One skink, two skink, big skink, blue skink
Details
A fossil history of iconic Australian reptiles, with WA Museum's Kailah Thorn.
Kailah is the WA Museum Collections Manager for Herpetology and crawls through Western Australian caves searching for recently extinct reptiles. She specialises in Australian reptile fossils that are less than 66 million years old (from the Cenozoic) and has described Australia’s oldest skink (Proegernia mikebulli), deciphered when the first true bluetongue lizard evolved, and assembled the largest skink on earth: Tiliqua frangens.
Fossils from across the country can help us answer big questions and even reveal spiky surprises — like a bobtail lizard as long as your arm, weighing 1,000 times more than a garden skink, and covered in spiked, armoured plating! Fossils extend our expectations of what animals look like, where they live, where they’ve come from and what might have brought about their extinction. This talk will dive deep into the fossil history of Australia’s most diverse vertebrate family, Scincidae: when did they get here and what’s happened to them since?
The main presentation will be followed by a short focus talk on selected natural history of Tasmania.
We will also look at any specimens that have been brought along.
After this you are welcome to join us for tea/coffee and conversation.
All are welcome to attend, with a donation of $3 for Club members or $5 for non-members giving you a chance to win the door prize (EFTPOS available).
Doors open at 7.10pm and the meeting begins at 7.30pm at the Hew Roberts Lecture Theatre, University of Western Australia.
Parking is free and available in car parks near the Gordon St or Clifton St entrances to the campus.
