A tiny marsupial species declared extinct decades ago may still be hopping around in the deserts of Australia — and a new ...
This small, possibly extinct marsupial from the inhospitable Sturt Stony Desert may have had a solid skull built for hard biting. But not enough to bite through the kinds of foods biologists used ...
The desert rat-kangaroo (Caloprymnus campestris), a small, hopping marsupial believed to be extinct since 1994, may still be hiding in the vast and harsh Sturt Stony Desert of Australia.
The ridges are known as kaluts. In the Lut Desert some are up to 155 m high and their ridges can be followed for more than 40 km. The wind also strips hard rocky outcrops bare of soil, which leaves ...
The discovery may help refine search efforts in remote areas with more appropriate food sources, like the Sturt Stony Desert in the state's northeast, where unverified sightings have been reported.