australia
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Phoenix From the Ashes: How Australia’s Giant Birds of Prey Survived the Megafauna Extinction
Australia's only vulture, and a fearsome extinct eagle, are among the earliest recorded birds of prey from the Pleistocene period more than 50,000 years ago—and now Flinders University researchers are bringing them to life again.
Latest Research Articles
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Australia Offers Visa Grant To Tuvalu Citizens Affected Of Climate Change
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Climate Refuge: Australia to Welcome Tuvalu Citizens Affected by Rising Sea Levels Under Landmark Pact
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Crocodile Match: Australian Man Survives Attack by Biting Back at 10-Foot Reptile
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Brown Snake Suspected of Killing French Backpacker in Australia
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Horrific Recycling Habit in Australia Prompts Warning From Waste Segregation Company as Explosives, Animal Carcass, Samurai Sword Found in Bins
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Shoot-to-Kill: Aerial Cull Ordered to Rid of Feral Horses in Australia State Park After Native Wildlife Risks Extinction
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Australia Fire: Two Dead, Hundreds Evacuated In Queensland As Officials Warned Of Worst Bushfire Seas
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Leopard Toby Puffer Fish Endemic in Southeast Asia, Oceania Seen for the First Time in Australia
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Half-Devoured Great White Shark Near Victoria Sparks Fear of Megapredator in the Deep Sea
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Mysterious Orcas "Old Tom" and Family That Hunted with Indigenous Australian Whalers Now Extinct [Study]
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Hailstorm Frequency: New Study Shows 'Hail-Prone Days' Increased by 40% in Heavily Populated Areas in Australia
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Coastal Erosion in Australia Gets New Solution: Concrete Modules Blended With Oyster Shells