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Topic: Thylacinus


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In the News (Sat 26 Dec 09)

  
 Cryptozoology
Many animals have gone extinct over the last few hundred years as a result of ecological disruption caused by humans migrating to new environments or direct attempts to exterminate "problem" species.
An example is the Tasmanian Tiger or Thylacine (scientific name Thylacinus cynocephalus), also known as the marsupial wolf.
Thylacinus cynocephalus offers a number of pictures of dead or caged thylacines taken early in the twentieth century.
www.pibburns.com /cryptozo.htm   (8311 words)

  
 Fossil sites of Australia - Riversleigh
Yarala burchfieldi, a plesiomorphic bandicoot (Marsupialia, Perameloidea) from Oligo-Miocene deposits of Riversleigh, Northwestern Queensland.
Muirhead, J., Gillespie, A. Additional parts of the type specimen of Thylacinus macknessi (Marsupialia: Thylacinidae) from Miocene deposits of Riversleigh, Northwestern Queensland.
Fossil bandicoots of Chillagoe (northeastern Queensland) and the first known specimens of the Pig-Footed Bandicoot Chaeopus Ogilby, 1838 from Queensland.
www.amonline.net.au /fossil_sites/publications.htm   (3540 words)

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