4th February 2016
Newsademic.com
™
- British English edition
page
4
sides will not even sit in the same
room. Instead they are taking part
in proximity talks. The two groups
are in different parts o f the building.
UN officials move from one group
to the other trying to find things that
they agree on. These proximity talks
are expected to last for at least six
months. □
A
u s t r a l ia n
b ir d
e x t in c t io n
Genyornis newtoni
was a huge
bird. It lived in Australia thousands
o f years ago. The bird, which laid
very large eggs, could not fly. R e
searchers from the USA have been
studying broken pieces o f ancient
eggshell. Some have burn marks.
The burnt eggshells probably mean
that early humans cooked and ate
the flightless bird’s eggs. This might
explain why the birds died out.
C om puter g enerated im age o f w hat G enyornis
new toni m a y have lo o ke d like
The large birds were 2.1 metres
(seven feet) tall. They were much
bigger than today’s large flightless
birds such as the emu and ostrich.
The ancient birds had powerful
legs, but very small wings. From
the shape o f its beak, scientists
think that
Genyornis newtoni
was a
plant-eater, or herbivore. The birds
lived in many parts o f Australia.
They seem to have liked grassland
areas. Many shell fragments from
their eggs have been found in sand
dunes. So the giant birds may have
used these places to nest. The birds’
eggs were the size o f large melons.
Giant creatures were once com
mon in Australia. Together they are
known as megafauna. Many fossils
o f these big animals have been dis
covered in the country. They often
look like very large versions o f ani
mals that exist today. For example,
fossils have been found o f giant
wombats, kangaroos, koalas, liz
ards, tortoises, and platypuses. The
giant kangaroos were over three me
tres (ten feet) tall.
M ost megafauna species are
thought to have died out around
50,000 years ago. Yet some sur
vived for another ten thousand
years. Nobody knows why all o f
Australia’s megafauna became ex
tinct. One idea is that early humans
hunted these animals until none
were left. Some scientists think
that the more likely reason was ei
ther a sudden or gradual change in
the climate. Huge wildfires are not
unusual in Australia. Lightning of
ten starts these blazes. In Australia
they are known as bushfires. Some
suspect that wildfires may have
helped, or contributed to, several
megafauna extinctions.
Megafauna also existed in most
other parts o f the world thousands o f
years ago. They too died out. Today,
Africa is the only part o f the world
where many megafauna-like ani
mals exist. Examples are: elephants,
rhinos, giraffes, and hippos.
Modern humans
(Homo sapiens)
originally came from Africa. They
began to spread to parts o f the Middle
East roughly 70,000 years ago. After
crossing Asia they arrived in Aus
tralia about 20,000 years later. This
was around the time that the Austral
ian megafauna began to disappear.
These early humans did not grow
their own food. They travelled
around hunting animals and gather
ing edible fruit, nuts and berries. It
would have been easy for them to col
lect
Genyornis new toni’s
large eggs.
Rock art picture o f Genyornis newtoni? (Ben Gunn)
The researchers studied pieces
o f eggshell with burn marks. They
were found at 200 places in different
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