the "Headline That Caught My Attention or the WTF" thread

Meet Methuselah, the World’s Oldest Living Aquarium Fish

The nonagenarian lungfish has lived in a tank in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco since 1938.

A large fish lying on the sand of an aquarium, with a plant draping over it and smaller fish swimming above.

Methuselah, an Australian lungfish, in her tank at the Steinhart Aquarium at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco. Credit...Jim Wilson/The New York Times

In the fall of 1938, the Golden Gate Bridge had been open for a year, the United States was still recovering from the Great Depression and Franklin D. Roosevelt was in his second term as president. World War II had yet to begin.

And in the cargo hold of a steamship, a young lungfish arrived from Australia to a new home at an aquarium in San Francisco.

She’s still alive today.

In a delightful piece of California trivia, what is believed to be the world’s oldest fish in human care can be found in Golden Gate Park, at the Steinhart Aquarium of the California Academy of Sciences.

I recently met Methuselah, as the fish is known, and can attest that she’s a particularly charming celebrity.

With a torpedo-shaped body covered in mossy green scales, she glides through her tank at a glacial pace that seems only appropriate for her advanced age. She pokes her flattened snout out of the water when her caretaker offers prawns, earthworms or her favorite food, figs. She eats out of humans’ hands, and sometimes even enjoys a gentle belly rub or a tickle on her chin.

“She’s a pretty content, happy fish, I’m going to say,” Brenda Melton, the aquarium’s director of animal care and well-being, told me. “She’s been around a long time. She’s seen more than any of us at Steinhart Aquarium. We’re lucky to have her.”

The staff knew the date when Methuselah arrived at the aquarium, so it’s been clear for years that she was at least an octogenarian. And she assumed the unofficial title of world’s oldest aquarium fish in 2017 when Granddad, another Australian lungfish, died at the Shedd Aquarium in Chicago at age 95.

But it’s only recently that a scientific analysis of Methuselah’s full age has been performed, because traditional methods for doing that are invasive and for the most part feasible only post-mortem. Using a new DNA-dating technique, though, Australian scientists tested a tiny sample of one of Methuselah’s fins and concluded that she’s probably about 92, with an upper estimate of 101. The results are being officially released today.

The news is especially meaningful for its timing: This month, the aquarium turns 100, so its most beloved fish might well “be celebrating her centennial birthday along with Steinhart,” Melton told me. (If you’re interested, there are a bunch of events around San Francisco in September in honor of the aquarium’s milestone.)

The Australian scientists, who plan to publish their full findings later this year, studied samples from 30 other lungfish living at institutions in the United States and Australia. Steinhart’s two other lungfish were found to be about 54 and 50 years old.

“I don’t know that we truly know how long they can live,” Kylie Lev, a curator at the aquarium, told me as we peered through the glass, watching the younger two lungfish flap their fins as they swam through their tank. Bowhead whales, rougheye rockfish and some giant tortoises can live for roughly 200 years, but even so, lungfish probably rank among the longest-living species in the world.

And they’re unusual. They are native to only a handful of slow-moving rivers in Queensland and, as their name suggests, have a lung that allows them to supplement the oxygen they get through their gills.

Lungfish are primitive creatures that have been around for 380 million years and are the closest living relatives to the first fishes that crawled out of the sea. In other words, lungfish represent the evolutionary link between fish and amphibians. Steinhart staff members call them living fossils.

Methuselah may not be quite as old as the biblical figure Methuselah — Noah’s grandfather, who lived for 969 years — but in many ways, she is truly ancient.
 

Denver is one of a number of liberal cities that have been hit by a surge of migrants. Most prominently, New York City Mayor Eric Adams has warned that the migrant crisis facing his city could cost up to $12 billion by 2025 without federal action.

The mayor of the self-described "sanctuary" city has warned that the influx could "destroy" the city.
 

World leaders descended on New York City in gas-guzzling SUVs this week for the latest round of United Nations climate meetings where they warned of the risks fossil fuels pose to humanity.

"Our focus here is on climate solutions — and our task is urgent. Humanity has opened the gates of hell," U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in his opening remarks Wednesday.

However, images captured by Fox News Digital show that leaders overwhelmingly traveled to the U.N. meetings this week in traditional gas-powered vehicles with internal combustion engines. Leaders like Biden and Guterres have repeatedly advocated for policies to reduce transportation sector emissions and promote electric vehicle adoption.


So how did the world leaders get here? I know there were some strong storms in the Atlantic, so if by wind power, I guess they made good time.

Please do not say private or commercial jets. That would be terrible for the environment. :ROFLMAO:
 

NBC News 4 reported Monday that the FBI and IRS criminal investigators are attempting to determine if Menendez or his wife had taken up to $400,000 worth of gold bars from Fred Daibes, a New Jersey developer and former bank chairman, or his associates in a swap for Menendez reaching out to the Justice Department to aid the "admitted felon" accused of banking crimes.



Listen, this happens etc, but I just had to notice the "prize" came in the form of gold bars. Just too funny to pass up. I mean, you do need gold to just fill the gas tank, but really, hard to move. Not like cash in my mind.
 
Alligators don't take kindly to trespassers....

 
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