The “extinct” marsupial wolf again hit the lens the cameras

A photo from open sources

Australian Thylacine Awareness Group, engaged in the search and analysis of evidence of modern the existence of the marsupial wolf, recently published on the site “YouTube” is an interesting video. On a three minute record received a video trap in the night forest near Busselton, captured an animal from the canine family, very similar to an extinct, according to official scientific version, tilacin.

By turning on the video below, you can first see animal running to the left of the screen. Then shown supposedly the same creature lurking on the right. By for some unknown reason, both clips are significantly trimmed and demonstrate a mysterious creature only briefly. Skeptics are convinced that in fact in fact, this is an ordinary fox, and representatives of Thylacine Awareness Group “ostensibly specially mounted video so as to create hoax.

However, other users of the World Wide Web believe that it really can be – Tasmanian wolf. The fact is that tilacins tended to move in small leaps, and the animal on record behaves exactly the same way – at least at the beginning of the video. If the fox got into the lens of the video trap, then her paw was clearly deformed. I believe in such a coincidence with with great difficulty since the automatic camera was installed just in the area where the surviving representatives of the legendary species are found, according to rumors, most often.

It’s noteworthy that the video was made back in January 2013, however, only a mysterious record fell into the hands of specialists now. A forester shared it with experts at the end of last month, wishing to remain anonymous.

Recall that the marsupial wolf, driven exclusively on The Australian continent is considered extinct since 1936, when in the local zoo Hobart passed away from old age the last known representative of this species. Despite this, many cryptozoologists and other scholars believe that tilacins can still inhabit impassable Australian jungle. Similar animals periodically fall into the lenses of cameras and camcorders.

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