Lonesome George To Be Embalmed

I'm not sure if it is really called "embalmed" when done to a tortoise, but it is the same idea. Lonesome George was a Galapagos Tortoise, Chelonoidis nigra abingdonii, who was known for some time a the last living individual of his subspecies. He lived on Pinta Island in the Galapagos. He died on my birthday last year at the age of "more than 100 years old." These tortoises numbered over a quarter of a million a few centuries to just a few thousand today.

The latest news is that George will be embalmed, or preserved, at the Museum of Natural History in New York City and returned to the Galapagos at a later time.

A 2007 study of the genetics of Galapagos Tortoises (with this followup) suggests that George is not really the last of his kind. There are over a dozen others! It turns out that the tortoises on this particular island are genetically diverse and have relatives on other islands, as a result of natural and human-caused dispersal of the animals.

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I'm sure you already know the story of Lonesome George: And now, you can see "him" (as it were) at the American Museum of Natural History. From a press release: Lonesome George Will Be on View at American Museum of Natural History Museum will Oversee Preservation and Taxidermy of Famous Tortoise…
The last known member of the subspecies Pinta Island tortoise (Chelonoidis nigra abingdoni), affectionately named Lonesome George, passed away on Sunday at about 100 years old (no one knew his exact age). He had been the last of his kind in the Galapagos Islands for the past 40 years, earning his…
Eleven species of giant tortoise are found throughout the Galapagos Islands. The (Lonesome George) Pinta tortoise is one of the smaller species. Image: BBC News. Do you remember "Lonesome George"; the male giant Galapagos tortoise from the island of Pinta? Well, it appears that he is not so…
It has just been reported that Lonesome George, the Galapagos Tortoise who was considered to be the last of is kind, has died. the last remaining tortoise of his kind and a conservation icon, died on Sunday of unknown causes, the Galapagos National Park said. He was thought to be about 100 years…