Don’t set your watch to the migration timetable of the Galápagos giant tortoise—it doesn’t follow a predictable schedule the way so many other animal migrations do. Scientists first tracked the migration of giant tortoises in the Galápagos Islands in 2013, and they’ve discovered that not only is it marvelously slow, it’s kind of erratic, and flies in the face of human understanding as to why and how most animals migrate. Only the older tortoises make the roughly 6-mile climb out of the soggy jungle up into the hills—in this case, the slopes of Alcedo Volcano on Isabela Island. The journey is loosely related to mating, but researchers think there may be many other unknown variables at play. Whatever compelled these two lumbering giants up here, in about six months, they’ll start the slow climb back down to the jungle.
A long, erratic commute
Today in History
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Mid-Autumn Festival
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Homeward bound
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A river on the tundra
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Visiting a Maratha fortress
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Big Bend National Park turns 78
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A monastery in the mountain
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International Day for Monuments and Sites
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Train crossing the Tadami River in Japan
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A leafy seadragon in the waters off Wool Bay, Australia
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Star Wars Day
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Spring blooms in the Netherlands
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A lush, green escape
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Welcome to the drainpipe of the Pacific
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Stop and see the flowers
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Brown-throated three-toed sloth in cecropia tree, Costa Rica
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Irohazaka Road in fall, Nikko, Tochigi, Japan
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Eurasian lynx
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Happy Presidents Day
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Madame Sherri Forest, New Hampshire
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Take the Stairs Day
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Aerial view of Plaza Mayor, Madrid, Spain
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The Elbe in Dresden, Germany
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An avian predator built for the snow
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Shark Awareness Day
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Golden Gate Bridge, San Francisco, California
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Things are looking up
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Basking in the glow
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Of moles and liquid nitrogen
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Plitvice Lakes National Park in Croatia
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North Sea at sunset, Norddorf, Germany
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