![]() One burial discovered included someone covered by more than 200 great auk beaks, which are presumed to be the remnants of a cloak made of great auks' skins. Many Maritime Archaic people were buried with great auk bones. ![]() The great auk was an important part of many Native American cultures, both as a food source and as a symbolic item. The young left the nest site after two to three weeks, although the parents continued to care for it. Both parents participated in the incubation of the egg for around six weeks before the young hatched. The egg was white with variable brown marbling. They nested in extremely dense and social colonies, laying one egg on bare rock. Although agile in the water, it was clumsy on land. Its favourite prey were fish, including Atlantic menhaden and capelin, and crustaceans. Instead, the great auk was a powerful swimmer, a trait that it used in hunting. The wings were only 15 cm (6 in) long, rendering the bird flightless. During winter, the great auk lost these patches, instead developing a white band stretching between the eyes. During summer, great auk plumage showed a white patch over each eye. The black beak was heavy and hooked, with grooves on its surface. The bird was 75 to 85 centimetres (30 to 33 inches) tall and weighed about 5 kilograms (11 pounds), making it the largest alcid to survive into the modern era, and the second-largest member of the alcid family overall (the prehistoric Miomancalla was larger). When not breeding, they spent their time foraging in the waters of the North Atlantic, ranging as far south as northern Spain and along the coastlines of Canada, Greenland, Iceland, the Faroe Islands, Norway, Ireland, and Great Britain. It bred on rocky, remote islands with easy access to the ocean and a plentiful food supply, a rarity in nature that provided only a few breeding sites for the great auks. It is not closely related to the birds now known as penguins, which were discovered later by Europeans and so named by sailors because of their physical resemblance to the great auk. It was the only modern species in the genus Pinguinus. The great auk ( Pinguinus impennis) is a species of flightless alcid that became extinct in the mid-19th century. Mataeoptera impennis (Linnaeus, 1758) Gloger, 1842. ![]()
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