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November 28th, 2006, 16:11 GMT · By Stefan Anitei

Giant Kangaroos Killed 40,000 Years Ago by a Severe Drought, Not by Ancient Aborigines

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During the Pleistocene period (2 million to 10,000 years ago), Australian fauna was as diverse and impressive as the fauna of the African savanna today.

On the Australian grassland were roaming large herds of giant kangaroos (image), 3 m (10 feet tall) and weighing 200 kg, two tonnes giant wombats and other large herbivorous species.

The abundant fauna of wild beasts sustained large carnivorous species like giant goannas (7 m long, 600 kg weight), 5 m long land crocodiles, leopard sized marsupial lions (related to wombats) or 500 kg flightless birds.

But this entire fauna of giants vanished 40,000 years ago.

People, thought to have entered Australia 50-40,000 years ago, were blamed for the extinction of the megafauna.

Now, researchers from the Queensland University of Technology have gathered proof that the great extinction might have been produced by a large drought.

Investigating the fossil-rich Darling
Downs area of south-east Queensland, the scientists discovered that the fossils belonging to giant fauna roaming the area to the end of Pleistocene presented signs of drought-stress when they died.

"What makes this research so relevant to climate change theories today is that the profile of the fossil kangaroo populations is identical to that of a modern drought-stressed kangaroo mob," said Dr. Gilbert Price.

"It provides, for the first time, evidence which suggests that the megafauna kangaroos were greatly affected by a series of catastrophic droughts."

"These animals of the prehistoric Australian bush were the largest of their time and included gigantic wombats the size of cars, kangaroos that reached almost 2.5 meters tall, and massive emus and goannas (monitor lizards)."

"But if we can understand how those animals responded to the massive droughts and climate change events of the past, we might be able to go some way in predicting the effects of future climate changes and its impact on the way that we manage and conserve the precious habitats and wildlife of the Australian bush ".

The fossils analysis at the Darling Downs site does not support the theory of megafauna extinction being caused by human hand.

"Some scientists believe in the 'blitzkrieg' megafauna extinction hypothesis which blames humans for over-hunting these giant marsupials," said Price.

"If that was the case, these fossils dating back thousands of years would show the animals dying out at the same point in time. But they don't. These layers of fossils buried at a single site under the Darling Downs show a progressive, three-stage extinction over time that relates to periods of climate change."

Geological clues point to a semi-arid environment 40,000 years ago at the Darling Downs rather than to a subtropical or tropical grassland.

"Sedimentological information shows that the Darling Downs was experiencing repeating cycles of wet and dry conditions, resulting in droughts and periodic flash flooding from storms, during the time when the megafauna populations were declining," said Dr. Gregory Webb.

"The research found no evidence of humans being involved in the accumulation of fossils in the catchment at the time of deposition, but is perfectly consistent with their decline being caused by increasing aridity."

"So it's most likely that Australia's giant kangaroos and other megafauna in this area were driven to extinction by the hands of Mother Nature."

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Comment #1 by: Jason on 22 Jan 2009, 06:06 UTC reply to this comment

Maybe the Aboriginals of the time didn't hunt the Giant 'Roos directly (Like Maori to the Moa), but the presence due to hunting 'indirectly' resulted in their termination in an already fragile part of the world.
Luckily there are some farmers 'studding' giant 'Roos back into existence.

Comment #1.1 by: animal lover on 10 Sep 2011, 11:32 GMT

it is so sad how animals become extinct. i wonder how life would be with these mega faunas still alive...
well for those other endangered species, i hope you survive and i hope scientists can breed as many as possible.
scientists should start breeding animals before their numbers are low.
but i don't blame humans for the mega fauna extinction.
they probably ate grass and leaves and a drought came and then the plants died and so did they.


Comment #2 by: kobi on 13 Aug 2009, 07:08 UTC reply to this comment

Aboriginals hunted them


Comment #3 by: Sports Babe on 25 Oct 2010, 18:47 UTC reply to this comment

Wow that was soooooooo intresting!! I am gonna do a report on it for school!! Thanks, Brianna Waugh

Comment #3.1 by: mamaluigi444 on 04 May 2011, 18:29 GMT

very interesting makes you think...


Comment #4 by: kobe on 23 Jun 2011, 06:25 UTC reply to this comment

it is bad thing for the giant kangaroo


Comment #5 by: animal lover on 10 Sep 2011, 11:41 UTC reply to this comment

i think it is both human and nature who caused the extinction. these animals, were they herbivores?if so, they were probably hunted and a drought came and destroyed plants. They had no food and their numbers were already low and died.
i wish we could have done something about it... but then again they would have been hunted by the Europeans.
don't blame the Aboriginals because they only hunted enough to eat... it is what they believed, they didn't hunt in masses.
well... all i want to say is HELP THE ENDANGERED ANIMALS REPOPULATE THE EARTH!!!
i want scientists to breed many of the endangered until there is enough to release... ALSO STOP HABITAT DESTRUCTION.
we should do something before it is too late. don't wait until there is a few hundreds because it may be too late.
lets take action or donate... do anything to help these innocent species survive... you know what happened to the Bali tigers and the Dodo and a few HUNDRED more species... :(


Comment #6 by: Dave on 25 Oct 2011, 15:28 UTC reply to this comment

Surely the migration of humans into the area at the same time as their extinction is too much of a coincidence? Is it not logical to conclude that severe drought had reduced the numbers of these species to dangerous low levels before the newly arrived hunters finished of the survivors?

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