Now on ScienceBlogs: Surveying the "integrative medicine" landscape (2012 edition)

ScienceBlogs Book Club: Inside the Outbreaks

Aardvarchaeology

How To Get a Mink Skeleton in a Weird Way

My friend Eddie the pagan goldsmith has inadvertently discovered an unusual way to acquire a clean mink skeleton. Here's what you do.

Profile

Martin Rundkvist Dr. Martin Rundkvist is a Swedish archaeologist, journal editor, public speaker, chairman of the Swedish Skeptics Society, atheist, lefty liberal, bookworm, and father of two.

Order Mead-halls of the Eastern Geats
Order merchandise

Martin's Amazon.CO.UK Wish List

Search

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

Blogroll

« Mika's Place for Underwear | Main | Skamby Visit, Farewell to Daub »

How To Get a Mink Skeleton in a Weird Way

Category: Biology
Posted on: September 30, 2009 4:52 PM, by Martin R

PIC_0152.jpg

My friend Eddie the pagan goldsmith has inadvertently discovered an unusual way to acquire a clean mink skeleton. Here's what you do.

  1. Set some crayfish traps in a lake.
  2. A mink will break into one of the traps to get at the crayfish, get stuck and drown.
  3. When retrieving your traps with their catch, fail to find the one the mink has thrashed around in.
  4. Since you have lost the trap, crayfish and other scavengers will have ample time to clean the mink's bones.
  5. The following year, set the traps again along the same lake shore. When you retrieve them, find the trap you lost last year.
  6. The mink's skeleton will be clean but still partly articulated by sinews.

Share on Facebook
Share on StumbleUpon
Share on Facebook
Find more posts in: Life Science

Comments

1

Works for a toddler's skeleton, too!

... wait... have I said too much?

Posted by: Anon | September 30, 2009 8:54 PM

2

I've got a friend who found a new species of rodent which she caught in her pitfall traps she'd left out to catch insects.

She also has a parasitic fly named after her.

Posted by: Bob O'H | October 1, 2009 1:08 AM

3

I guess the method smell less than some other methods. I usually put the dead animal close to an ants nest. If the animal is fairly small i use a netbasket and if it is a skull with antlers or so I tie it to a tree.

At the moment I have a roedeer skull (great antlers on that one) and two ram skulls hanging in trees for the birds to pick (and maggots to feast upon).

Posted by: Leif | October 1, 2009 1:56 AM

4

Even a tiny carrion smells incredibly strongly. On a dig I was on the osteologists found a dead juvenile hedgehog, put it in a punctured plastic cookie box and hung it on a tree some ways from the excavation. The animal was the size of a fist, but it stunk up the entire area.

Still, the punctured cookie box method is pretty good. Everything stays in place and the insects find their way in.

Posted by: Martin R | October 1, 2009 2:07 AM

5

You've given us the bones of an idea. When are you going to flesh it out?

Posted by: IanW | October 1, 2009 10:52 AM

6

I've used big anthills for cleaning. The biggest object cleaned this way was probably an elk's skull that we left there for a year. A disadvantage here is that the ants carry away anything that's not hard bone, keratin or enamel. If you left that mink for the ants to clean, they'd probably chew away the cartilage and sinew and use the ribs for scaffoldings.

Posted by: Tom | October 2, 2009 1:29 PM

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. On some blogs, comments are moderated for spam, so your comment may not appear immediately.)





eXTReMe Tracker

ScienceBlogs

Search ScienceBlogs:

Go to:

Advertisement
Follow ScienceBlogs on Twitter

© 2006-2011 ScienceBlogs LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of ScienceBlogs LLC. All rights reserved.