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Tasmanian tigers and devils discovered in Indigenous rock art in Australia
Around 14 new rock-art depictions of thylacines, also known as Tasmanian tigers, have been found in northern Australia.
Discover Magazine on MSN
Aboriginal cave paintings of now-extinct Tasmanian tiger may shift extinction timeline
Discover how Indigenous art from less than 1,000 years ago could reshape what we know about the Tasmanian tiger’s ...
Archaeologists think some of the paintings may be less than 1,000 years old, even though the animals were thought to have ...
Rock art depictions of thylacines are much more numerous and widespread across mainland Australia than Tasmanian devils.
Australian rock art discovery depicts thylacines using white clay, indicating that they were painted within the last 1,000 ...
Newly documented rock art in Arnhem Land has raised questions about how long Tasmanian tigers lived on the mainland before ...
The striped dog-like marsupial we know as the Tasmanian tiger has long been surrounded by mystery, and the subject of ...
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Tasmanian devils, the carnivorous marsupials whose feisty, frenzied eating habits won the animals cartoon fame, have returned to mainland Australia for the first time in some ...
Tasmanian devils are named for their chilling nocturnal shrieks, which reminded early colonists of hellhounds. Perhaps more than any other sound, the screams give a lone bush walker “this feeling of ...
On the other side of the world, even wild animals are getting into the holiday spirit. Marley and Moose, two Tasmanian devil babies at the Australian Reptile Park, had fun in a specially-built winter ...
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