Historical Thylacine Photos&Films

Indeed; I'm aware of that. The point I was making was that the other thylacine didn't arrive at the zoo; she died on board the ship.

Sorry no. The photographer died in 1963 so his photos are still in copyright.
you know that they are in a guide which is public so this doesnt really matter
 
Each of these guides includes a photograph, taken by David Seth-Smith, depicting a thylacine in the North Mammal House. There are three separate photos in all, as the guides for 1930 and 1931 duplicate the photo in the 1926 guide. These three photos are different to the two photos attached to your post.

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To the best of my knowledge, the only photo depicting the Zoo's last Thylacine is the second one shown above, with her yawning and a drainpipe behind her. Of seperate interest is that it is also one of only two photos that appears to show a Thylacine in a thicker seasonal(?) coat.

At least one of David Seth-Smith's photos show an animal with a damaged foreleg- this was certainly an earlier specimen and not the last one. I think these guidebooks during the last ZSL Thylacine's life for some reason probably all featured 'stock' photos of previous specimens and which all are already well known to Thylacine researchers.
 
To the best of my knowledge, the only photo depicting the Zoo's last Thylacine is the second one shown above, with her yawning and a drainpipe behind her. Of seperate interest is that it is also one of only two photos that appears to show a Thylacine in a thicker seasonal(?) coat.

At least one of David Seth-Smith's photos show an animal with a damaged foreleg- this was certainly an earlier specimen and not the last one. I think these guidebooks during the last ZSL Thylacine's life for some reason probably all featured 'stock' photos of previous specimens and which all are already well known to Thylacine researchers.
i know which photos he is talking about and they werent taken in the North Mammals House,only the last thylacine of the zoo was photographed there. All the other photos were either taken in the Kangaroo dens or in the Lemur House of the Zoo and they are older that 1926-1931
 
i know which photos he is talking about and they werent taken in the North Mammals House,only the last thylacine of the zoo was photographed there. All the other photos were either taken in the Kangaroo dens or in the Lemur House of the Zoo and they are older that 1926-1931
When you are making a new guidebook, its often easier to just use existing stock photos of a past animal in the collection, rather than bother to try and get good shots of the current one...
 
When you are making a new guidebook, its often easier to just use existing stock photos of a past animal in the collection, rather than bother to try and get good shots of the current one...
is known that there are only 22 known photos from the London Zoo. You can check Dr. Sleightholme's paper "A Catalogue of the Thylacine captured in Film'' which lists 113 from the 118 known photos of the animal
 
Of course it's not impossible that the guidebook reproduced some photos of earlier zoo thylacines but I think it's more likely that the guidebook used photographs of the thylacine currently living at the zoo.
I have now looked into this in more detail. Apologies: the photos in the guidebook are of earlier zoo thylacines not the individual living at the zoo between 1926 and 1931.
 
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