Meet Ming. Ming the clam:
Unfortunately Ming is no longer with us. He is dead. To be more precise, he was killed.
But what made Ming so special?
It all started in 2006 when Ming was dredged off the northern coast of Iceland in 2006.
Sometime in 2007, researchers announced that the clam was 405 years old making it one of the oldest living animals we had ever discovered. Unfortunately the whole opening process of the shell to measure his age killed poor Ming.
The irony? The dating process that killed our little friend was both unnecessary and erroneous!
Later in 2013 researchers used a different method that relied only on the patterns of the outer shell and determined the actual age of the clam to be 507 years of age and the time it was caught.
This officially made Ming the oldest individual (non-clonal) animal ever discovered.
In other words, we could have the answer without killing Ming. Other researchers have also confirmed that the second method used to determine Ming's age was more accurate.
What a sad and meaningless way to go 😑 Who knows, if it wasn't for human stupidity curiosity Ming could have still been with us.
RIP
References & Further Reading
Posted Using INLEO
The rewards earned on this comment will go directly to the people( @davideownzall ) sharing the post on Reddit as long as they are registered with @poshtoken. Sign up at https://hiveposh.com. Otherwise, rewards go to the author of the blog post.
Thanks @davideownzall
That poor clam deserved a share
That's a sad and unnecessary end to such an old creature... If he was that old I would bet he has some buddies down there that are much, much older. Cold water creatures seem to live a lot longer than those in the warm water. It puts the Greenland Shark to shame only living 400 years on average!
!BBH
!DOOK
Well... The shark is cooler 😂
!pimp !duo
You just got DUO from @trumpman.
They have 1/1 DUO calls left.
Learn all about DUO here.
(In other words, we could have the answer without killing Ming) Exactly human stupidity , is that sometimes in its eagerness it does NOT do things correctly, but when it is too late, complaints and remorse arrive, well in some people the word remorse does NOT apply, we human beings are barbarians.
hahaha,Don't tell me I'm wrong.
We go again. Mr Trumpman with one of his favorites. I understand with you since it was not caught for meat purpose its a tragic experience. That's always the roughness of science, learning through mistake and something( sometimes someone) has to be the victim.
It is what it is
hahahaha
It's sad that the "oldest" living animal was killed, but Ming was the oldest we had found. I think there's a good chance that there's an older clam out there and maybe it's better if we didn't find it 😅 !BBH
We must find it. And kill it!
!pimp
Not all researchers are scientists. Some should stay just fishermen...
!LUV
!pimp
(1/1) sent you LUV. | tools | discord | community | HiveWiki | <>< daily@trumpman, @steemmillionaire
RIP to the clam. I guess they have to measure the age somehow, and technology wasn't at the stage yet.
!pimp
That’s what humanity does it kills things….. it’s a cruel world.
!pimp
!pimp
An other example of human stupidity, these scientists have been so imbecils
Could have been studied how it survived that much, and I wonder how long it would have last
!PIZZA
!pimp
That's so sad, I wonder how long it could've lived if it didn't get killed :(
!BBH
We will never know 😑
!pimp
!hiqvote
@trumpman, the HiQ Smart Bot has recognized your request (1/3) and will start the voting trail.
In addition, @trumpman gets !PIMP from @hiq.redaktion.
Discord. And don't forget to vote HiQs fucking Witness! 😻For further questions, check out https://hiq-hive.com or join our
When humans intervene with nature...ugh 😥
!BBH
!pimp
WTF... "Uh, maybe the oldest living being alive! Let's whack its shell to make sure!"
🤦♂🤦♂🤦♂
Poor clam indeed. That's why we must pray for the conversion of all sinners everyday so we would become better people e.g. better caretakers of nature. 🙏
$PIZZA slices delivered:
(2/15) @davideownzall tipped @trumpman
The story of Ming the clam is indeed a poignant reminder of the delicate balance between scientific exploration and conservation.
This incident underscores the importance of balancing our quest for knowledge with the responsibility to preserve the very subjects we study.