Haunting Final Footage of Now-Extinct Animals Reminds Us What’s at Stake

Some well-known extinct species, such as the dodo, have been gone for centuries, meaning that there are no photos of videos that show us what they really looked like. But there are dozens of other creatures that have disappeared over the last 150 years. Though lower in quality than what we’re used to today, several of them have at least been recorded by media. While convenient, the footage, much of it in black and white, is a haunting reminder of the way humans have affected animal life and their habitats since the Industrial Revolution.

A self-proclaimed “internet history museum” known as Time Capsule Tales compiled footage of recently extinct animals in a thread on X (formerly Twitter). Some, such as the quagga, a subspecies of the common zebra, were photographed in 1870 and were extinct by 1883—some 60 years after the invention of photography in 1822. The tarpan, a free-ranging horse subspecies of the Eurasian steppe, met a similar fate. Its only surviving photograph was taken in 1884, 25 years before the last individual died in captivity in 1909.

In addition to still images, Time Capsule Tales has included some restored clips of species that are no longer around. The Layson rail, a flightless bird native to Hawai’i that went extinct in the 1940s, is seen prancing around what looks like a rocky beach. And a pair of heath hens, extinct in 1932, can be seen having a “booming” match in a silent film by the Massachusetts Department of Conservation.

The most heartbreaking, however, are those whose likenesses were recorded in high quality color images. Such is the case of the Western Black Rhinoceros who went extinct in 2011. And just a year later, the Pinta Island tortoise known as Lonesome George, the last of his species, died in 2012.

As harrowing as the compilation is, it’s not only a valuable resource to learn about animals that are no longer in existence, but also a warning. Animals that are endangered today could only exist in photographs and videos if we don’t protect them and the ecosystems they call home now. We can’t change the past, but we can always do something about the future.

Time Capsule Tales compiled the last remaining footage of some of the animals that have gone extinct in the last 150 years.

While convenient, the footage, much of it in black and white, is a haunting reminder of the way humans have affected animal life and their habitats.

As harrowing as the compilation is, it’s not only a valuable resource to learn about animals that are no longer in existence, but also a warning.

Animals that are endangered right now could soon only exist in photographs and videos, if we don’t protect them and the ecosystems they call home today.

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After Nearly Going Extinct, Famed Giant Tortoises Return to the Galápagos Islands

16-Million-Year-Old Skull of Extinct Species of Giant Dolphin Discovered in Peru

Whale Thought To Have Gone Extinct Nearly 200 Years Ago Spotted off Coast of Massachusetts

Rare Saharan Antelope Is Brought Back From the Brink of Extinction

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