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Thylaman
Australia
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 24 ส.ค. 2023
This channel is for content obtained during my search for the Thylacine. Videos do not contain Thylacine evidence unless such evidence has been obtained during a search or hunt. All videos are filmed and based in South Australia. If you don't believe in the existence of Thylacines, that's ok, I'm not asking you to believe. Just enjoy the content of animals, the outdoors, the adventure, the use of thermal imagery, trail cameras, and the possible Thylacine evidence found during my endless quest, searching for the world's most elusive creature, the Thylacine!
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#14) : Tiger Plains Times (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman and Marsupial Wolf take a thermal search tour in the Murraylands Plains and Mid North. Starting from Tiger Plains and finishing at World's End Ranges. Lots of interesting encounters with a variety of species.
มุมมอง: 210
วีดีโอ
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#13) : Mid North Marbles (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 32328 วันที่ผ่านมา
Thylaman and Marsupial Wolf explore the Mid North tackling 100km of mixed landscapes using a thermal monocular, searching for Thylacines. A few surprises along the way...
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#12) : This and That (Zoo Animals)
มุมมอง 242หลายเดือนก่อน
A walk through the Gorge Wildlife Park South Australia. The HD thermal monocular used to film these animals shows exquisite detail at close range when in focus. Indulge in zoo animals through the eye of a thermal camera. Thanks to the Gorge Wildlife Park for the care and conservation of these animals.
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#11) : Possums on Parade (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 100หลายเดือนก่อน
A surveillance tour of the Barossa Valley and the Adelaide Plains covering 125km. Incorporating two rivers, woodlands, ranges and plains. Thylaman, Marsupial Wolf and the Bone Crusher take to the backroads using HD thermal to search for Thylacines, filming anything that's out there!
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#10) : Fox only Fans (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 5692 หลายเดือนก่อน
A compilation of foxes filmed in South Australia from 2022-2024. Comprising trail cameras set in the Adelaide Hills and Adelaide Plains followed by ambush raids with a HD Thermal monocular in the mighty Mazda. There's also some encounters on foot. All filmed while searching for the elusive Thylacine. Sly, cunning, playful, a well-adapted mesopredator. Foxes have a few similarities to a Thylacin...
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#9) : Obvious or Oblivious (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 1893 หลายเดือนก่อน
Thylaman returns to a familiar site at first light on the Adelaide Plains searching for Thylacine with the thermal monocular. 3 years ago, this site presented plausible Thylacine evidence in the form of prints, hairs and an ambiguous trail camera video. There's been no such evidence found at this site since. Will they return? Lets see what's there...
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#8) : Wading through Wombats (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 2903 หลายเดือนก่อน
Thanks to Wombats SA, Thylaman, Marsupial Wolf and the Bone Crusher search the Moorunde Wildlife Sanctuary for Thylacines. Many Thylacine sighting reports have come from surrounding areas over the years, so it made sense to search here. With 3 cameras constantly recording (Dashcam, IR Trail Camera roof-mounted and Thermal Monocular), we trawl the Sanctuary for 4 hours at night. We scan the Rang...
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#7) : Flinders Fantasy (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 5254 หลายเดือนก่อน
Epic tour of the Flinders Ranges searching for Thylacines with Thylaman, Marsupial Wolf and the Roo Keeper. There's tripod thermal and a day tour of some quintessential places the Flinders Rangers has to offer. Glass Gorge, Parachilna, Brachina Gorge, Bunyeroo Valley, Razorback Lookout and Wilpena Pound. Dawn the mighty Mazda put to the test with some climbs, crossings and light off-roading. Wi...
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#6) : Journey from Johnburgh (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 6725 หลายเดือนก่อน
A comprehensive thermal search in the Southern Flinders Ranges South Australia. Thylaman and Marsupial Wolf take to the back roads in search of Thylacines, covering over 100kms incorporating plains, ranges, creeks and a river. Interesting scenes and events, one of which a particular kangaroo is followed for over 5 minutes @ 40-50km/h, but which one is it? Challenges were faced along the way. It...
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#5) : Adelaide Hills Ambush (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 7817 หลายเดือนก่อน
Thylaman and Thylakid take a 2 hour tour in the Adelaide Hills. The animals were out tonight and there's some great ambushes in this one!
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#4) : Friday in the Forest (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 1.1K8 หลายเดือนก่อน
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#4) : Friday in the Forest (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#3) : Trailcams and Tribulations (Thylacine Research) Made with Clipchamp
มุมมอง 7K9 หลายเดือนก่อน
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#3) : Trailcams and Tribulations (Thylacine Research) Made with Clipchamp
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#2) : Waiting for the Wolf (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 3049 หลายเดือนก่อน
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#2) : Waiting for the Wolf (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S2) : Thylacine Teaser (Season 2 Trailer)
มุมมอง 26410 หลายเดือนก่อน
Thylaman's Quest (S2) : Thylacine Teaser (Season 2 Trailer)
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#1) : Rolling Ranges (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 28610 หลายเดือนก่อน
Thylaman's Quest (S2 - Ep#1) : Rolling Ranges (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#14) : Mystery Menace (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 10K11 หลายเดือนก่อน
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#14) : Mystery Menace (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#13) : Killa Kangaroo (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 1K11 หลายเดือนก่อน
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#13) : Killa Kangaroo (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#12) : Family Feast (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 507ปีที่แล้ว
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#12) : Family Feast (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#11) : Dash out at Dawn (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 424ปีที่แล้ว
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#11) : Dash out at Dawn (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#10) : Sneaky and Suspicious (Silent Sanctuary scene review)
มุมมอง 763ปีที่แล้ว
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#10) : Sneaky and Suspicious (Silent Sanctuary scene review)
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#9) : Silent Sanctuary (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 576ปีที่แล้ว
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#9) : Silent Sanctuary (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#8) : Random Raids (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 737ปีที่แล้ว
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#8) : Random Raids (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#7) : Previous Prints (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 1Kปีที่แล้ว
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#7) : Previous Prints (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#6) : Back to the Beginning (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 1.2Kปีที่แล้ว
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#6) : Back to the Beginning (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#5) : Trailcam Trauma (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 19Kปีที่แล้ว
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#5) : Trailcam Trauma (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#4) : Dancing with the Deer (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 185ปีที่แล้ว
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#4) : Dancing with the Deer (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#3) : Fox and the Furious (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 537ปีที่แล้ว
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#3) : Fox and the Furious (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#2) : Bite Time and the Black Dogs (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 8Kปีที่แล้ว
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#2) : Bite Time and the Black Dogs (Thylacine Research)
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#1) : Animals of the Adelaide Hills (Thylacine Research)
มุมมอง 189ปีที่แล้ว
Thylaman's Quest (S1 - Ep#1) : Animals of the Adelaide Hills (Thylacine Research)
Fox
What’s on the left side of the screen just inside the grass?
Never mind it must be log or something.
Drone would get rid of a lot of that hand shaking.
@doggiesarus sure would. Flight time and capture angle from above is the issue. Birds of prey love taking down drones.
I swear, one of these days a trail cam is going to capture an actual alien spaceship landing.
yes, fluffy tail similar to the 3 previous foxy creatures = probably a fox. Footage like this is still useful, it helps us to better understand the capabilities and the inherent distortions of digital imaging systems.
I was hoping for a Thylocene but all I got was IR footage with background music. 😅
Bullshit. The poor buggers are history. All gone extinct. Get a life.
Why would you just leave a poor dog stranded on the side of the road ???😠
Thumbnail clip is a Kangaroo! Enough said! A-Hole.
How come people acknowledge the traditional owners but never the current ones
Have you looked into the trees at all? I've heard of thylacines that use them to hide and looking at those trees, it'd be a good place to sleep.
Great landscapes. The thylacine could be right in front of you and you wouldn't even know it.
Great prints, I have found a few headless roos lately, very fresh roadkill. Great work on these interesting animals. 😊
There is always one hobbling fox in your videos. do you include that on purpose?
😂😂😂 Definitely the fourth fox!
Read the comments and agree we got 4 foxes today.. pardon the comment but is there anything to be gained by being nasty or unnecessarily critical of each other here. After all, we are all doing our best to right the wrongs of the past…
No chasing… 2 adults, 2 pups = 4 foxes.
Could you please stop uploading videos, like I'm begging you. Please give up on this pointless quest.
oi no need for that, we work hard on these vids, plus for me its not all research, its also fun, oh and ur 'hate' comments actually help the channel so thanks
Ke il tilacino viva ancora❤
I think you should use a drone!
It was another fox. Slowing it down just made it too blurry to make out any features. Funny how any picture or footage of a "was that a thylacine" are all too blurry to make any concrete evidence.
wow this video is awesome!! Whoever this mysterious 'Thylakid' is, they are great at filming!
Surreal. Dream-like. Music was excellent.
Wiki has several Aussie mammals with stripes, but all noticeably smaller than thylacines. Can you confirm?
I know of 2 Australian animals with lateral stripes. Numbat and Thylacine. The yellow-footed rock wallaby has lateral stripes but only on their tail.
Juste un autre renard
Any chance the Warrigal (aka Rock Dog) of the Blue Mountains is still around? Thylacoleo species as large as an African lion has been reported by the researchers at Mysterious Australia.
What time was this at night?
The time signature is displayed in the tool bar at the bottom of the screen. 8pm - 10pm. What brought the animals out could have been the waxing crescent moon 25% setting at 9pm.
@@Thylaman that area is absolutely beautiful where you were. Were you near the thylacine hotspot? Last year 12 people sighted the marsupial in the same week. Of course, it was denied because they always are
@SuperGravey yes it is a beautiful place. There have been many reported sightings and other plausible evidence come from the areas covered in this video, as is the case with all of my videos. As my prime objective is to encounter a Thylacine and film it, I search where the sighting reports and data suggest I should be.
@@Thylaman you're doing more than our overpaid scientists. They look where they are not and then deny everything.
Nice dope beat to one love it's out there o yes the place is bigger then you think
Omg😮😮😮
2:50 тот самый момент ради которого мы пришли сюда. Офигеть как похож
100% sure, some 2:24 Red fox pups that follow a later.
All I see is a potential food source. They need to step up production on these.
None in Australia. Tasmanian, maybe.
The species over that way is expected to be similar to the Rilla Martin photograph of the Ozenkadnook tiger. There is a lot of people trying to photograph what has already been photographed. To bad people claimed a legitimate photo as a hoax. New photos will prove the stripe pattern to be similar to the Ozenkadnook Tiger. Keep up the search and good luck.
I believe that some Thylacines or subspecies have wider stripes or bands. This looks evident in the Kevin Cameron photo taken in Western Australia (1980's).
Black Dogs? Feral once Domesticated Dogs ? Do you live near Dingo populations? I'm from Toronto Ontario Canada. This is all foreign to me.
They would be domesticated dogs. The first lot were contained on someone's property. The ones after that (different area) were on the loose either escaped or dumped. No Dingoes where I search (South Australia, well below the dingo fence).
@@Thylaman OH OK, thank you!
Ambiguous World is another Thylacine Cryptozoology Channel based in Australia. I think he's the one who recorded a huge Womabat looking Creature with a Tail. Wombats are smaller and don't have tails. So its an unknown animal of some kind. I think it was uploaded about 4 days ago. Check it out. Maybe you guys can even link up and work together. Form a group and share information. Etc
Where abouts can I find deer in the Adelaide Hills? never knew we had them
National Park and Forrest areas. They would be in most parts of the Adelaide Hills.
that location will the tree stump in the bottom right is an awesome spot. please keep a camera there , so many different creatures and all Thyla prey
The camera has been moved. Don't worry, there are other trail cams in this area. There have been Thylacine sightings reported in this area since the 1900's. Quite a few in the last decade. They sometimes stay in an area for a few months, then they move on only to return 3-5 years later, but not always.
@@Thylaman In museum cases. The frustrating value of the sad types suggesting to the gullible these still exist on the mainland is damaging to the chances of having reports taken seriously from anywhere, including the few sites where a miniscule finite possibility of a remnant population exists. A significant proportion of the human population is severely lacking reality, and many deluded fools don't improve credibility.
Bla bla bla rien compris 😂
There's been a few Australian lion sightings in recent years as well. (Thylacoleo)
Correct
@@Thylaman Was it you who posted a video of what looked like a large wombat with a tail? I was thinking, if maybe it was a Thylocoleo. Without scale it's hard to tell how large it was though. And I don't know exactly how large a Thylocoleo is. It's roughly the size of a medium to large sized dog. 80-130 kg. Its silhouette closely resembles a wombat. Similar Head shape. Especially with its legs hidden in the grass. Just a thought I had. Although I doubt it. I imagine a Thylocoleo moves different.
@rabbithole8592 It wasn't me who filmed a wombat with a tail. Thylacoleo is a very different beast. It would be very confronting to encounter one (as sighting reports suggest). Scale is difficult at the best of times. My thermal monocular is a high-end unit. However, it uses a stagmatic range finder, which uses 2 estimates for its reading. I do wish it used the lazer range finder (like the equivalent riffle scopes). That way, I can at least return to the scene and scale it accurately. Either way, I keep searching.
@@Thylaman It looked like a Wombat, but it's much bigger and it had a tail. I follow a few Thylacine channels like yourself. It was a video posted maybe 3 days ago. I wasn't sure if it you or not. I love the content though brother. I find Cryptozoology very intriguing. The Thylacine is an incredible animal. Proving its existence so We can make efforts to protect them as an endangered species is absolutely crucial to their survival. You're doing the Lords work. I believe Humans are caretakers of the Earth.
@@Thylaman Yeah, the Scale would be valuable information. Total game changer! 👍
UM SPY THYLACINE 😮?????
Um, more like Thylacine spy (searching)
Too bad, I guess folks dump dogs there the same as they do here in S TX, USA.
Yeah some people just don't care
thanks
thanks
This guy is filming Taz Tigers regularly like its no biggie! Lol
Wow! You clearly captured Tasmanian Tigers on Camera! Are you working with anyone to officially prove theyre still alive in order to make efforts towards protecting them by creating sanctuaries? They need to be listed as endangered species.
Whaaat ?? No Thylacines in that video!?!? Sheep, kangaroo s ,!!
@@tonygordon3879 Maybe Not this Video but other videos on his Channel. I was watching a few of his videos and just happened to leave a comment under this video.
That wallaby using its tail to walk rather than hop (normal for feeding but not locomotion), may have been attacked by dogs or have been struck by a vehicle and have a broken or crippled leg.
If you are going to all this trouble to prove that the tassie tiger still exists then stop shaking the fucking camera FFS!
That Tasmanian tigers extinct that is a dingo
Where's the dingo?
You need some sort of image-stabilisation or a tripod, at least...
Nice work