Nambaroo is an extinct genus of macropod marsupial from the late Oligocene to the early Miocene of Australia.[2]
Nambaroo Temporal range:
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Mammalia |
Infraclass: | Marsupialia |
Order: | Diprotodontia |
Family: | †Balbaridae |
Genus: | †Nambaroo Flannery and Rich, 1986[1] |
Type species | |
Nambaroo tarrinyeri Flannery & Rich, 1986
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Species | |
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Recent research suggests that the many species belonging to this genus may be either be invalid or belong to the closely related Ganawamaya.[3]
Sources
edit- ^ Flannery, Tim; Rich, Thomas H. V. (1986). "Macropodoids from the Middle Miocene Namba Formation, South Australia, and the homology of some dental structures in kangaroos". Journal of Paleontology. 60 (2): 418–447. Bibcode:1986JPal...60..418F. doi:10.1017/S0022336000021958. S2CID 86029480.
- ^ B.P. Kear; B.N. Cooke; M. Archer; T.F.Flannery (2007). Implications of a new species of the Oligo-Miocene kangaroo (Marsupialia: Macropodoidea) Nambaroo, from the Riversleigh World Heritage Area, Queensland, Australia, in Journal of Paleontology 81, pp. 1147-1167. (abstract)
- ^ Butler, K. (2018). "Revision of Oligo-Miocene kangaroos, Ganawamaya and Nambaroo (Marsupialia: Macropodiformes, Balbaridae)". Palaeontologia Electronica. 21 (1): 1–58. doi:10.26879/747.
- "Granddaddy of Kangaroos" Found in Aussie Fossil at National Geographic