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Earliest known ancestors of the extinct Tasmanian Tiger discovered


Still Waters

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A marsupial which had an “extremely thick” jawbone, enabling it to consume even the bones and teeth of its prey is among a discovery of three, new ancient species of the modern Thylacines – otherwise known as the Tasmanian tiger, which went extinct 88 years ago.

These new species each roamed Australia around 23-to-25 million years ago, during the late Oligocene, making them the “undoubted oldest members of this family ever discovered”.

Today – Australia’s National Threatened Species Day, which marks the death of the last Tasmanian Tiger in Hobart’s Beaumaris Zoo on the 7th of September 1936 – scientists from the University of New South Wales (UNSW) Vertebrate Palaeontology Lab publish their findings in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.

https://newsroom.taylorandfrancisgroup.com/earliest-known-ancestors-of-the-extinct-tasmanian-tiger-discovered-and-some-could-even-eat-the-bones-and-teeth-of-their-prey/

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