thylacoleo उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- By species number, most current living marsupials are scansorial, and the cursorial ones seem to hop . . . You might like to look at the hips and spines of the Thylacoleo . talk ) 20 : 47, 16 November 2015 ( UTC)
- It also had extremely strong fore limbs, with retractable, cat-like claws, a trait previously unseen in marsupials . " Thylacoleo " also possessed enormous hooded claws set on large semiopposable thumbs, which were used to capture and disembowel prey.
- Due to its unique predatory morphology, scientists repeatedly claim " Thylacoleo " to be the most specialized mammalian carnivore of all time . " Thylacoleo " had vertical shearing carnassial cheek teeth that are relatively larger than in any other mammalian carnivore.
- Due to its unique predatory morphology, scientists repeatedly claim " Thylacoleo " to be the most specialized mammalian carnivore of all time . " Thylacoleo " had vertical shearing carnassial cheek teeth that are relatively larger than in any other mammalian carnivore.
- "' Genus : " "'Thylacoleo " ( " Thylacopardus " )-Australia's marsupial lions, that lived from about 2 million years ago, during the late Pliocene and became extinct about 30, 000 years ago, during the late Pleistocene epoch.
- A 2016 episode of " Nature's Weirdest Events " theorized that the " drop bear " may have started as a long-persisting Australian native memory of encounters with " Thylacoleo carnifex ", the marsupial lion, including showing an old native rock painting that seems to show a " Thylacoleo " standing on a tree branch.
- A 2016 episode of " Nature's Weirdest Events " theorized that the " drop bear " may have started as a long-persisting Australian native memory of encounters with " Thylacoleo carnifex ", the marsupial lion, including showing an old native rock painting that seems to show a " Thylacoleo " standing on a tree branch.
- In addition, they note that megalania fossils are extremely uncommon, in contrast to " Thylacoleo carnifex " with its wide distribution across Australian Pleistocene deposits . " Quinkana ", a genus of terrestrial crocodile that grew up to 6m and was present until around 40, 000 years ago, has also been marked as another apex predator of Australian megafauna.
- Although believed to have been killed by climate change, some scientists now believe " Thylacoleo " to have been killed by humans destroying the ecosystem with fire in addition to hunting its prey . They found " Sporormiella " spores, which grow in herbivore dung, virtually disappeared around 41, 000 years ago, a time when no known climate transformation was taking place.