2022
DOI: 10.1002/arco.5274
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Re‐evaluating the evidence for late‐surviving megafauna at Nombe rockshelter in the New Guinea highlands

Abstract: The causes of the Late Pleistocene extinction of most larger-bodied animals on the Australian continent have long been controversial. This is due, in no small part, to inadequate knowledge of exactly when these species were lost from different ecosystems. The Nombe rockshelter in the highlands of Papua New Guinea is one of very few sites on Sahul with as-yet-unrefuted evidence for the survival of megafaunal species until more recently than 40 thousand years (ka) ago. However, our understanding of the age of th… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(6 citation statements)
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References 61 publications
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“…143d) (Hope et al 1993). It does not co-occur with any other species of Protemnodon, but does occur with N. nombe at Nombe Rockshelter (Flannery et al 1983;Prideaux et al 2022).…”
Section: Pleistocene Distributions (Fig 143)mentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…143d) (Hope et al 1993). It does not co-occur with any other species of Protemnodon, but does occur with N. nombe at Nombe Rockshelter (Flannery et al 1983;Prideaux et al 2022).…”
Section: Pleistocene Distributions (Fig 143)mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Different sites are conflated into a single point in various cases to prevent the map from becoming too cluttered. Oldest and youngest dates provided for each species are in reference to the few dated sites and dated specimens, made with reference to FosSahul 2.0 (Peters et al 2019) and Prideaux (2006). The vast majority of sites yielding material of Protemnodon have not been directly dated, and so we consider it unlikely that these dates represent the full temporal range of the species.…”
Section: Included and Comparative Taxamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For the others we cannot currently do better than middle or late Pleistocene, which has long been a deficiency that has beset our understanding of change in Quaternary assemblages and extinction trajectories (Prideaux 2006). Bohra paulae, B. illuminata and B. nullarbora may have become extinct in the late Pleistocene at around the same time as numerous other larger species, soon after the arrival of humans in Australia and New Guinea (e.g., Prideaux et al 2009Prideaux et al , 2022Johnson et al 2016;Saltré et al 2016), or they may have disappeared earlier due to climatic changes (e.g., Wroe et al 2013). Faunal turnover at Mt Etna sometime between 280 and 205 ka ago has been interpreted as a response to increased aridity (Hocknull et al 2007), and two frog species bound to free water were lost from the Nullarbor region in the middle Pleistocene (Tyler & Prideaux 2016).…”
Section: Extinctionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The extinct marsupial family Diprotodontidae consisted of large quadrupedal herbivores, with the largest species, Diprotodon optatum Owen, 1838, weighing in excess of two tonnes [ 1 ]. The family inhabited Australia and New Guinea for greater than 26 million years (Ma) until its complete extinction 50–40 ka (thousand years) ago [ 2 5 ]. Most systematic studies of diprotodontids have focused on the dentition [ 6 – 14 ], with few describing and comparing cranial or postcranial features [ 15 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%