
The extinct Kaua’i Mole Duck (Talpanas lippa) is known only from the fossils we have found in Makauwahi Cave. For more of Dr. Julian Hume’s paintings, see his excellent new book Extinct Birds.
I can still remember what I said that day, over 15 years ago, when I climbed out of the ever-growing East Pit excavations of Makauwahi Cave, and walked over to Storrs Olson with a peculiar skull in my muddy hand that I had just found: “Storrs, I’m embarrassed to say I can’t tell for sure whether this skull is from a mammal or a bird. It is really strange-looking.”
It was like nothing anybody had ever seen, we quickly agreed: something like an Australian platypus or a New Zealand kiwi. The eye sockets were tiny and far back on the head. The odd skull was very
flattened, with a long broad snout. Storrs reckoned it might be some kind of duck, but a very weird one indeed. We found a few more pieces of the skeleton that season, but it was over a decade later
before the experts decided what it was, and published a name, Talpanas lippa, literally “the nearly blind mole duck” (see our Resources Page for a pdf of the technical description, in Iwaniuk et al., 2009).
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