Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
A Giant Kangaroo Bone Is Challenging the Idea That Humans Wiped Out Australia’s Megafauna
Indigenous Australians may have been early "paleontologists," not big-game hunters, according to a new analysis ...
Australia’s First Peoples may or may not have hunted the continent’s megafauna to extinction, but they definitely collected ...
Two recently examined fossils suggest that Australia’s First Peoples valued big animals for their fossils as well as for ...
A tiny marsupial species declared extinct decades ago may still be hopping around in the deserts of Australia — and a new study offers a potential roadmap for its rediscovery. The desert rat-kangaroo, ...
Palaeontologists say there is no hard evidence in the fossil record that extinct Australian megafauna were butchered by First ...
Incision marks likely made by humans on the fossilised bone of an ancient kangaroo challenges the ‘humans wiped out ...
Tens of thousands of years ago, Australia was still home to enigmatic megafauna—large land animals such as giant marsupial ...
During the late Pleistocene epoch, which took place between 126,000 and 11,700 years ago, hordes of megafauna species -- large organisms that weigh roughly 110 pounds or more -- died out in what is ...
An ancient giant kangaroo bone from Australia's Mammoth Cave has long been cited as evidence that Indigenous Australians ...
The desert rat-kangaroo — a small marsupial species — was declared extinct in 1994. But, scientists believe it could be alive and “evading detection,” according to a new study. Photo from Flinders ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results