Tag Archive for 'sharks'

Antiquarian Books for Beachcombers

Link to Amazon [150x200, 12K]A couple months ago, I picked up a reprint of The Whale Book by Adriaen Coenen (1585) at my local indie bookstore.

In the late 16th century, Dutch beachcomber Adriaen Coenen scanned the beaches of Holland for interesting marine material and produced several illustrated manuscripts of his findings, covering anything from the commonplace herring to the exotic moonfish. Coenen’s work contains the earliest European pictures of whales, naïve but easily identifiable, which makes it a rare visual and textual source for the natural world of his day.

Link to Koninklijke Bibliotheek (KB) [150x200, 12K]

You can thumb through a detailed, Flash-based facsimile over at the Koninklijke Bibliotheek (click on Blader in het Visboek). Reading the commentary in the reprint, it’s interesting seeing the transition from medieval murk to rational enlightenment. Today technology makes the oceans less opaque to exploration, but back then most knowledge came from whatever rot washed up on the shore. Consequently, it was easy to get a distorted vision of what many sea creatures really looked like.

Link to National Diet Library [200x150, 12K]
It is also interesting to compare the European naturalist’s depictions to those from Japan. Over at Pink Tentacle, they link to the works of Kurimoto Tanshuu (1756 - 1834), who sketched wildlife during the Edo period. Japan’s National Diet Library makes hi-res scans available of these original works.

Coenen and Tanshuu worked some 200 hundred years apart and both seemed to take some liberty with their depictions. But Tanshuu’s skill and level of detail is compelling. Be sure to check out the comments on Metafilter for some translations of the Diet website.

New white shark at Monterey Bay Aquarium

Download a White Shark Photo. Courtesy of MBA (c) 2006 [200x150, 4K]Monterey Bay Aquarium has a new white shark (Carcharodon carcharias) and this time it’s a male. He was captured by MBA’s husbandry staff a couple weeks ago and it’s now on display in their Outer Bay exhibit. Wish I could get there to see this.

For only the second time, there’s a healthy young white shark in our Outer Bay exhibit. 5 feet 8 inches long and 104 pounds, he arrived on August 31 and is making himself right at home in the million-gallon exhibit.

White sharks are notoriously difficult to keep in captivity. MBA had a lot of success with a female specimen they kept for 198 days back in 2004. I reckon they’ll keep this male on exhibit for a couple of months too before he’s released. It’s a good opportunity to learn more about this species and educate the public about sharks.

UPDATE: Here’s some interesting links from the last time MBA had a shark. Did not realize there was a controversy.

Daily Shark! Cartoon

onewhale.com cartoon from Australian cartoonist Phil Watson, &#copy;2006 [200x150, 12K]My thanks go out to Ly Williams. I attended her Shark Crime Investigators session at NMEA 2006 today, wherein she introduced me to onewhale.com, home of 129 shark cartoons & other creative stuff from Australian cartoonist Phil Watson. There’s even Shaaark! widget to deliver a cartoon to your desktop every day.

Rare goblin shark caught

Rare goblin shark caught at mouth of Tokyo Bay

[64x54, 4K]A goblin shark (Mitsukurina owstoni), considered a living fossil by scientists, was caught by a trawler of the coast of Miura, Japan. The 1.3-meter, 4-kg fish is a rare bottom-dwelling species of shark. Catching the shark in the relatively shallow waters around the mouth of Tokyo Bay is considered highly unusual. (via)

UPDATE: New video of rare goblin shark (8 February 2007).