Mass grave found of 'giant wombats' the size of a rhinoceros

Greg Wood/AFP-Getty Images

The Australian Museum exhibits a reconstructed model of a "diprotodon", an ancient rhino-sized mega-wombat on Thursday.

A mass grave of prehistoric “giant wombats” – a marsupial the size of a rhinoceros – has been discovered in Australia, according to reports.

The discovery of about 50 diprotodon skeletons was the biggest to date and could shed light on why the animal become extinct, BBC News reported.

Diprotodon, a relative of the modern wombat, was the largest marsupial that ever lived and had a pouch that was large enough to carry an adult human.


According to the Australian Museum, it was “widespread across Australia when the first indigenous people arrived, co-existing with them for thousands of years before becoming extinct about 25,000 years ago.” Fortunately for the people, diprotodon ate plants.

“Exact reasons for the extinction of Diprotodon remain unclear. It seems to have co-existed with Aboriginal people for over 20,000 years, so the 'blitzkrieg' model (extinction upon the arrival of humans) does not hold for Diprotodon,” according to a post on the Museum’s website.

“Human activity may have had an effect, either through habitat change ('firestick farming') or perhaps via a slow decrease in numbers through selected hunting of juveniles. Aboriginal people did not have 'big game' weapons, and most likely did not target adult Diprotodon,” it says.

“Climate change may have also been a significant factor. During the Pleistocene, Australia experienced droughts that were much worse than today's, and much of inland Australia was barren, inhospitable and waterless,” it adds.

'Blown away'
The fossils were discovered at the South Walker Creek mine site  in central Queensland by the Barada Barna people, according to the Queensland Museum, where the lead scientist on the project, Scott Hocknull, is based.

"When we did the initial survey I was just completely blown away by the concentrations of these fragments,” Hocknull told BBC News.

"It's a paleontologists' goldmine where we can really see what these megafauna were doing, how they actually behaved, what their ecology was,” he added. "With so many fossils it gives us a unique opportunity to see these animals in their environment, basically, so we can reconstruct it."

He said it was thought the animals died after they became trapped in a bog. The remains of other species, such as 20-foot lizards called megalania and giant crocodiles, were also found at the site.

"We're almost certain that most of these carcasses of diprotodon have been torn apart by both the crocodiles and the lizards, because we've found shed teeth within their skeletons from both animals,” Hocknull told the BBC.

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They all had small holes in their skulls consist with small caliber hand gun rounds.

  • 1 vote
Reply#26 - Thu Jun 21, 2012 9:05 PM EDT

Oh god must be very unhappy to know that.

    Reply#27 - Thu Jun 21, 2012 9:29 PM EDT

    The dingo ate my wombat.

    • 2 votes
    Reply#28 - Thu Jun 21, 2012 10:31 PM EDT

    I like how they always slip the climate change thing in on every story .

      Reply#29 - Fri Jun 22, 2012 12:03 AM EDT

      That is one big wombat! I just wonder what else we will find.

        Reply#30 - Fri Jun 22, 2012 6:48 AM EDT

        Whatever it is Romney would French kiss it to become President...

          Reply#31 - Fri Jun 22, 2012 9:14 AM EDT

          Just keep on moving along, folks. Nothing to get excited about here. Just another pretty face in the crowd.

            Reply#32 - Fri Jun 22, 2012 1:11 PM EDT

            "According to the Australian Museum, it was “widespread across Australia when the first indigenous people arrived, co-existing with them for thousands of years before becoming extinct about 25,000 years ago.” Fortunately for the people, diprotodon ate plants."

            Describing people who come to a new continent from elsewhere as "indigenous people" is somewhat off the mark. The only place they were indigenous to at that time was where ever they came to Australia from.

            The current move afoot in anthropology and and the study of Pleistocene fauna seems to be to blame extinctions on something else other than "indigenous" people. We've seen that move recently with the wooly mammoth. Used to be that predation hunting by proto-Indian hunters after the last Ice Age was blamed for their decline and eventual extinction. Now, the move is to blame "climate change". If they can only find some evidence that white Europeans were, beginning around 10,000 BC, burning fossil fuels, running coal-fired electric plants, filling the atmosphere with CO2 and methane, and becoming generally overweight at the expense of poorer regions, then they will have their P.C. culprit.

              Reply#33 - Tue Jul 3, 2012 10:59 AM EDT
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