From National Geographic News:
A clam dredged from icy Arctic waters is being hailed as the world's longest-lived animal.
Climate researchers at Bangor University in the United Kingdom recently counted 405 annual growth rings in the shells of a quahog clam.
When this animal was young, Shakespeare was writing his greatest plays and the English were establishing their first settlements in the Americas. The team plucked the mollusk from 262-feet-deep (80-meter-deep) waters off the northern coast of Iceland.
What I find sad is that the Methuselah mollusk did not survive the rings counting - I wonder if the scientist decided to count the rings from inside. I suspect the animal finished in his stomach.
A clam dredged from icy Arctic waters is being hailed as the world's longest-lived animal.
Climate researchers at Bangor University in the United Kingdom recently counted 405 annual growth rings in the shells of a quahog clam.
When this animal was young, Shakespeare was writing his greatest plays and the English were establishing their first settlements in the Americas. The team plucked the mollusk from 262-feet-deep (80-meter-deep) waters off the northern coast of Iceland.