Good point. However, most of the big whales can only get to about 8 ms[sup]-1[/sup]. The sei whale is the fastest of the big ones, able to get up to about 10 ms[sup]-1[/sup]. The sei only weighs in at around 50 tonnes max, so the extra speed doesn’t make up for the lack of mass.
Much smaller toothed whales can go faster, e.g. a killer whale can hit about 13 ms[sup]-1[/sup], but they only get to about 10 tonnes, so again, the smaller size doesn’t compensate.
I just read a moderately scholarly tome with several chapters devoted to early NZ fauna and there was no mention of this. So the answer to your question is probably no.
Sorry my response was unclear. I knew about Haast’s Eagle and that it killed moa. It’s the people bit (that the eagle killed them and that the people therefore killed the eagles) that I doubt. Particularly since the book in question (Tim Flannery’s “TheFuture Eaters”) is specifically on the question of what extinctions humans caused.
I think it is much more likely that humans simply ate to extinction the Haast Eagle’s usual food sources.
With an extreme weight of 2200lbs, it would have to run more than 10 times the speed of the giant elephant cited in post #11. I think polar bears can be quick when pressed, but I expect 200mph is out of their range.
Well, we’ve never been able to study a live giant squid but squid don’t weigh much. I think one washed up on shore a few years ago in New Zealand and was 60ft long and weighed about 500lbs. But I think some have been recorded as being bigger than that, although, I don’t think any more than 200ft long. Let’s say we triple the mass, that’s still only 1500lbs. Still not even a ton. It would have to move pretty damn fast to match the blue whale.
Googling produced one claim that these range in weight up to 1000kg, though 100-300 appears more likely; no estimates of speed. I’d guess that 30 knots might be possible, though perhaps optimistic - there’s a lot of drag to a squid.
An avenue we haven’t explored is an Apollo astronaut. With escape velocity approaching 1000 times what a blue whale can do, and a mass of, say, 100kg, we might have a contender.
I think I may have actually seen that thing (or one of its hapless cousins), preserved and on display, at Te Papa, the NZ National Museum in Wellington. Big, but nowhere near as big as a Blue Whale (a likeness of which I have stood beneath in our own national museum in Washington).
Wow, I didn’t realize that krakens were that small. OK, yeah, they’re out of the running.
And rightly so, since the OP specified “other than humans”. Nor do I think we ought to consider Laika the dog (who I suspect was the largest non-human animal in orbit): It seems reasonable to me to limit ourselves to an animal’s natural modes of propulsion.
And a darn shame it is, too. I was going to suggest one particular human, Capt. Joe Kittinger, on his high altitude freefall…assuming a weight of over 200 lbs with gear and a maximum velocity of over 600mph he would have packed quite a whallop. Nowhere near an astronaut but rockets…feh…
They actually have two of them preserved at the Smithsonian, they’re a bit disappointing in size. A blue whale is truly ginormous though. It’s impossible to really get a feel unless you stand near a likeness. A friend of mine saw one on a whale watching trip, she said it was amazing.
There are chickens and turkeys that have managed to break the sound barrier. That’s got to be a lot of energy. But this was with NASA’s help, so they are probably disqualified as well. Besides, they were dead before they started moving and were utterly destroyed after they went through the cockpits and windshields they were testing.