Badjcinus

<i>Badjcinus</i>

Badjcinus

Extinct genus of marsupials


Badjcinus turnbulli is an extinct thylacinid marsupial.[1] The only species in the genus Badjcinus, it is the earliest and most primitive known thylacinid, living 23 to 28 million years ago in the late Oligocene.[1]

Quick Facts Badjcinus Temporal range: Late Oligocene, Scientific classification ...

The generic name combines the Wanyi Aboriginal language "badj", 'expert hunter', and a word from Ancient Greek "kynos", meaning 'dog', from which the Thylacinidae name was originally derived. The specific epithet was proposed by the authors to honour the contributions of William D. Turnbull to palaeontology.[1]

Badjcinus was quite small, averaging 5.2 pounds (2.4 kg) in weight. It was a carnivore, probably eating small vertebrates and insects, as living Dasyurus species do today. The fossils were found at Riversleigh in north-west Queensland, Australia. Since other animals at Riversleigh were rainforest species, it is possible that B. turnbulli was arboreal, like Dasyurus maculatus.[1]


References

  1. Muirhead and Wroe, 1998.

Bibliography

  • Muirhead, Jeanette; Wroe, Stephen (September 1998). "A New Genus and Species, Badjcinus turnbulli (Thylacinidae: Marsupialia), from the LateOligocene of Riversleigh, Northern Australia, and an Investigation of Thylacinid Phylogeny". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 18 (3): 612–626. Bibcode:1998JVPal..18..612M. doi:10.1080/02724634.1998.10011088.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Badjcinus, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.