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Monday, December 5, 2022

Turtle that lived during the times of R' Akiva Eiger & Chasam Sofer Celebrates its 190th Birthday

 

Jonathan the tortoise celebrated his 190th birthday as he extends his run as the longest-living land animal in the world. 

Jonathan first arrived in his current home on the island of Saint Helena in the South Atlantic in 1882 as a gift to the governor of the island, which is a British territory. At that time, he was thought to already be 50 years old.

Now notching 190 years on Earth, Jonathan is 48 inches long, the same size as when he arrived on the island. His species of tortoise reaches full maturity by 50, providing the best estimate for his age, even though some naturalists believe he could be even older. 

Despite his long life, he only gained international attention in 2008 when The Independent reported on his then-remarkable age of 176.

Locals speculated as to why Jonathan has lived so long, exceeding the expected life of his breed, the Seychelles Giant tortoise, which is 150 years old. 

Jonathan was five years old when Queen Victoria – Britain’s second-longest reigning monarch – took the throne, and he outlived both World Wars. He is older than the first photograph and has lived through the administrations of 39 US presidents. 

Locals organized a number of events to celebrate Jonathan’s birthday, culminating in a three-day celebration. 

Estimated to have been born in 1832, Jonathan has lived most of his life at the governor’s plantation house, according to the island’s website, which adds that Jonathan could arguably serve as a national symbol for the island. Jonathan’s image even adorns the backside of a St. Helena 5 pence coin.

Scientists have even studied Jonathan to determine what health benefits they might glean from his diet and his cells. Because his cells do not mutate the same way the cells of humans do, scientists hope he could reveal some secret to fighting cancer in humans. 

Jonathan shares his home with three other tortoises: Emma, a 54-year-old female; David, a 54-year-old male; and Frederika, formerly Fredrik, a 31-year-old tortoise originally thought to be male but now thought to be female. The first two arrived in 1969, and Frederika arrived in 1991. 

Jonathan last year surpassed the previous record-holder for oldest living land animal, a Madagascar tortoise named Tu’I Malila, who was gifted to the Tonga royal family in 1777 and died in 1965 at the age of 188 years old, according to Smithsonian magazine.

12 comments:

Frum but normal said...

DIN, you must have graduated from one of those chassidishe yeshiva's, where they didn't teach you arithmetic.
According to my old reliable calculator,someone born in 1882 is today 140 years old not 190.
But anyways, it's a nice story, and thanks for sharing.

Anonymous said...

The key to the turtles' super long life is the extremely slow heartbeat, measured at 25 beats per minute, and dropping sometimes at 10 bpm.
Turtles need much less oxygen than humans do.

Thinking Jew said...

You were probably in his class... The article says that it was 50 years old at the time...

Anonymous said...

Lol. If you're going to sarcastically make fun of someone you should make sure your facts are right. I could tell you that you probably went to a Yeshivah where they don't teach reading, but that would be chutzpah so I won't

LES AYM said...

It says that it's "estimated" that the turtle was born in 1832.
So 2022 - 1832 = 190 DIN's article is correct math. Of course assuming the "estimate" if his birthdate his correct.

Anonymous said...

Born I'm 1832.

Zako said...

To "Frum but normal" :

1. DIN din't write this article
2. You didn't read it
3. It says :
Jonathan first arrived in his current home on the island of St Helena in the South Atlantic in 1882 as a gift to the governor of the island, which is a British territory. At that time, he was thought to already be 50 years old.

Anonymous said...

FbN, read the article again...

"Jonathan first arrived in his current home on the island of Saint Helena in the South Atlantic in 1882 as a gift to the governor of the island, which is a British territory. At that time, he was thought to already be 50 years old."

Frum but normal said...

I take it back and apologize to DIN

Anonymous said...

Beautiful story

Shmoyna Shrutzim said...

DIN is just scratching the surface here with the timeline. There are shitos that dem tcherepache (turtle in Yiddish) is even older than 190, azoy alt that Lipa Margulies remembered it way back when in the alter Heim in Satmar!

Prof Ryesky said...

Never mind the turtles!

There are plenty of dinosaurs still around! Significant populations in Bnei Brak, Monsey, Meah Shaarim, and Brooklyn.