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  2. Great auk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_auk

    On the North American side, eider down initially was preferred, but once the eiders were nearly driven to extinction in the 1770s, down collectors switched to the great auk at the same time that hunting for food, fishing bait, and oil decreased. [50] [19]: 329 The great auk had disappeared from Funk Island by 1800.

  3. File:GreatAukMap.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:GreatAukMap.svg

    Date: 2010: Source: Own work using: Map in Symington Grieves 1855 map in his book on the Great Auk. BirdLife International. 2016. Pinguinus impennis.

  4. Frederic Augustus Lucas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederic_Augustus_Lucas

    Frederic A. Lucas in 1911. Frederic Augustus Lucas (March 25, 1852 – February 9, 1929) was a zoologist and taxidermist who served as a curator of the Brooklyn Museum and director of the American Museum of Natural History.

  5. The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sixth_Extinction:_An...

    The great auk was a large flightless bird that lived in the Northern Hemisphere. It had a large, intricately grooved beak. When the first settlers arrived in Iceland, the auk population was probably in the millions. However, the settlers found the auks to be “very good and nourishing meat.”

  6. Bird extinction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_extinction

    A taxidermized Great Auk The great auk (or, as it has been nicknamed, the “Penguin of the North”) was a flightless marine bird that inhabited the North Atlantic Ocean and its nearby islands. Its range once extended to the continental United States and Europe. [ 21 ]

  7. Joseph Banks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Banks

    [10] [11] Banks also documented 34 species of birds, including the great auk, which became extinct in 1844. On 7 May, he noted a large number of "penguins" swimming around the ship on the Grand Banks, and a specimen he collected in Chateau Bay, Labrador, was later identified as the great auk. [12]

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  9. Errol Fuller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Errol_Fuller

    The Great Auk. Southborough, Kent: Errol Fuller. ISBN 0-9533553-0-6. The book of more than 450 pages is entirely devoted to the extinct great auk (Pinguinus impennis). It holds, apart from detailed descriptions of the history, ecology, habits and distribution of the "garefowl" (an old English name), a great many illustrations – often dating ...