Paleontological Treasure Trove Found in Australia

A paleontological treasure trove of fossils was discovered recently in a cave in the Nullarbor Plain in southern Australia. This discovery includes mammals, birds, reptiles and a marsupial lion, Thylacoleo carnifex (pictured), and 23 species of kangaroo, including eight of which are new to science. These fossils date back to between 400,000-800,000 years ago.

The creatures apparently fell to their deaths through openings in the dusty surface of the plain that periodically opened and closed over millennia.

"Sitting in the darkness next to this skeleton, you really got the sense of the animal collapsing in a heap and taking its last breath. It was quite poignant," said Gavin Prideaux, the lead author.

"Everywhere we looked around the boulder piles, we found more and more skeletons of a very wide array of creatures."

Most of the animals were killed instantly but others initially survived the 20 meter drop only to crawl off into rock piles to die from their injuries or from thirst and starvation.

The preservation of many of the specimens was remarkable, said the Nature paper's lead author, Dr Gavin Prideaux.

In total, 69 vertebrate species have been identified in three chambers the scientists now call the Thylacoleo Caves. The discoveries were published in the top-tier journal, Nature.

Cited story and image source.

The discovery of the complete Thylacoleo skeleton (right) attracted international media attention when it was first announced in 2002.

.

More like this

tags: Paleontology, birds, Genyornis newtoni, rock art, aboriginal peoples, Archaeology, Australia, Niwarla Gabarnmung, Arnhem Land, Flinders University Australia's oldest painting? A red ochre rock art depiction of two emu-like birds (Genyornis newtoni?) with their necks outstretched. Image:…
The Australian mainland's largest extant native mammalian predator is the Spotted-tailed quoll or Tiger quoll Dasyurus maculatus. It weighs, at most, 7 kg. While rumours of Thylacine Thylacinus cynocephalus (15-30 kg) survival persist both in Tasmania and on the Australian mainland (and,…
Restoration of the skull of Thylacoleo. From The Ancient Life History of the Earth. Thylacoleo was one strange mammal. A close relative of living koalas, kangaroos, and wombats, the largest species of Thylacoleo were lion-sized carnivores that stalked the Australian continent between 2 million…
tags: Antarctica, Weddell Sea, new species, ANDEEP, zoology The scientists said an "astonishingly diverse" collection of isopods had been discovered. This young male isopod represents one of 674 isopod species found. Image: W. Brokeland. [larger image] According to a paper that was recently…

Imagine a kitten-like marsupial poking its head out of a pouch.

Imagine a kitten-like marsupial poking its head out of a pouch.

Kanga and Kitty, maybe?

By biosparite (not verified) on 24 Jan 2007 #permalink

Neat critter! But you may want to correct the typo in your blog post; I am pretty sure that it is the "Nullarbor" rather than the "Nullabor" Plain (from the Latin for "no trees").