 4, 2004
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Can you imaging having a lifespan like this? This animal was born into a world long before the internet, Viagra and Honda Civics. The seas were still crossed by great sailing ships and a horse was needed for a midnight run down to the corner store. The Unites States was not yet a nation and the industrial revolution had not yet begun.

Really amazing when you think about it. :rose:

Tortoise dies after 250 years
Addwaitya, believed to be oldest tortoise in the world, lived in Indian zoo

Reuters
Updated: 8:21 a.m. ET March 23, 2006



KOLKATA, India - A giant aldabra tortoise thought to be around 250 years old has died in the Kolkata zoo of liver failure, Indian authorities said on Thursday.

The tortoise had been the pet of Robert Clive, the famous British military officer in colonial India around the middle of the 18th century, a local minister in West Bengal state said.

Local authorities say the tortoise, named “Addwaitya” meaning the “The One and Only” in Bengali, was the oldest tortoise in the world but they have not presented scientific proof to back up their claim.

“Historical records show he was a pet of British general Robert Clive of the East India Company and had spent several years in his sprawling estate before he was brought to the zoo about 130 years ago,” West Bengal Forest Minister Jogesh Barman said.

“We have documents to prove that he was more than 150 years old, but we have pieced together other evidence like statements from authentic sources and it seems that he is more than 250 years old,” he said.

'Sad day'
The minister said details about Addwaitya’s early life showed that British sailors had brought him from the Seychelles islands and presented him to Clive, who was rising fast in the East India Company’s military hierarchy.

On Thursday, the tortoise’s enclosure wore a deserted look.

“This is a sad day for us. We will miss him very much,” a zoo keeper said.

Wild Aldabra tortoises are found in the Aldabra island in the Indian Ocean Seychelles islands. They average about 265 pounds (120 kg). It is believed that tortoises are the longest lived of all animals, with life spans often surpassing 100 years.
 
For some reason I find this very touching. And fascinating.

Makes you wish we could talk to animals.
 
fieryjen said:
For some reason I find this very touching. And fascinating.

Makes you wish we could talk to animals.
I couldn't have said it better.


Thanks for the article, cheerful_deviant.
 
fieryjen said:
For some reason I find this very touching. And fascinating.

Makes you wish we could talk to animals.

It is a fascinating and interesting fact...

I also agree fieryjen...But, then again, if we were all Dr.Dolittles, I'm sure it wouldn't take too long for us to corrupt the poor unsuspecting mammals!
 
From one quadruped to another, . . . so long little buddy.

Another good reason for protecting animal species . . . they're not only environmentally necessary . . . they're history.
 
silkynik said:
It is a fascinating and interesting fact...

I also agree fieryjen...But, then again, if we were all Dr.Dolittles, I'm sure it wouldn't take too long for us to corrupt the poor unsuspecting mammals!

How about "makes you wish we could listen to animals" ? I would settle for that in a heartbeat. :)

Also, good point Alpaca.
 
fieryjen said:
How about "makes you wish we could listen to animals" ? I would settle for that in a heartbeat. :)

Also, good point Alpaca.
:) (And I!!!!!) Yes I like that, and I also agree Alpaca...
 
My Grandfather died in 1978.... He was born in 1880 as best he could figure....

The things he saw in his lifetime are awesome.... from wagons to space shuttles... from telgraph to internet... The list just blows my mind at times... talking to him was a history lesson in so many ways....
 
cheerful_deviant said:
Can you imaging having a lifespan like this? This animal was born into a world long before the internet, Viagra and Honda Civics. The seas were still crossed by great sailing ships and a horse was needed for a midnight run down to the corner store. The Unites States was not yet a nation and the industrial revolution had not yet begun.

Really amazing when you think about it. :rose:

Tortoise dies after 250 years
.
.
.

One of nature's rare examples of life not burning both ends of the candle.

R.I.P. Addwaitya
 
TxRad said:
My Grandfather died in 1978.... He was born in 1880 as best he could figure....

The things he saw in his lifetime are awesome.... from wagons to space shuttles... from telgraph to internet... The list just blows my mind at times... talking to him was a history lesson in so many ways....

Same as my grandfathers, but one died when I was a kid, the other when I was a teenager, but his mind had gone long before then.

My folks were born in 1920 and 1921. Believe me, there's a hell of a lot of stuff that's changed for them as well, and listening to them talking to my kids about their childhood is a real eye opener. To my youngest in particular, a student of history, and a degree in modern history, this kind of information, from the 'horse's mouth', as it were, just fascinates him. He can't get enough of it.

Rest in peace tortoise, you deserve it.
 
It was only about ten years ago, that a turtle died in the London Zoo that Captain Cook had brought back from Tahiti.

It is fascinating to think of the human linkages we have to history. As a child, there was a 90 year old woman in our neighborhood who told stories about being in a wagon train when she was five. My grandmother as a young woman, knew Civil War veterans.

There are probably people alive today, who knew people who knew people who knew Thomas Jefferson.
 
My Great Grandmother on my fathers side died in 1976 at the age of 99. She used to tell us stories about the trek from Columbia SC where she was born to Chicago in wagons. They couldn't afford the train. They road horses everywhere. Her family settled in the Chicago area which is where I was born and raised.

She also told us about her grandmother who had married a war chief of one of the indian tribes somewhere in the Carolinas. It was very interesting to sit and listen to her every Thanksgiving when I was younger. My children only got to listen to the stories once before she passed away. They were too young to remember.

But at that Thanksgiving were five generation in one room. I miss her to this day. Her mind was sharp right up until the day she died. :heart:
 
Aurora Black said:
God, this is depressing.
I disagree. It is about the continuity of history, and our personal connections to it.

Enjoying where we've been so we can get excited about where we are going.
 
Aurora Black said:
God, this is depressing.


But we get turtle soup now.

~~BOINK~~

Sorry, my grandmother was born in 1910 and has only just begun to deteriorate as she says...still she has more life in her than my mom and me on some days..
 
It makes a person think, though. (Which is always good.) Where does all our hurrying get us, except a quicker trip to the end? ;)

Okay, so that's overly generalized. But still, the "slow and steady" story comes to mind.
 
Unfortunately, we are well beyond "slow & staedy". In my view, we are forcing the issue with ever increasing verocity. After the Industrial Revolution, very quickly came the Technological Revolution..Is the Genetic Revolution next? We strive to be the strongest, fastest, bravest, most intelligent, most beautiful, the best...and the world (our world!) suffers...

Ho hum, the sun came out today, and it was pleasantly warm for a spell!
 
Owlwhisper said:
...Right now evolution is betting the house on "brains," with us being the front man. How's it going to turn out? Come back in a couple of million years. Or much sooner if we don't get any better at using our brains to apply technology more wisely.
A very valid and erudite point!!! And I agree the world did try "big", and eventually that failed, but it lasted a long, long time...We are just a spec on the evolutionary calander...Can we last much longer? I do hope so..Yet, I have a horrible suspicion that we are simply too vain...Then again, if anybody does know the anwer...please put it on a postcard (it may have to be a very big one!!)...
 
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