Extinct Giant Kangaroos Discovered in Australia

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A team of researchers has identified three new species of giant kangaroos after examining fossils from Australia.

Paleontologists from Adelaide’s Flinders University recently reviewed multiple complete kangaroo fossils from Lake Callabonna in South Australia that were discovered in 2013, 2018 and 2019. By reviewing all species of Protemnodon, a genus of extinct kangaroos that lived from 5 million to 40,000 years ago, researchers identified three new species of kangaroos, one of which is twice the size of the largest red kangaroo alive today, according to a university press release.

The findings of the study’s lead researcher, Isaac Kerr, and his co-authors were recently published in Megataxa.

Pictured is a male red kangaroo, a species native to Australia. Researchers recently identified three new species of extinct kangaroo, one of which is twice the size of the red kangaroo.

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The discovery revealed attributes of the new species that differed greatly from each other—for example, the kangaroos lived in different environments and hopped in different ways.

The new species were named Protemnodon viator, Protemnodon mamkurra and Protemnodon dawsonae. The former was the biggest species identified by the researchers—reaching twice the size of red male kangaroos today. Red kangaroos can stand up to nearly 6 feet.

The study said Protemnodon viator was being named for its long-limbed nature, which allowed it to “hop fairly quickly, the press release said.

The other species, Protemnodon mamkurra and Protemnodon dawsonae, were identified when researchers examined the work of early researchers.

Protemnodon mamkurra likely moved on all four legs, making it slower than Prtemnodon viator. “A large but thick-boned and robust kangaroo, it was probably fairly slow-moving and inefficient. It may have hopped only rarely, perhaps just when startled,” Kerr said.

Kerr’s research spans five years. The researchers photographed and 3-D-scanned more than 800 specimens collected from Australia and New Guinea and compared them.

“It was quite the undertaking,” Kerr said, according to the press release. “It feels so good to finally have it out in the world, after five years of research, 261 pages and more than 100,000 words. I really hope that it helps more studies of Protemnodon happen, so we can find out more of what these kangaroos were doing.

“Living kangaroos are already such remarkable animals, so it’s amazing to think what these peculiar giant kangaroos could have been getting up to,” he added.

All Protemnodon species went extinct on mainland Australia 40,000 years ago, and the reason isn’t clear, especially because many species differed in size, habitat and other markers. Researchers are studying why similar animals, like wallaroos and gray kangaroos, didn’t experience the same fate.

“It’s great to have some clarity on the identities of the species of Protemnodon,” Flinders professor Gavin Prideaux, a co-author of the Megataxa study, said about the species.

“The fossils of this genus are widespread and they’re found regularly, but more often than not you have no way of being certain which species you’re looking at. This study may help researchers feel more confident when working with Protemnodon.”

Newsweek reached out to Prideaux by email for further comment.