The two marsupials were found living in the remote rainforests on the Vogelkop Peninsula of New Guinea.
Researchers say the remarkable discovery was made using fossils, photos and a misidentified museum specimen ...
Scientists have described an exciting discovery: two marsupials that modern science thought to be extinct are still alive in ...
For thousands of years, scientists knew of two tiny marsupials in New Guinea only through fossils and local legend. Researchers had long considered these species extinct. However, a team recently ...
Scientists have confirmed that two marsupial species, known only from ancient fossils for more than 7,000 years, are still ...
Indigenous people in Papua, Indonesia, have helped scientists track down two animals that were thought to have gone extinct thousands of years ago: a relative of Australia’s greater glider and a ...
Until now, scientists have only known about the animals from fossils. But they suspected the creatures might still be alive, because the remote, difficult-to-navigate region where the fossils were ...
In paleontology, lineages that drop out of the fossil record and then re-emerge after long periods are termed ‘Lazarus taxa.’ ...
The pygmy long-fingered possum and the ring-tailed glider, two marsupials believed to have died out thousands of years ago, are still alive in Papuan Indonesia.
The death of this ancient species, discovered alongside more newly described mammals, had been greatly exaggerated.
Two marsupial species thought long extinct, until now known only from fossils, were found alive in New Guinea through a ...
Scientists have rediscovered two marsupial species in New Guinea that were believed to have gone extinct 6,000 years ago. The ...