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Created 5 months ago · 8 comments· 0 likes
Google Imagen 3.0 Fast
Latimeria chalumnae
The Coelacanth was known to science only from fossil records until 1938, leading to its commonly being described as a "living fossil". Fossils similar to the modern coelacanth date to 400 million years ago, and were presumed to have become extinct 60 million years ago at the end of the Cretaceous period.
Although coelacanths were known to Comoro island fishermen who caught gombessa occasionally, it was studied formally for the first time by ichthyologist JLB Smith who gave it the nickname "Old Fourlegs" and the formal name Latimeria chalumnae to honour Margaret Latimer, the curator of the East London Museum who provisionally identified a caught specimen.
Until 2013, coelacanths were thought to represent the oldest ancestor of four-legged land animals (tetrapods), but DNA studies have concluded that lungfishes are more closely related.
This image shows a coelacanth swimming in the ocean's depths. The fish has limb-like fins, a distinctive tail, large eyes, and dark blue scales with light specks, in a style reminiscent of marine life art.
Created by Charlie on Aug 5, 2025 using the Google Imagen 3.0 Fast AI image generator model.
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Yeeha! Another SA 'first'! Thanks for reminding me of that ...
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oeee nice job !! We had this time 190 wild life entries and one winner.. I hope to see you again in the next challenge ...
Winner @Shadowin