'Life in a glass house' - The Pliocene deposits of Chinchilla
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Louys, Julien
Wilkinson, Joanne
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Australian Age of Dinosaurs
Abstract
A shot rings out in the waning light of the day. It’s late afternoon in Chinchilla, down at the rifle range. The echo of the rifle shot reverberates off the gully walls; it’s the last shot of the day and as it fades away the ancient creatures that inhabit this area have the place to themselves once again. They don’t mind sharing with these strange visitors though. They’ve been here for millions of years and in that time they’ve seen all sorts come and go. They’re the monsters and marvels, beasts and critters of a time known as the Pliocene – a weird world, reminiscent of our own in many ways, but in other ways vastly different! The Pliocene – the geological period between 5.6 and 2.6 million years ago – was a time of great climatic and environmental upheaval. Following on from the generally cool and dry conditions that characterised the late
Miocene, the beginning of the Pliocene was warm and wet and it was during this period that many of the marsupials that dominate modern Australian ecosystems, including quolls, dunnarts,
bandicoots, wombats and long-faced kangaroos first appeared in the fossil record. Rodents, which
today make up about 25% of modern Australian mammalian diversity, also arrived on the scene during this time, most likely as a result of accidental rafting from Southeast Asia
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Australian Age of Dinosaurs
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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