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  2. Great auk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_auk

    Great auk in winter plumage (No. 24, one of four in existence) and the internal organs of the last two great auks, Natural History Museum of Denmark Following the bird's extinction, remains of the great auk increased dramatically in value, and auctions of specimens created intense interest in Victorian Britain, where 15 specimens are now ...

  3. Geirfuglasker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geirfuglasker

    The rough surf around the island usually made it inaccessible to humans, and one of the last refuges for the flightless bird the great auk (which was also called "garefowl" — "geirfugl" in Icelandic). In a volcanic eruption in 1830 this rock submerged. The surviving great auks moved to a nearby island called Eldey and were wiped out by humans ...

  4. Geirfuglasker (Vestmannaeyjar) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geirfuglasker_(Vestmannaeyjar)

    ' Great Auk Stack '), [2] or Freykja (), [citation needed] is a small, uninhabited island in the Vestmannaeyjar archipelago. [1] [2] Geirfuglasker is located approximately 30 kilometres (19 mi) off Iceland's southwestern coast. [1] [2] The island hosted one of the last known colony of great auks, which thrived given its inaccessibility to humans.

  5. Funk Island - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Funk_Island

    The second visit of a scientific nature occurred in 1863, when Thomas Molloy, the United States Consul to Newfoundland, received permission from the Government of Newfoundland to go to the Funk Island to mine remains of the great auk. Thirty-five tons of the decomposed organic material was secured by Molloy's expedition.

  6. Pinguinus alfrednewtoni - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinguinus_alfrednewtoni

    Pinguinus alfrednewtoni is an extinct species of auk related to the great auk known from fossils that were discovered in the Pliocene Yorktown Formation of North Carolina.Like the great auk, it was a large flightless diving bird that used its wings to propel itself forward underwater.

  7. List of extinct animals of the British Isles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_extinct_animals_of...

    Only a small number of the listed species are globally extinct (most famously the Irish elk, great auk and woolly mammoth). Most of the remainder survive to some extent outside the islands. The list includes introduced species only in cases where they were able to form self-sustaining colonies for a time.

  8. Solsem cave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solsem_cave

    A small number of human-made cultural artefacts made of stone and bone were found in the cave: a 5cm-long figure depicting a duck or great auk, [10] a 9cm-long harpoon fragment made of bone or antlers, [11] an articulated animal bone shaped with a human face, [2] [12] and the knuckle of a seagull that may have been used as a whistle. [2] [13]

  9. Stac an Armin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stac_an_Armin

    Mounted great auk, Natural History Museum, London. On Stac an Armin, in July, 1840, the last great auk (Pinguinus impennis) seen in Britain [17] was caught and killed. A then 75-year-old inhabitant of St Kilda told Henry Evans, a frequent visitor to the archipelago, that he and his father-in-law with another man had caught a "garefowl ...