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The Tasmanian tiger is thought to have gone extinct in 1936, but mysterious sightings suggest the creature might still be out there

The Tasmanian tiger a marsupial that looked like a cross between a large cat, a fox, and a wolf is thought to have gone extinct in 1936.

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  • But according to a document recently released by the Tasmanian government, eight sightings of Tasmanian tigers have been reported in the last three years.
  • The most recent report came in July, when a man found what might be a Tasmanian tiger footprint in Hobart, Tasmania.
  • Tasmanian tigers were carnivorous and ate kangaroos, wombats, and sheep. They were hunted to extinction in the 19th century by British settlers in Tasmania.
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On September 7, 1936, the last Tasmanian tiger died in captivity in Hobart's Beaumaris Zoo.

Or so we thought.

Last month, Tasmania's Department of Primary Industries, Parks, Water and Environment released a document that revealed Australian citizens have been reporting Tasmanian tiger sightings. In the last two years, there have been eight reported sightings; the most recent was in July.

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The tiger was a member of the Thylacine family of carnivorous marsupials. It was recognizable by its yellow-brown fur and a pallet of black stripes across the lower back and tail (hence the tiger moniker).

Tasmanian tigers preyed on kangaroos, wombats, and occasionally sheep and livestock, which brought them into conflict with British colonists who settled in Tasmania in 1803.

Some 130 years later,the last wild Tasmanian tiger was thought to have been hunted to extinction.

Here's everything we know about the elusive animal and why some experts and hunters think it may not be extinct after all.

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John Gould

Two years before that, a couple saw an animal that they said they were "100% certain" was a Tasmanian tiger near Corinna, Tasmania.

"The animal had a stiff and firm tail, that was thick at the base. It had stripes down its back," the report read. "It was the size of a large Kelpie (bigger than a fox, smaller than a German Shepherd)."

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Wikimedia Commons

The government has kept the individuals who filed the reports anonymous.

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L. Medland/Wikimedia Commons

"It all proved terribly poor value," Nick Mooney, the wildlife biologist currently in charge of the agency's investigations, said in January . "Hundreds and hundreds of times people have gone to look where a sighting report has been, and there's been nothing."

In September 2017, a group called the Booth Richardson Tiger Team made waves by releasing video clips and still images of a creature's blurry snout. The group captured the footage using trail cameras in the Tasmanian wilderness.

"We believe 100% that it is a thylacine," tiger expert Adrian Richardson said during a press conference after releasing videos.

But Mooney was skeptical.

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"My first impression was a flash of excitement which sobered on analysis," he told Gizmodo . Optimistically, he said, there was a one in three chance the animal was a Tasmanian tiger.

National Archives of Australia/Wikimedia Commons

The creatures were are also known as Tasmanian wolves due to their similarities to dogs, coyotes, and (of course) wolves. A September 2019 study revealed genetic and skeletal similarities between Tasmanian tigers and modern wolves, too.

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Wikimedia Commons

Unlike most other marsupial species, both male and female Tasmanian tigers had these pouches.

The animal's name, Thylacinus cynocephalus, translates roughly to "dog-headed pouched one."

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According to American anthropologist Richard K. Nelson , "The thylacine is, or was,one of the most extraordinary andimprobable animals on Earth a kangaroo redesigned as a wolf."

Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, Hobart

They could live up to seven years in the wild.

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Wikimedia Commons

Tasmanian tigers had stiff tails like a kangaroo's, short legs, and jaws with 40 to 50 sharp teeth.

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Henry Burrell

The predators liked to hunt at night, either alone or with a partner.

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Wikimedia Commons

The tigers communicated via husky, coughing barks or "terrier-like, double yaps," according to the Tasmanian government.

Smithsonian Institutional Archives,1904

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In 1806, Tasmania's surveyor-general described the tiger this way: "Eyes large and full, black, with a nictant membrane, which gives the animal a savage and malicious appearance."

Wikimedia Commons

In 1888, Tasmania's government started paying trappers and hunters to kill the creatures.

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Hobart Zoo/Wikimedia Commons

Before it went extinct , the Tasmanian tiger had been around Australia, Tasmania, and Papua New Guinea for 4 million years.

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Wikimedia Commons

In May 1930, a farmer named Wilf Batty shot the last wild Tasmanian tigerafter he discovered it in his hen house.

Competition from non-native wild dogs and habitat destruction also contributed to the tigers' decline.

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Wikimedia Commons

The last known Tasmanian tiger, an animal named Benjamin, died at the Beaumaris Zoo in Hobart in September 1936.

Ironically, the Tasmanian government had declared it a protected species just two months prior.

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Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery, Hobart

Benjamin's death marked the extinction of the Tasmanian tiger, though it took the government until 1986 to officially declare the species extinct.

Even before that declaration, in the early 1980s, reports of tiger sightings became so frequentthat the government started equipping wildlife officials with "Thylacine Response Kits." That way, researchers could properly gather pawprints and scat as evidence of potential sightings, the New Yorker reported ,

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Emke Dnes/Wikimedia Commons

In 1999, scientists at the Australian Museum started the Thylacine Cloning Project an attempt to clone a Tasmanian tiger. The research team extracted DNA from female Thylacine tissue that had been preserved in alcohol for more than a century.

But the project was canceled in 2005 after the scientists deemed the DNA unusable.

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Wikimedia Commons

As recently as 2005, the Australian magazine Bulletin offered a reward of 1.25 million Australian dollars for "a live, uninjured animal."

"Many people are just fascinated with this creature," Greg Berns, a scientist at Emory University, told Smithsonian magazine. "It was iconic."

See Also:

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SEE ALSO: The last Tasmanian tiger is thought to have died more than 80 years ago. But 8 recent sightings suggest the creature may not be gone.

WATCH NEXT: People say they're seeing an animal that supposedly went extinct 81 years ago

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