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Australia's Mammal Extinctions

Australia's Mammal Extinctions

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Chris Johnson
Cambridge University Press, 1/25/2007
EAN 9780521686600, ISBN10: 0521686601

Paperback, 288 pages, 24.7 x 17.4 x 1.8 cm

Of the forty mammal species known to have vanished in the world in the last 200 years, almost half have been Australian. Our continent has the worst record of mammal extinctions, with over 65 mammal species having vanished in the last 50 000 years. It began with the great wave of megafauna extinctions in the last ice-age, and continues today, with many mammal species vulnerable to extinction. The question of why mammals became extinct, and why so many became extinct in Australia has been debated by experts for over a century and a half and we are no closer to agreement on the causes. This book introduces readers to the great mammal extinction debate. Chris Johnson takes us on a detective-like tour of these extinctions, uncovering how, why and when they occurred.

Preface and Acknowledgments
Glossary
1. Introduction - a brief history of Australian mammals
Part I. Mammals and People in Ice-Age Australia - 2.6 Million to 10,000 Years Ago
2. The Pleistocene Megafauna
3. What caused the Megafauna extinctions? 150 years of debate
4. Two dating problems - human arrival and Megafauna extinction
5. The changing environment of Late Pleistocene Australia
6. Testing hypotheses on Megafauna extinction
7. The aftermath
ecology consequences of Megafauna extinction
Part II. The Late Pre-Historic Period - 10,000 to 200 Years Ago
8. Environmental change and human history in aboriginal Australia
9. Dingoes, people, and other mammals in Holocene Australia
Part III. Europeans and Their New Mammals - The Last 200 Years
10. Mammal extinction in European Australia
11. What caused the recent extinctions?
12 Interaction
rabbits, sheep and dingoes
13. Conclusions - the history in review.

'This book makes a very well argued case for patterns and causes of mammal extinctions in Australia from the late Pleistocene into the period of European occupation. It gives an impressive range of evidence - palaeontological, palaeoenvironmental, archaeological, historical, ecological - to make the case. I thoroughly recommend it.' Bruno David, Monash University