Great Auk
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Owner:
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Bearly Thare
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Released:
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Sunday, December 15, 2013
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Origin:
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Alberta, Canada
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Recently Spotted:
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Unknown Location
This is not collectible.
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To travel where the my friends are and beyond. Travel safely between caches and make it to the earths most southern tip.
****After watching Discovery Mama Bear and I decided to add this lil critter to our TB family. The Name? Its all in the Entomology------->
The word "Penguin" first appears in the 16th century as a synonym for Great Auk.[1] When European explorers discovered what are today known as penguins in the Southern Hemisphere, they noticed their similar appearance to the Great Auk of the Northern Hemisphere, and named them after this bird, although they are not closely related.[2]
The etymology of the word "penguin" is still debated. The English word is not apparently of French,[1] Breton[3] or Spanish[4] origin (the latter two are attributed to the French word pingouin "auk"), but first appears in English or Dutch.[1]
Some dictionaries suggest a derivation from Welsh pen, "head" and gwyn, "white", including the Oxford English Dictionary,[5] the American Heritage Dictionary,[6] the Century Dictionary[6] and Merriam-Webster,[7] on the basis that the name was originally applied to the Great Auk, either because it was found on White Head Island (Welsh Pen Gwyn) in Newfoundland, or because it had white circles around its eyes (though the head was black).
An alternative etymology links the word to Latin pinguis which means "fat". In Dutch the alternative word for penguin is 'fat-goose' ('vetgans' see: Dutch wiki or dictionaries under Pinguïn), and would indicate this bird received its name from its appearance.
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