YouTube Skeletons of three-tonne wombat-like marsupial excavated in outback WA
Skeletons belonging to a gigantic, three-tonne relative of Australia’s modern-day wombats have been unearthed by scientists in Western Australia’s north, shedding light on the state’s rich natural history.
Western Australia Museum’s palaeontology team descended on a remote mine site at Du Boulay Creek, in the Pilbara, where several Diprotodon fossils have lurked beneath the surface for tens of thousands of years.
Related to the modern-day wombat and koala, the diprotodon is the largest known marsupial to have ever lived, growing up to four metres in length and 1.7 metres tall, and reaching weights of almost three tonnes.
An image of a what a Diprotodon is believed to have looked like, by zoology and palaeontology artist Peter Schouten.(Supplied: Western Australian Museum, Foundation for the WA Museum and CITIC Pacific Mining)
On the site, the dig team is hoping to recover four or five skeletons, including skulls, jaws and teeth, which are partly visible and embedded in the hard creek bed.
The creatures were discovered in 1991 and have been observed and carefully protected since, with the original specimen now in the WA Museum.
“It was a researcher working just on top of the cliffs,” WA Museum Curator of Mammalogy Kenny Travoullion said.
“He looked down and saw some bones and reported them to the museum.”
He said the Diprotodons were herbivores, roaming the landscape in herds and eating saltbush.
A team recovering rare Diprotodon skeletons from Du Boulay Creek in the Pilbara.(Supplied: Western Australian Museum, Foundation for the WA Museum and CITIC Pacific Mining)
“They’re pretty incredible animals,” Dr Travoullion said.
“They would have overlapped with the first people of this land … we don’t really know much about them.
“But by studying them in the field here, taking them back to the museum, and having researchers and experts come and look at the bones, we’ll be able to uncover more about these creatures and how they lived in the past.”
The Du Boulay Creek site, in the Fortescue River floodplain, 1450 kilometres north of Perth, is believed to be unique because the remains of several Diprotodons are near each other.
It is believed the presence of both adult and juvenile skeletons could mean the site was on a major migration route.
The Diprotodon skeleton found in 1991 is now on display at the WA Museum Boola Bardip. (Supplied: WA Museum Boola Bardip.)
This site is the fifth of its kind in Western Australia, with other Diprotodon fossils discovered in remote locations including the Nullarbor Plain.
Due to the risks of flooding, experts say excavation is critical to preserve the skeletal remains.
It is believed the site may have been on a major migration route.(Supplied: Western Australian Museum, Foundation for the WA Museum and CITIC Pacific Mining)
Culture and Arts Minister David Templeman said the find was globally significant.
“Under this ancient sky on this ancient landscape, we are now uncovering stories of the past that date back thousands and thousands of years,” he said.
“The scientific knowledge that’s gained by these findings will be shared worldwide and give attention to Western Australia more broadly.”
For year 11 Karratha High School student Henry Noble, having the Diprotodon site close to home has been a thrill.
“I really like to find out stuff of the past,” he said.
“It’s just kind of like time travelling in a way.”
Year 11 Karratha High School student Henry Noble said he is interested in archaeology as it feels like time travel. (ABC Pilbara: Cody Fenner)
Just as delighted is year 10 student Maddison Dart, who says she wants to be an archaeologist one day.
“I’m very excited, I like being out in nature … and looking at bones of animals,” she said.
“So being able to see actual fossils in real life and digging them up is amazing.”
Once recovered, the fossils will be taken to Perth and kept at the WA Museum Boola Bardip.