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By the time the first European explorers arrived, the animal was already extinct in mainland Australia and New Guinea and rare in Tasmania. Europeans may have encountered it in Tasmania as far back as 1642, when Abel Tasman first arrived in Tasmania. His shore party reported seeing the footprints of "wild beasts having claws like a Tyger". [15]
Australia-New Guinea is divided between three countries: Australia (mainland Australia and Tasmania), Papua New Guinea (eastern New Guinea), and Indonesia (Western New Guinea and the Aru Islands). Extinct animals from the rest of Indonesia are covered in List of Asian animals extinct in the Holocene.
This category includes animals that have become extinct in Australia since European colonisation in 1788. For fossil species see Category:Prehistoric animals of Oceania.
The thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger, was a dog-like marsupial with the head of a wolf. The shy Australian animals died after only a century of European settlement. Despite the world's last captive ...
An extinct Portuguese dog breed. Tesem: Ancient Egyptian dogs that are now extinct. [37] Toy Bulldog: A British breed that was a miniature version of the Bulldog, popular in the late Victorian era as a companion dog; it is considered to be the progenitor of the French Bulldog (which surpassed it in popularity) and the last record of it was in ...
Canidae is a family of mammals in the order Carnivora, which includes domestic dogs, wolves, coyotes, foxes, jackals, dingoes, and many other extant and extinct dog-like mammals. A member of this family is called a canid; all extant species are a part of a single subfamily, Caninae, and are called canines. They are found on all continents ...
St. John's Water Dog. Another long-lost pup is the St. John’s Water Dog, or the Lesser Newfoundland, which is a big name for a big breed. Native to Newfoundland, they were known for their ...
You won't believe how incredible these extinct dog breeds once were. The post 8 Extinct Dog Breeds You Won’t Believe Actually Existed appeared first on Reader's Digest.