Desert Rat-kangaroo


The Desert Rat-Kangaroo (Caloprymnus campestris) lived in the driest, hottest and most desolate environments in Central Australia. It was the size of a small rabbit. It was graceful, scarcely seeming to touch the ground as it hopped, almost floating, effortlessly, through the air. It showed great endurance and 'paused only to die'. It sheltered in a flimsy nest by day. At night, it emerged to feed. It lived alone and was so independent of water, that it even shunned the succulent plants of the sandhills. It was first recorded by Europeans around 1841 and was not seen again for 90 years. The last sighting was in 1935.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
darwin's rice rat
dartmouth algol 30
uni air
noscapine
lymphosarcoma
voodoo church
alice sebold
william nuti
pemberton's deer mouse
yiquan
list of new york city movie festivals
om (band)
1999 mayday
fibrosarcoma
oceanium
left and leaving
jim wiseman
swimming to cambodia
lisa on ice
al 6xn
lesser stick nest rat
weak hypercharge
holy fire
wang xiangzhai
naked bike
palermo (disambiguation)
william halse rivers rivers
passenger services act
john boxall
larry o'connor
culture of hawaii
nuo beltrn de guzmn
the sims (consoles)
wally feurzeig
fallow (album)
the colour of pomegranates
princess
memory prosthesis
william swain lee (politician)
woolsey hall
yu gi oh! the falsebound kingdom
maritime union
hms sheffield (c24)
gunning, new south wales