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“Fossils deposited in hot, dry and arid places, such as large parts of Australia, lose their collagen very early…. The major ...
What happened to all the megafauna? From moas to mammoths, many large animals went extinct between 50 and 10,000 years ago.
What happened to all the megafauna? From moas to mammoths, many large animals went extinct between 50 and 10,000 years ago. Learning why could provide ...
Researchers developed collagen peptide markers to identify three extinct Australian megafauna genera, a hippo-sized wombat, a ...
Collagen from a fossilized bone fragment can identify the animal it came from. And, some new info about our galaxy’s eventual ...
Learn how researchers used mass spectrometry of collagen to successfully identify some of Australia's megafauna.
From around 50,000 to 10,000 years ago, Earth was home to terrestrial giants: mammoths, moa, and mega-marsupials, including ...
Some of the wildest legends may actually be rooted in reality. Ancient people didn’t have science textbooks, just bones in ...
Shepparton Eagles' Joe Tunumafono glides past Wodonga Wombats' Mitchell Cameron. Photo by Rechelle Zammit ...
How an Arnhem Land community distilled the 1948 American–Australian Scientific Expedition into a figure with unusual powers ...