405-year-old clam longest lived animal

Published: Oct. 28, 2007 at 4:20 PM

LONDON, Oct. 28 (UPI) -- Welsh scientists analyzing a clam shell from the North Atlantic off the coast of Iceland determined it was the oldest living animal in recorded history.

The ocean quahog, nicknamed Ming after the Chinese dynasty it was born in, was determined to be 405 years old when it died.

Scientists are able to determine the age of a clam by counting the growth rings in its shell, much like the rings of a tree, Chris Richardson of the Bangor University School of Ocean Sciences told the Times of London.

Richardson notes that this species of clam typically lives for 200 years.

By analyzing Ming’s growth rings, scientists were able to construct an environmental profile of climate patterns in the North Atlantic.

Ming's flesh was discarded last year and only the shell remained when scientists determined its age.

© 2007 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
CDC estimates 22M had H1N1, 3,900 died (27 min)
New Orleans Hornets fire Coach Byron Scott (52 min)
Chicago students arrested after food fight
Intel to pay AMD $1.25B settlement
UPI NewsTrack Business
Crude oil prices slide hard Thursday
Unemployed grandmother hits street for job
fark
...and when they covered the Jews' cars in sticky-notes I said nothing, because I was not a Jew
Photoshop this barrier balancer
You can make your very own Tamiflu at home. I'm sure this will end well
Ohio couple married 61 years and died one day apart. There is no escape. Did you hear me? NO ESCAPE...
Elmo vs Spiderman vs Chewbacca: LA's superhero turf wars heat up again
John King to replace Lou Dobbs, says CNN. Dobbs' wife reportedly pleased