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Keyword: genyornis

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  • Ancient humans made giant omelets from the eggs of ‘Demon Ducks of Doom’

    06/05/2022 9:07:14 PM PDT · by BenLurkin · 34 replies
    syfy-wire ^ | June 4, 2022, 1:00 PM ET | Cassidy Ward
    “Genyornis was two meters tall and 200 kilos. We don’t know exactly what it would have looked like because it’s been dead for a while and there are few skeletal remains available. It was certainly a flightless bird with some characteristics shared with ostriches, like the big chest and small wings, but it would have looked more like a big goose or duck,” The evidence that humans were eating these large eggs comes from burnt eggshells found among the remains of ancient cultures. Scientists studying these sites find two different types of eggshells, one of which comes from emus and...
  • First Australians ate giant eggs of huge flightless birds, ancient proteins confirm

    06/01/2022 11:48:05 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 22 replies
    ScienceDaily ^ | May 25, 2022 | University of Cambridge
    Proteins extracted from fragments of prehistoric eggshell found in the Australian sands confirm that the continent’s earliest humans consumed the eggs of a two-metre tall bird that disappeared into extinction over 47,000 years ago.Burn marks discovered on scraps of ancient shell several years ago suggested the first Australians cooked and ate large eggs from a long-extinct bird – leading to fierce debate over the species that laid them.Now, an international team led by scientists from the universities of Cambridge and Turin have placed the animal on the evolutionary tree by comparing the protein sequences from powdered egg fossils to those...
  • Bush tucker feeds an ancient mystery

    07/13/2012 7:38:52 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 22 replies
    HeritageDaily ^ | Tuesday, July 10, 2012 | Contributing Source: UNSW
    As sabre tooth tigers and woolly mammoths were wandering around Europe, unique, giant prehistoric animals were living in Australia -- three metre tall kangaroos and wombat-like creatures, the size of a four-wheel drive, were just some of the curious creatures Down Under. Yet mysteriously, sometime during the last 100,000 years, they disappeared forever. The extinction of these giant animals, known as megafauna, has generated great debate. One group advocates "human blitzkrieg" -- those asserting the first Australians hunted these beasts to extinction. Others, myself included, find there is too little evidence to confidently attribute responsibility to any particular factor. Nonetheless,...