At 230kg genyornis newtoni weighed around five or six times as much as an emu and stood about two metres tall

Flinders University researchers may have discovered what ultimately led to the extinction of the last of Australia’s massive thunder birds, genyornis newtoni.

The clue came with the discovery of a rare fossil. The find, by researchers at Flinders University, unveiled severe bone infections in several dromornithid remains mired in the 160 sq km beds of Lake Callabonna fossil reserve, 600km northeast of Adelaide.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Sergio Pérez wins Azerbaijan Grand Prix amid Esteban Ocon pit lane chaos

‘It’s a big disaster, a crazy moment’ says shaken Ocon Pérez holds…

‘Green gold’: Spanish farmers ditch olives for pistachios in bid to survive

Hard-up producers replace wheatfields and vineyards with a more lucrative, drought-resistant crop…

Wetter farming: how bog restoration can please both farmers and wildlife

Trial on Greater Manchester farm restores water to degraded peatland – then…