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Australia's Juukan Gorge yields up uncommon Tasmanian Devil tooth

Archaeologists surveying the Juukan Canyon rock shelter in Western Australia that was destroyed by Rio Tinto in 2020 have unearthed significant finds including the tooth of a Tasmanian Devil that has not been taped on the mainland in 3,000 years. The Tasmanian Devil is one of the world's largest meateating marsupials that is an apex predator on the country's southern island. It died out on the mainland around 3,500 years back.

The work, undertaken as part of a remediation arrangement between the miner and the Puutu Kunti Kurrama and Pinikura ( PKKP) peoples, is shedding fresh light on the history of human habitation through the last Ice Age, for at least 46,000 years, the PKKP Aboriginal Corporation stated in a statement on Tuesday.

The outcomes add to finds from excavations in 2008 and 2014 that consisted of a length of braided human hair that was dated to around 5,000 years ago, and revealed a hereditary link to Aboriginal people living in the Pilbara in the present.

The reality we have a collection of these products all from one small part of the planned excavation demonstrates what the PKK people have been stating all along-- that this is a really unique and important place, stated excavation director Michael Slack of Scarp Archaeology.

The damage of the rock shelters at Juukan Canyon four years ago triggered a worldwide protest, the departure of Rio's top executives and an overhaul of Western Australia's heritage protection laws.

(source: Reuters)