Giant squid (Archie) goes on display - The Natural History Museum, London
28 Feb 2006
A giant squid, Architeuthis dux, was recently put on display at the London Natural History Museum's Darwin Centre tank room.
The 8.62-metre squid, called Archie, was caught off the coast of the Falkland Islands in March 2004.
Archie is not the largest specimen ever caught, that record belongs to an 18.5-metre specimen caught in Island Bay, New Zealand in 1880. Archie was caught live and is almost complete making it a very important specimen for research. Initial investigations suggest that Archie is female although this will be confirmed by future study.
The final home for 'Archie' is a specially made acrylic tank filled with a 10 per cent solution of formol-saline as a preservative. The tank was constructed in California by Casco Ltd., the people who made the tanks for Damien Hirsts' various artworks of animals in formaldehyde. The tank is 9 metres and 45 centimetres long and stands on a 1-metre stainless steel stand so that the giant squid can be viewed from any angle.
[url="http://www.nhm.ac.uk/about-us/news/2006/feb/news_5255.html"]http://www.nhm.ac.uk/about-us/news/2006/feb/news_5255.html[/url]
28 Feb 2006
A giant squid, Architeuthis dux, was recently put on display at the London Natural History Museum's Darwin Centre tank room.
The 8.62-metre squid, called Archie, was caught off the coast of the Falkland Islands in March 2004.
Archie is not the largest specimen ever caught, that record belongs to an 18.5-metre specimen caught in Island Bay, New Zealand in 1880. Archie was caught live and is almost complete making it a very important specimen for research. Initial investigations suggest that Archie is female although this will be confirmed by future study.
The final home for 'Archie' is a specially made acrylic tank filled with a 10 per cent solution of formol-saline as a preservative. The tank was constructed in California by Casco Ltd., the people who made the tanks for Damien Hirsts' various artworks of animals in formaldehyde. The tank is 9 metres and 45 centimetres long and stands on a 1-metre stainless steel stand so that the giant squid can be viewed from any angle.
[url="http://www.nhm.ac.uk/about-us/news/2006/feb/news_5255.html"]http://www.nhm.ac.uk/about-us/news/2006/feb/news_5255.html[/url]