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It's the world's most remote and isolated continent.
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It's home to glaciers, mountains, plants, and penguins, but today, Antarctica is also
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noteworthy for what it doesn't have.
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In modern Antarctica, there aren't any trees, or any native terrestrial mammals, reptiles,
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or amphibians!
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At all!
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But, it wasn't always like this.
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Thanks to plate tectonics, Antarctica has been connected to lots of other continents
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at various points in deep time.
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As a matter of fact, before the start of the Eocene Epoch about 56 million years ago--Antarctica
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was still joined to both Australia and South America.
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And the fossil record tells us that, in the early Eocene, Antarctica was a warm, forested
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place, very different from the continent we know today.
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Palm trees thrived there, as did flowering plants, dung beetles, and even a number of
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hoofed mammals and marsupials.
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And because of the way it was situated, Antarctica probably served as an important migration
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path for the ancestors of some of the southern hemisphere's most charismatic mammals, like
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wallabies and kangaroos.
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Eventually, of course, the lush environment of Eocene Antarctica transitioned into the
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cold, glacier-covered landmass that it is today, isolated from the rest of the world
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by the most powerful ocean currents on the planet.
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But it turns out that a lot of what we recognize about the southern hemisphere -- including
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those famously unique animals of Australia -- can be traced back to that time when Antarctica
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was green.
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If you could travel back in time and visit Antarctica in the Eocene Epoch, the first
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thing you'd notice would probably be the greenery.
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Off the coast of Wilkes Land, in eastern Antarctica, scientists have discovered sporomorphs--fossilized
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pollen and spores -- from ancient palm trees and ferns.
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And they've also found pollen from other plants that often live in tropical environments
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today.
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The traces of these warm-weather plants can tell us a lot about what Antarctica was like
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back then.
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Since these palms and other trees can't tolerate the cold very well, paleontologists
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think that, in the early Eocene, the coast of Wilkes Land experienced very mild winters,
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with little to no frost.
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By one estimate, the mean annual temperature of that part of Antarctica was around 16 degrees
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Celsius, with an average winter temperature around 11 degrees Celsius.
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So, how could ancient Antarctica have been so warm?
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Well, for one thing, the Eocene wasn't the first time that Antarctica's climate was
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so mild.
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Scientists have found sporomorphs and other fossils from warm-weather plants in Antarctica
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that date way back to the Devonian Period, more than 358 million years ago.
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And in the early Jurassic Period, about 190 million years ago, Antarctica was a temperate
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home for dinosaurs like the long-necked Glacialisaurus and Cryolophosaurus, a crested carnivore.
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In those days, Antarctica was just one small chunk of the supercontinent Gondawana, and
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was located a bit farther north than it is now.
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But by about 100 million years ago, most of the landmass that would become Antarctica
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had migrated to the bottom of the world.
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By the early Eocene, the western part of Antarctica had just split from the tip of South America,
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but the eastern part was still mostly linked to Australia.
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And right around this time, the world was going through a dramatic heat spike.
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This event is known as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum, and we did a whole episode
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about it, because the theories about what caused it -- and what made it stop -- are
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really complex, fascinating, and little scary
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During this period, the global average temperature increased by 5 to 8 degrees Celsius in 220,000
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years or less!
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And as the world's climate changed, so did its flora and fauna.
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Tropical trees like palms, as well as ferns and tree-ferns, were able to spread onto every
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continent, including Antarctica.
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And mind you, Antarctica is a really big place; like...the entire country of Australia can
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easily fit inside its boundaries!
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So given its size, it was able to support many different ecosystems in the Eocene.
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Farther inland, and at higher elevations, sporomorphs and leaf impressions have been
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found from plants that are normally found in temperate rainforests, like southern beech
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trees.
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It's also been suggested that some areas
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even experienced monsoons, getting more than 60% of their annual rainfall in the summer.
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And of course, plants didn't have the whole continent to themselves.
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On Seymour Island, off the Antarctic Peninsula, paleontologists have recovered brood balls
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of ancient dung beetles.
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Those are balls of dung that female beetles lay their eggs in.
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So if these beetles were rolling dung balls around, where did that poop come from?
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Well, some of it came from ancient marsupials!
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Fragmentary remains and isolated teeth tell us that a number of these little mammals lived
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in Western Antarctica.
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Judging by their teeth, it seems that some of them belonged to the same order of marsupials
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as the modern colocolo opossum, a small and adorable insect-eater that's native to South
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America.
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Another Antarctic marsupial was Antarctodolops.
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First described in 1984, this opossum-like critter was the first terrestrial mammal ever
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discovered in the continent's fossil record.
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Its ancestors most likely came over from South America.
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Other residents of Eocene Antarctica probably came from South America as well.
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For example, a single contentious toe bone suggests that xenarthrans--the group of mammals
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that includes modern-day sloths--might have lived in Antarctica.
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Xenarthrans originally evolved in South America, as did the forerunners of a hoofed herbivore
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that's been found in western Antarctic, called Notiolofos,.
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The teeth of this creature tell us that it was a browser, stripping twigs off if tree
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branches and maybe eating the occasional sapling.
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Not many specimens have been found, but we do know there were at least two species of
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Notiolofos in Antarctica.
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Judging by the sizes of their teeth, the bigger of these ungulates weighed up to 230 kilograms
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while its smaller cousin was about one-fourth that size.
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And the fact that these two species had such different sizes means that they might have
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both been specialists, eating different types of plants to avoid direct competition with
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each other.
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Another big hoofed mammal known from Eocene deposits in West Antarctica is Antarctodon,
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or “Antarctic Tooth.”
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Scientists think it was a kind of astrapothere, an unusual group of extinct and mostly South
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American herbivores.
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The only Antarctodon fossils that have turned up so far are teeth.
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But more complete skeletons of other astrapotheres show that these animals looked kind of like
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tapirs.
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Some species had self-sharpening canine teeth and ate a combination of soft plants and hard
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nuts.
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Others may have been semiaquatic, like modern-day hippos.
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And paleontologists think Antarctodon was yet another animal whose ancestors crossed
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into Antarctica from South America.
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So, these and the other animals that shared their prehistoric habitat are extremely important
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to paleontologists.
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Because, Antarctica's fossil record isn't as comprehensive as those on other continents,
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and many of the bones that we do find are isolated or fragmentary.
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Still, the coexistence of all these Eocene creatures tells us that Antarctica was home
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to a variety of land mammals.
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But why isn't that the case anymore?
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What happened to Green Antarctica?
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Well, while Antarctica's land mammals were still kicking around, some pretty big changes
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loomed on the horizon.
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Scientists are still working out the timeline
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of events, but they think that, by about 56 million years ago Antarctica and South America
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had pulled away from each other.
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Then by about 40 million years ago, Antarctica and Australia had become separated by an emerging
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seaway.
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This expanse of water--which still exists today--is sometimes called the Tasmanian Gateway.
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And at some point, another seaway formed, the Drake Passage, off the tip of the Antarctic
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Peninsula, sometime between 36 million and 23 million years ago.
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So as time wore on, Antarctica went from being a land bridge between South America and Australia
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to being an isolated continent.
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The stage was set for a dominant new force in the Southern Ocean: The Antarctic Circumpolar
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Current, or ACC.
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This current still swirls around Antarctica, and hands down, it is the most powerful current
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on earth.
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Its volume is 1000 times bigger than the Amazon River, and it chugs along at the breakneck
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speed of 40 centimeters per second in some locations.
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Propelled by winds and unimpeded by land, the swirling current blocks warmer waters
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farther north, keeping them away from the mainland.
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It also dredges cold water from the ocean floor to the surface.
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And those two factors work together, creating a chilling effect on Antarctica.
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Climatologists think that the ACC is between 41 and 23 million years old.
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But there's not a lot of agreement about how the formation of this current actually
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affected the drop in temperatures -- and the rise in glaciation -- on ancient Antarctica.
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What we do know is that the late Eocene and early Oligocene was a time of global cooling.
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At high latitudes in both hemispheres, temperatures dropped by about 15 degrees Celsius.
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Around the world, atmospheric carbon dioxide was decreasing, possibly because large quantities
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of it were being absorbed by marine plankton or buried in ocean floor sediments.
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This may have contributed to the worldwide cooling trend.
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And the formation of the ACC could've forced temperatures in Antarctica to drop even further.
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Regardless, we know that from about 36.5 million years onward, glaciers became more widespread
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across the continent.
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As ice blanketed Antarctica's surface, many plant communities suffered.
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A study of fossil plant samples from the Cross Valley formation in the Antarctic Peninsula
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found that its plant diversity dropped by 47 percent between the late Paleocene and
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middle Eocene.
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Slowly, warmth-loving trees and ferns found themselves replaced by temperate forests.
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These were dominated by Southern Beech trees, which we know had been living on the continent
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since the late Cretaceous Period, based on fossilized leaf impressions and sporomorphs.
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And even their days were numbered.
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Their sporomorphs tell us that there were southern beech trees on Antarctica as recently
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as 2.5 million years ago.
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But today, it's a treeless continent, a polar desert whose remaining plants mostly
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consist of hardy mosses, grasses, lichens and algae.
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Clearly, Antarctica's biodiversity took a hit after the Eocene.
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And yet, life continued to flourish on its two former neighbors.
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After they split with Antarctica, South America and Australia were both totally isolated from
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the rest of the world for millions of years.
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And those two continents had something special in common: Marsupials.
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New World opossums originated in South America before some of them migrated north into Central
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and North America.
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Meanwhile, Australia is world-famous for its charismatic marsupials, including kangaroos,
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wallabies and the now-extinct Thylacine.
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And DNA evidence suggests that the common ancestor of today's marsupials lived in
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South America about 70 to 80 million years ago.
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So, from there, marsupials spread through Antarctica and into Australia back when those
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three continents were still connected.
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And as evidence of this journey, they left behind the remains of marsupials like Antarctodolops--relatives
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of the mammals that Australia is famous for today.
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So even though Antarctica has lost its big land animals, it was once a forested pathway
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for life.
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Which is why, even today, our world retains the ecological fingerprints of a time when
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Antarctica was green.
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