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News Article Fossil Find in Queensland

Posted: Sat Jul 17, 2010 4:32 pm
by NoPolys
Anyone see this? and does anyone have the full published article?

http://bigpondnews.com/articles/OddSpot ... 86031.html

Re: News Article Fossil Find in Queensland

Posted: Sat Jul 17, 2010 9:35 pm
by The yowie Mrx
I was looking at some caves today didn't find any fossil's only 1 kangaroo skull and a back bone.

Re: News Article Fossil Find in Queensland

Posted: Sun Jul 18, 2010 6:36 pm
by deadpool
http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/queensl ... 10bty.html <-- pretty much the same article, just dragged on a bit more with a few pics.

Re: News Article Fossil Find in Queensland

Posted: Sun Jul 18, 2010 11:52 pm
by NoPolys
Thanks Deadpool, makes me kinda shudder to think about a sheep sized tree climber, good thing I wear a hat (sweat drop) .

I guess my question would be if these large marsupials were at the top of the fossil pile, what's the possibility of a relic population still in the area?

Re: News Article Fossil Find in Queensland

Posted: Tue Jul 20, 2010 4:39 am
by deadpool
Lets just hope they're not drop bears (scared)

Re: News Article Fossil Find in Queensland

Posted: Tue Jul 20, 2010 9:06 pm
by NoPolys
When I first moved over here, I had someone mention drop bears....... good thing they had a smile when they did, I never would step off the M-5 !! (cheers)

Re: News Article Fossil Find in Queensland

Posted: Wed Jul 21, 2010 11:46 am
by deadpool
Its kinda amusing in a way, when you wiki "drop bear". It comes up with the following at the end:

See also:
Phantom kangaroo
Fictional national animals
Bunyip
Yowie
Queensland Tiger

The Drop Bear is a "cryptid"? (lol)

Re: News Article Fossil Find in Queensland

Posted: Fri Jul 23, 2010 1:05 am
by cryptobotanica
Drop bears are funny. But, an entirely normal koala can and will reduce your flesh to strips of putrid puss with its claws, if it feels the need to. Checking on "roadkill" and people that care for injured wildlife ("WIRES") can result in that kind of damage.

I suspect someone had one fall on their noggin a hundred years ago and it just spread...

QLD , despite the rampant plant growth if you give it half a chance, is a very ancient region and not as far removed from the rest of the world, as the rest of Australia is.

I've found odd things in caves or rock shelters... admittedly a three inch forest snail shell is not that interesting to most people but it's easily twice the size of what they are "meant" to be.

There hasn't been a decent effort to classify our local flora and fauna in a good 100 years. For example, red kangaroos do not come as far east as my place. Which mustb e amusing the the big red roo bloke that I nearly ran over a few months back just around the corner.

Those black "distribution" splotches on maps are handy but hardly foolproof... it's a BIG place, and very few people. Even fewer that bother reporting things to the relevant experts.

I can't see dozens on dozens of animals ALL falling down the same hole. They may have had a very coherent social structure meaning as one fell, another would go to help... or it may be they all tried to shelter there durng a fire / volcanic eruption / whathaveyou.

I have found a few things to confound the "experts" in QLD. Stones, and bones. It's a big place, and very old, and a lot of it for whatever reason (ownership, accessability,a line being drawn through history about 180 years ago...generally seeming a bit threatening) has never been properly explored or documented since old Willy McKenzie made his sketch of Aboriginal trade routes.