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Mysteryman
Came across an what was once thought to be an extinct species. They are these marine animals that look like huge, wrinkled manatees. They are still being seen by Russian fisherman.

From one source:

The Steller's sea cow was discovered in the arctic waters of the Bering Strait in 1741 by Captain Bering's stranded crew. Find this area on your map and color it black. The sea cow was much larger than manatees and dugongs. It grew up to 35 feet long and weighed up to three-and-a-half tons. This is as big as a large truck! Steller's sea cows did not have any teeth; they ate the marine algae that grows in the shallow waters of the Bering Sea. Unlike manatees and dugongs, sea cows were able to live in very cold water. They were slow-moving and had no fear of humans. This made it easy for Captain Bering's crew and other visitors to this area to kill them. Hunters ate the meat and used the tough skin for making boat covers and shoe leather. They hunted the sea cow so relentlessly that it vanished completely. In 1768, less than 30 years after it had been discovered, the defenseless sea cow became extinct.

From another source:

To the crew of Vitus Bering's ship St. Peter, shipwrecked off the coast of Kamchatka in early November 1741, the huge, easily-hunted sea cow was a godsend that helped most of them to survive and return home. Within 3 decades, though, their countrymen had hunted sea cows to extinction.

Steller's sea cows were the largest, and the only cold-water members of the scientific order Sirenia, to which manatees and dugongs also belong. Although they look rather like whales or sea lions, the order's closest relatives are elephants and hyrax. Feeding on sea grasses (in the case of the Steller's sea cow, primarily kelp), they are the only aquatic herbivorous mammals. Historically, about 1,500 - 2,000 members of the species known taxonomically as Hydrodamalis gigas ("giant sea calf") lived in the shallow waters off the coasts of Alaska and the Russian Far East, centred in the Commander Islands. Although they undoubtedly faced some hunting pressure from the Aleut and Eskimos, both of whom were expert whalers, their population was probably quite stable.
Georg Wilhelm Steller, the naturalist and physician on Bering's expedition, recorded the first, and best, descriptions of the sea cow. They were up to 28 feet long, and weighed as much as 7-8 tons; drifting just below the surface, they were often mistaken for overturned boats. With a heavy bone stucture, they had huge midsections, a disproportionately small head, and a large, flat, twin-lobed tail. The wrinkly black hide was about an inch thick and very tough, covering a fat layer between 4 and 9 inches thick - the combination provided protection from the cold, pounding by surf, and rubbing against ice and rocks. It did not provide sufficient protection from Russian weapons, though - only one out of five sea cows hit by harpoon or rifle fire was retrieved, but the majority escaped only to die at sea from their injuries.

Their external ear openings were only about the size of a pea, but the internal ear bones were very large, so excellent hearing can be assumed, although when they were feeding, they would completely ignore even a boat. Steller sometimes described the sea cow as if they were farm animals:

These animals, like cattle, live in herds at sea, males and females going together and driving the young before them about the shore. They are occupied with nothing else but their food. The back and half the body are always seen out of the water.They eat in the same manner as the land animals, with a slow forward movement. They tear the seaweed from the rocks with the feet and chew it without cessation... During the eating they move the head and neck like an ox, and after the lapse of a few minutes they lift the head out of the water and draw fresh air with a rasping and snorting sound after the manner of horses.
During the ten months that Steller and the other survivors of Bering's crew spent on what would later be named Bering Island, Steller was able to gather considerable information on the habits of the sea cow, as well as an extensive set of measurements of various parts of the sea cow's anatomy, allowing scientists to reconstruct the animal around skeletons that have survived. Hans Rothauscher has posted an excellent site, in both English and German, showing the progression and possible errors in such reconstructions of the sea cow.

The meat of the sea cow, which was most often referred to as being similar to veal, remained fresh for much longer than any other available meat source, making it extremely valuable to the Russian sailors and hunters. The fat was described as tasting like sweet almond-oil. Although Bering's crew only killed their first sea cow six weeks before their escape in August 1742, the meat was crucial in restoring their strength during the final stages of building a new boat from the wreckage of the St. Peter. When they left, they took a supply of meat and fat, and stories of the incredible riches of the islands for fur hunters. Those hunters flocked to the area, and in 1768, explorer Martin Sauer entered in his journal an account of the death of the last known sea cow.
Manatees and dugongs are the focus of worldwide conservation efforts to ensure that they don't share the fate of the Steller's sea cow. There is still a chance, though, that the sea cow isn't extinct. In the years since their generally-accepted extinction in 1768, there have been occasional reports suggesting that small colonies may have survived by moving to areas away from the Russian hunting grounds. In the mid-1800s, such reports were not unusual, and as recently as 1962, the crew of a Russian whaler reported seeing six animals that resembled sea cows, feeding in a bay in the Gulf of Anadyr. In 1977, a fisherman in Kamchatka reported actually touching a drifting animal that matched the description of a sea cow. But for now, those reports are just considered to be rumours, fuel for yet another Northern myth.

Links:

http://www.sirenian.org/stellers.html

http://www.cep.unep.org/kids/cb07.html

http://www.explorenorth.com/library/yafeatures/bl-seacow.htm

http://www.skullsunlimited.com/stellers_sea_cow.html

http://www.savethemanatee.org/sirenian.htm

Pictures:

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Conspiracy
i think every known "Extinct" animal since the early centuries like 1500's all may still be alive.. animals arent stupid they know how to hide pretty good, because they got whole areas to hide in and stuff like jungles, forests, big caves, oceans etc, these animals after awhile of being slaughtered must knew that they should hide and now thier scared of humans thats why so few reports are being stated.

Thats just my idea.
snuffypuffer
You know, this may not be entirely pc to say, but some animals may just need to be extinct.
Walken
Woah! Great thread!

Those pics are cool. I wish we had pics of actual sightings though.

Thanks for shareing.
Malek
Isn't human an animal?

Race disappear because the human kill them. That is shameful for us! I say that the nature shall take her revenge one day.

Sadly I don't think races get used to us, I don't think they can hide that good of human. We are unfortunately terrific predators.
SilverCougar
Stellar has a sea cow?
Canadian Rottweiler
Looks the same as an elephant seal blink.gif
Canadian Rottweiler
Elephant seals...
Mysteryman
Never got back to this thread.

Yeah - this Sea Cow is very closely related to that of a manatee and a dugong, and even as you said CR, like an elephant seal. I wouldn't get to crazy about it because since it resembles it so much, it probably is one of the closest relatives to a manatee or a dugong -
Seraphina
QUOTE
Stellar has a sea cow?


Aww crying.gif you beat me!
DarkSinister
hahaha.

That thing is huge though!
Mysteryman
Just like a manatee and a dugong - their all huge - the whole family is!
Canadian Rottweiler
Lol the head of your sea cow doesn't look like that of a manatee or a dugong.Moreso resembles the elephant seal.Sea cow might even be a nickname for the elephant seal...
Walken
Humans are mammals, uh-huh.
MJB222
That thing is huge! w00t.gif Kinda makes me sad to hear about yet another animal extint.
Mysteryman
QUOTE(Canadian Rottweiler @ Mar 10 2005, 01:53 AM)
Lol the head of your sea cow doesn't look like that of a manatee or a dugong.Moreso resembles the elephant seal.Sea cow might even be a nickname for the elephant seal...
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I certainly agree with you on the resemblence of an elephant seal and for all we know as you said, it could be the elephant seal. But it is said that it is closely related to that of a manatee and a dugong. It may not look like it, but their basically in the same family.
Apocalyptic Cryptid
i love dugongs manatees and Sea Cows they are all so CUTE!! but they i mean could live hidden they live in the ocean.. so just cuzz we havent seen them for a while so they are "extinct" doesnt mean they are really
Walken
True, but I doubt it. If that were the case, I think we would've seen them by now. Then again, they may've adapted to avoid us for survival. Maybe, just maybe...
Mysteryman
The Dugong:
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