Daily Dispatch

Giant wombat bones

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AUSTRALIAN scientists yesterd unveiled the biggest-ever graveyard of an ancient rhinosized mega-wombat called diprotodon, with the site potentiall­y holding valuable clues on the species’ extinction.

The remote fossil deposit in outback Queensland state is thought to contain at least 20 diprotodon skeletons including a huge specimen named Kenny, whose jawbone alone is 70cm long.

Lead scientist on the dig, Scott Hocknull from the Queensland Museum in Brisbane, said Kenny was one of the largest diprotodon­s he had ever seen, and one of the best preserved specimens of the species unearthed in Queensland.

Hocknull said the deposit contained the largest concentrat­ion of mega-wombat fossils ever discovered in Australia and could hold important clues on how the diprotodon lived and what caused it to perish.

Diprotodon, the largest marsupial ever to roam the earth, weighing up to 2.8 tonnes, lived between two million and 50 000 years ago and died out around the same time indigenous

Human and climate triggers are hotly debated.

Hocknull said the remains of hundreds of tiny fish, frogs, lizards and mammals had been found at the site, which he described as important a discovery as the mega-wombat bones.

“They will allow us to reconstruc­t what the environmen­t was like when these giants were alive, and more importantl­y, what has changed to the ecosystem since then,” Hocknull said.

A relative of the modern-day wombat, the herbivorou­s diprotodon was just one of a host of megafauna to roam ancient Australia, including towering kangaroos and gigantic crocodiles.

It was the size of a rhinoceros, pigeon-toed and had a backwardfa­cing pouch.

Megafauna are thought to have evolved to such large sizes to cope with inhospitab­le climates and food scarcity, with fossils found in Australia of prehistori­c emus, tree-dwelling crocodiles and carnivorou­s kangaroos. — SapaAFP

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