One of the fossil giant wombat type marsupials the name of which temporarily escapes me (he asks guessing wildly)?
Nope, it's not a diprotodontid. Good guess though, the skulls look more similar than what I had remembered.
Thylacoleo, then?Is it a new thing that blogger won't let you log onto your google account without forcing you to create a blog?Chris
Nope, not a marsupial. I'd like to further add that this species became extinct very recently, hundreds of years after the Great Pyramid of Giza was completed.---I haven't noticed any strange login issues, but then I do have a blog... I'm sure our Google Overlords wouldn't mind an inquiry.
I'm too l-a-z-y to provide an answer. And I'm fat. So, I'm giant, and slothful.. that's what I'm getting at.
Hey, 150 kg isn't that giant!The now practically spoilered answer is forthcoming...
Megalocnus rodens
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One of the fossil giant wombat type marsupials the name of which temporarily escapes me (he asks guessing wildly)?
Nope, it's not a diprotodontid. Good guess though, the skulls look more similar than what I had remembered.
Thylacoleo, then?
Is it a new thing that blogger won't let you log onto your google account without forcing you to create a blog?
Chris
Nope, not a marsupial.
I'd like to further add that this species became extinct very recently, hundreds of years after the Great Pyramid of Giza was completed.
---
I haven't noticed any strange login issues, but then I do have a blog... I'm sure our Google Overlords wouldn't mind an inquiry.
I'm too l-a-z-y to provide an answer. And I'm fat. So, I'm giant, and slothful.. that's what I'm getting at.
Hey, 150 kg isn't that giant!
The now practically spoilered answer is forthcoming...
Megalocnus rodens
Post a Comment