Showing posts with label marsupial lion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marsupial lion. Show all posts

Sunday, 31 August 2025

Oligocene (Pt 17): Dawn of the Kangaroos

Ekaltadeta
Kangaroos are perhaps the single most iconic Australian mammals. As marsupials, we tend to think of them as lost relics of an earlier evolutionary period, and, indeed, they have been around for a long time. Of course, they have been evolving during that time, rather than standing still, but if we had a time machine, we could go back millions of years into Australia's past, and still find animals that were, more or less, kangaroos. But, obviously, there is a limit.

Exactly how far back that limit is partly depends on how kangaroo-like you want your kangaroos to be. But even then, there are some gaps in our knowledge that don't have direct counterparts on other continents. The obvious place to start is with the fossil record, and, here, at least, we can provide a clear answer. The oldest known fossil kangaroos date to around 28 million years ago, towards the end of the Oligocene.

Saturday, 1 October 2022

Miocene (Pt 35): Crash Bandicoot and the Giant Platypus

Nimbacinus
When we think of marsupials, the animal that's probably most likely to come to mind first is the kangaroo, likely followed by the koala. Both of these animals, along with wombats and possums, belong to the largest order of marsupials, technically referred to as the diprotodonts - a term that literally means "two front teeth" on account of the enlarged, vaguely rodent-like incisors that characterise the family. These are used to clip at vegetation, since the group is overwhelmingly herbivorous.

This was less true in the Miocene, and that's because of the existence of marsupial lions. Or, more accurately, of thylacoleonids, members of the "marsupial lion" family, since the truly lion-sized animal best known by that name didn't live until much later. The group originated towards the end of the previous epoch, when some herbivorous, probably wombat-like, animal switched to a more meaty diet, its front teeth becoming blade-like in order to cut into flesh. They seem to have prospered during the Miocene, with three different genera currently recognised.

Sunday, 13 September 2020

Miniature Marsupial Lions

Thylacoleo carnifex
The largest carnivorous marsupial alive today is the Tasmanian devil (Sarcophilus harisii). Noticeably smaller than a European badger, it's still almost twice the weight of the next nearest contender for that title, or, indeed, of the omnivorous Virginia opossum so well-known to Americans. Most other living predatory marsupials can more accurately be described as "insectivores", due to their small size.

Unsurprisingly, this wasn't always so. Most famously, perhaps, there was the thylacine or Tasmanian wolf, which officially went extinct in 1936. There were also the "marsupial sabretooths" of South America, which died out during the Pliocene about three million years ago. However, these are no longer thought to technically be marsupials in the sense of being descended from the last common ancestor of the living species, even if they were definitely in that branch of the mammalian family tree.