Indigenous Australians may have been early "paleontologists," not big-game hunters, according to a new analysis ...
Australia’s First Peoples may or may not have hunted the continent’s megafauna to extinction, but they definitely collected ...
Palaeontologists say there is no hard evidence in the fossil record that extinct Australian megafauna were butchered by First ...
Tens of thousands of years ago, Australia was still home to enigmatic megafauna—large land animals such as giant marsupial ...
Incision marks likely made by humans on the fossilised bone of an ancient kangaroo challenges the ‘humans wiped out ...
A decades-old theory that First Nations peoples hunted Australia's megafauna to extinction might not stack up, according to ...
Meet Thylacosmilus – the sabertooth predator you’ve probably never heard of. Unlike big cats, this fearsome hunter had ...
Two recently examined fossils suggest that Australia’s First Peoples valued big animals for their fossils as well as for ...
New technology has shown the incision marks likely made by humans on the fossilised bone of an ancient kangaroo were in fact made after the bone was ...
A new look at cuts on a giant kangaroo bone reveal First Peoples as fossil collectors, not hunters who helped drive species extinct, some scientists argue.
Edmontosaurus, which munched plants with its broad and flat snout that vaguely resembled a duckbill, roamed western North ...