the larger taxa became extinct and so few of the smaller taxa (Flood, 1994).
Aboriginal people coexisted with megafauna in Australia for at least 30,000
years. They lived in the same environments at the same time, evident by the
bones from both groups that have been found together in sediments. The way in
which the megafauna and humans interacted is still uncertain. There is growing
evidence, such as blood on stone tools and an engraved Diprotodon tooth, that
suggests that humans actively predated on the megafauna. An Extinction Scenario:
Humans first arrived in Australia gradually spreading around the continent using
fire and hunting. The megafauna were relatively slow moving and naive to
predators. The megafauna that survived the initial impact of human hunters,
finally died at the end of the Pleistocene when the Australia was undergoing the
driest period it had
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