Harriet, 176-year-old giant tortoise, dies Sat Jun 24, 4:14 AM ET AP - Sat Jun 24, 12:05 AM ET In this undated handout photo released by the Australia Zoo, crocodile
hunter Steve Irwin, right, and his wife Terri with Harriet, a Giant Galapagos
Land Tortoise, at Australia Zoo, about 70 km (44 miles) north of Brisbane.
Harriet, who died on Friday, June 23, 2006 at the age of 176 years is said to
be the oldest animal in captivity ,according to the Guinness book of Records.
(AP Photo/Australia Zoo, HO) SYDNEY, Australia - A 176-year-old tortoise believed to be one of the
world's oldest living creatures has died in an Australian zoo. ADVERTISEMENT The giant tortoise, known as Harriet, died at the Queensland-based
Australia Zoo owned by "Crocodile Hunter" Steve Irwin and his wife
Terri. Irwin said he considered Harriet a member of the family. "Harriet has been a huge chunk of the Irwin family's life,"
Irwin said Saturday. "She is possibly one of the oldest living creatures
on the planet and her passing today is not only a great loss for the world
but a very sad day for my family. She was a grand old lady." Senior veterinarian Jon Hanger told the Australian Broadcasting Corp.
on Friday that Harriet died of heart failure. Harriet was long reputed to have been one of three tortoises taken
from the Galapagos Islands by
Charles Darwin on his historic 1835 voyage aboard the HMS Beagle. However, historical records, while suggestive, don't prove the claim.
And some scientists have cast doubt on the story, with DNA tests confirming
Harriet's age but showing she came from an island that Darwin never visited. According to local legend, Harriet was just five years old and
probably no bigger than a dinner plate when she was taken from the Galapagos
to Britain. The tortoise spent a few years in Britain before being moved to the
Brisbane Botanic Gardens in Australia's tropical Queensland state in the
mid-1800s. There she was mistaken for a male and nicknamed Harry, according
to Australia Zoo, which later bought the 330-pound tortoise in 1987. Harriet was believed to be the world's oldest living tortoise, and one
of its oldest living creatures. Despite her longevity, however, Harriet is
not the world's oldest known tortoise. That title was awarded by the Guinness Book of World Records to Tui
Malila, a Madagascar radiated tortoise that was presented to the royal family
of Tonga by British explorer Captain James Cook in the 1770s. It died in 1965
at the ripe age of 188. |