Taxonomy

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One of the earliest examples of Large Scale Taxonomy was the famous Ferret Across the Mersey. No wait, that was Taxidermy.

“I have nothing to declare but my own genus.”

~ Oscar Wilde on taxonomy

Taxonomy is the fascinating study of dead animals. It is generally agreed that the discipline was Invented in 1543 by London taxi driver Dr. F. Taxonson, although some people claim that he taxed the idea from a famous celebrity he was giving a lift to.

Taxonomy involves the following:[edit | edit source]

1. Finding Your Animal[edit | edit source]

Finding your animal, if this is something common like the Anteater then no problem but if it is rare like the fabled Thingumy and Bob then you may have a harder time of it. Expeditions to exotic locations can be funded by grants from large establishments such as Universities, Pharmaceutical Companies or local Drug Barons, with many choosing to visit remote places such as the remaining sections of the Amazonian Rain Forest.

2. Naming Your Animal[edit | edit source]

Naming your animal using Linnean classification. In this system of nomenclature, the first group is the largest (least specific) and the last is the most specific:

Side (East, West or Dark) ->
Kingdom ->
Phylum ->
Posse ->
Order ->
Family ->
Genus ->
Class ->
Clique ->
Species ->

The final name of an animal is comprised of its Genus, Species and Clique classifications. Some examples:

  • Neanderthal: Homo sapiens primitives
  • Modern human being: Homo sapiens normals
  • Ivy League graduate: Homo sapiens preps

Some scientists also add the All in the Family categorization to an organism's scientific name, but others decry this as a pointless measure since all organisms share the same All in the Family classification:

  • Modern human being: Archie Bunker Homo sapiens normalus
  • Angsty teenager: Archie Bunker Homo sapiens gothicus
  • Archie Bunker: Archie Bunker Homo Archie Bunkerus

3. Skinning Your Animal[edit | edit source]

Skinning and gutting; the animal must have its internal organs removed so they do not start to smell and leave a rotting mess inside the corpse. This is achieved by having small boys jump up and down on the animal 'til its too flat for the gerbils to eat.