Name: Genyornis
(Jaw bird).
Phonetic: Jen-ee-or-niss.
Named By: Sterling & Zietz - 1896.
Classification: Chordata, Aves, Anseriformes,
Dromornithidae.
Species: G. newtoni (type).
Diet: Uncertain, refer to main text for details.
Size: Approximately 2 to 2.25 meters tall.
Known locations: Australia.
Time period: Pleistocene.
Fossil representation: Many fossil specimens.
Eggshell fragments are also known.
The
beak of Genyornis was sharp and powerful, but
unfortunately it is
difficult to say what its diet was as it would have been useful for
either a carnivore or herbivore. It is also equally possible that
Genyornis was an omnivore, feeding from plants but
also supplementing
its diet by scavenging carrion. This broad dietary interpretation
also covers other members of the Dromornithidae group such as
Bullockornis
and Dromornis.
The
temporal range of animals (how long the genus lived for) is usually
established by the recovery of fossils and the study of their dig
sites. However Aboriginal rock art dated to around just forty
thousand years ago depicts birds that are strikingly similar to
Genyornis, strongly suggesting that the aboriginal
people did indeed
live alongside this bird. In fact Genyornis bones
have even been
found associated with human artefacts indicating the possibility that
the early human settlers may have hunted Genyornis.
This also lends
some support to the theory that much of the Australian megafauna went
extinct as a result of hunting and land settlement by early humans.
Further reading
- The skull of dromornithid birds: anatomical evidence for their
relationship to Anseriformes - Records of the South Australian Museum
31(1):51-97 - P. F. Murray and D. Megirian - 1998.
- Pleistocene Extinction of Genyornis newtoni:
Human Impact on
Australian Megafauna - Science 283 (5399): 205–208. - Gifford H.
Miller, John W. Magee, Beverly J. Johnson, Marilyn L. Fogel, Nigel A.
Spooner, Malcolm T. McCulloch & Linda K. Ayliffe - 1999.
- Is the Genyornis egg of a mihirung or another extinct bird from the
Australian dreamtime? - Quaternary Science Reviews. 133: 147–164. -
Gerald Grellet-Tinner, Nigel A. Spooner & Trevor H. Worthy -
2016.
- Human predation contributed to the extinction of the Australian
megafaunal bird Genyornis newtoni 47 ka. - Nature
Communications. 7:
10496. - Gifford Miller, John Magee, Mike Smith, Nigel Spooner,
Alexander Bayne, Scott Lehman, Marilyn Fogel, Harvey Johnston, Doug
Williams, Peter Clark, Christopher Florian, Richard Holst &
Stephen DeVogel - 2016.
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