Diprotodon

E148672

Diprotodon was a giant prehistoric marsupial, the largest known marsupial to have ever lived, that roamed Australia during the Pleistocene epoch.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Diprotodon canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf extinct genus
marsupial
megafauna
bodyLength about 3 to 4 meters
bodyMass up to about 2800 kilograms
causeOfExtinction climate change (hypothesized)
human hunting (hypothesized)
class Mammalia
closelyRelatedTo Phascolarctos cinereus
surface form: koalas

wombats
continent Australia
dentition large chisel-like incisors
simple lophodont cheek teeth
describedBy Richard Owen
diet herbivorous
extinctionStatus extinct
family Diprotodontidae
firstAppearance Early Pleistocene
fossilFoundIn Lake Callabonna, South Australia
New South Wales
surface form: New South Wales, Australia

Queensland
surface form: Queensland, Australia

Tasmania
Western Australia
fossilType skeletons
skulls
trackways
geologicalAge Quaternary
heightAtShoulder about 2 meters
infraclass Marsupialia
kingdom Animalia
largestKnown marsupial
lastAppearance Late Pleistocene
livedIn grasslands
open woodlands
semi-arid environments
locomotion quadrupedal
nameMeaning two forward teeth
nativeRange mainland Australia
order Diprotodontia
partOf Australian Pleistocene megafauna
phylum Chordata
popularCultureRole sometimes called a giant wombat
reproduction pouched mammal
taxonRank genus
timePeriod Pleistocene epoch
surface form: Pleistocene
trophicLevel primary consumer
yearDescribed 1838

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.