Huh, so that’s why the Pokemon Dugong is named that, neat.
Forteana
For discussion of everything rum and uncanny, from cryptozoology (mysterious or out-of-place animals), UFOs, high strangeness, etc. Following in the footsteps of Charles Fort and all those inspired by him, like the field of anomalistics.
As this community is on Feddit.uk it takes a British approach to things but it needn't be restricted to the UK - if it's weird and unusual it probably has a home here.
Elsewhere in the Fediverse:
- !xphiles@lemmy.world
- !strangetimes@lemmy.world
- !highstrangeness@lemmy.ml
- !jingszo@lemmy.world
- !unsolvedmysteries@lemmy.world
- !uap@lemmy.world
- !ufos@lemmy.world
- !ufo@lemmy.ml
- !conspiracytheories@lemmyunchained.net
- !conspiracy@kbin.social
- !andfinally@feddit.uk
And no one collected DNA samples,
WTF?
I suppose if it's a remote island they may not have a handy scientist standing by.
You don't need a "scientist" for that. Any medical personnel shoukd have a good chance to sufficiently preserve a piece of the specimen. If they had questions about how to do that, they could always call or radio a hospital or even university - the latter would probably be more than happy to lend support in such a case.
It's possible these were never part of a complete animal. The ocean is huge, and some animals survive simply by being too big and fatty to prey on. These might be the wild equivalent of HeLa cells - a tumor that went feral. Cancer as a self-sustaining organism. This would explain other blobs that were examined (however hastily) and showed a variety of tissues in rough structures but were otherwise incomprehensible. There'd be no puzzle those pieces fit.