Meet the “Bone Crusher”: New Fossil Finds Rewrite the Evolutionary History of Australia’s Iconic Tasmanian Tiger
- by Anoop Singh
- 4
New fossil discoveries reveal three Thylacine species from 23 million years ago, highlighting rapid evolutionary diversification and expanding knowledge of ancient ecosystems. The last of the Tasmanian tigers, also known as the Thylacine, died in the Beaumaris Zoo in Hobart eighty-eight years ago. Now, a team of researchers from UNSW Sydney has added three of […]
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New fossil discoveries reveal three Thylacine species from 23 million years ago, highlighting rapid evolutionary diversification and expanding knowledge of ancient ecosystems. The last of the Tasmanian tigers, also known as the Thylacine, died in the Beaumaris Zoo in Hobart eighty-eight years ago. Now, a team of researchers from UNSW Sydney has added three of…
New fossil discoveries reveal three Thylacine species from 23 million years ago, highlighting rapid evolutionary diversification and expanding knowledge of ancient ecosystems. The last of the Tasmanian tigers, also known as the Thylacine, died in the Beaumaris Zoo in Hobart eighty-eight years ago. Now, a team of researchers from UNSW Sydney has added three of…