Lee Arnold | Patrick Moss | Renaud Joannes-Boyau
We now know people and megafauna overlapped by up to 20,000 years, until changes to vegetation, water and fire
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We have studied fossil bones of these animals for the past decade.
Our findings, published today in Nature Communications, shed new light on the mystery of what drove these ancient megafauna to extinction.
The first bones were found by the Barada Barna people during cultural heritage surveys on their traditional lands about 100 kilometres west of Mackay, at South Walker Creek Mine.
Our study shares the first reliable glimpse of the giants that roamed the Australian tropics between 40,000 and 60,000 years ago.
These megafauna were the largest land animals to live in Australia since the time of the dinosaurs. Understanding the ecological role they played and the environmental impact of their loss remains their most valuable untold story.
Fossils are found eroding out of the ancient flood plains of South Walker Creek. Rochelle Lawrence, Queensland Museum. |
While megafauna lived at South Walker Creek, people had arrived on the continent and were spreading across it. Our study adds new evidence to the ongoing megafauna extinction debate, but importantly underscores how much is left to learn from the fossil record.
The megafauna welcoming party
We excavated fossils from four sites and made detailed studies of the sites themselves to find the age of the fossils and understand what the environment was like in the past.
Our findings give us an idea of what megafaunal life was like in the tropical Australian savanna over a period of about 20,000 years, from around 60,000 to 40,000 years ago. During this time, the northern megafauna were different to those from the south.
Mega-reptiles of Pleistocene tropical Australia. V. Konstantinov, A. Atuchin, R. Allen, S. Hocknull. Queensland Museum. |
Mega-mammals from Pleistocene tropical Australia. V. Konstantinov, A. Atuchin, S. Hocknull. Queensland Museum. |
Imagine first sighting a six-metre goanna and its Komodo Dragon-sized relative, or bumping into a land-dwelling crocodile and its plate-mail armoured aquatic cousin. The mammals were equally bizarre, including a giant bucktoothed wombat, a strange “bear-sloth” marsupial, and enormous kangaroos and wallabies.
A yet-to-be named giant kangaroo is the largest ever found. With an estimated mass of 274 kg, it beats the previous contender, the goliath short-faced kangaroo, Procoptodon goliah.
The biggest of all the mammals was the three-tonne marsupial Diprotodon, and the deadliest was the pouched predator Thylacoleo. Living alongside these giants were other megafauna species that still survive today: the emu, the red kangaroo and the saltwater crocodile.
Whodunnit? The evidence points to environmental change
Why did these megafauna become extinct? It has been argued that the extinctions were due to over-hunting by humans, and occurred shortly after people arrived in Australia.
However, this theory is not supported by our finding that a diverse collection of these ancient giants still survived 40,000 years ago, after humans had spread around the continent.
Fossil seeds, leaves and insects help palaeontologists reconstruct the megafauna’s environment. Scale bar equals 1 mm. Paul Tierney, Queensland Museum. |
The megafauna extinction debate will no doubt continue for years to come. New discoveries will plug up the key gaps in the record. With the gaps in the north of the continent the greatest yet to fill.
With an overlap between people and megafauna of some 15,000–20,000 years, new questions arise about co-habitation. How did people live with these giants during a period of such drastic environmental change?
How much more change can Australia bear?
Major environmental change and extinctions are not an unusual part of our geological past, but this time it’s personal; it involves us. Throughout the Pleistocene (the time that ended with the most recent ice age), Australia has undergone major climatic and environmental change.
Within the same catchment of these new megafauna sites, one study shows how major climatic upheaval beginning around 280,000 years ago caused the disappearance of a diverse rainforest fauna. This set in motion a sequence of changes to the ecosystem that culminated in the loss of the megafauna at South Walker Creek around 40,000 years ago.
It’s still unclear what impact these long-term environmental changes and the loss of the megafauna had on the species that survived.
This long-term trend of extinctions has now been given a kick along by the major changes to the environment created by humans which continue today. In the early 21st century in Australia we have seen increases in floods, droughts and bushfires, and we expect these increases to continue.
The fossil record provides us with a window into our past that can help us understand our present. As our study shows, dramatic environmental change takes a heavy toll on species survival especially for those at the top of the food chain. Will we heed the warnings from the past or suffer the consequences?
Links
- Aboriginal Australians co-existed with the megafauna for at least 17,000 years
- Did people or climate kill off the megafauna? Actually, it was both
- Blood, brains and foul murder: evidence of Australia's massacres is in its newspapers
- Stripped bare: Australia's hidden climate crisis
- Torres Strait Islanders take climate change complaint to the United Nations
- First humans to reach Australia likely island-hopped to New Guinea then walked – study
- Most Australian Indigenous languages came from just one place, research claims
- Australian dig finds evidence of Aboriginal habitation up to 80,000 years ago
- Earliest evidence of Aboriginal occupation of Australian coast discovered
- Adani Carmichael mine opponents join Indigenous climate change project
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