PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

A lost world: Ancient cave reveals million-year-old wildlife

Major fossil discoveries in New Zealand Aotearoa

2026-01-29
(Press-News.org) Australian and New Zealand scientists have unearthed the remains of ancient wildlife in a cave near Waitomo on Aotearoa's North Island, the first time a large number of million-year-old fossils have been found – including an ancestor of the large flightless kākāpō parrot.

The discovery of fossils from 12 ancient bird species and four frog species has opened a rare window into how New Zealand looked about 1 million years ago.

It indicates that New Zealand’s ancient wildlife was significantly impacted by catastrophic climate changes and volcanic eruptions. This resulted in frequent extinctions and species replacements well before human arrival, according to new research published in Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology.

Lead author, Flinders University Associate Professor Trevor Worthy, says the study breaks new ground.

“This is a newly recognised avifauna for New Zealand, one that was replaced by the one humans encountered a million years later,” says Associate Professor Worthy, from the College of Science and Engineering at Flinders University.

“This remarkable find suggests our ancient forests were once home to a diverse group of birds that did not survive the next million years.”

The fossils were analysed by a team of palaeontologists from Flinders University and Canterbury Museum, along with volcanologists Joel Baker from the University of Auckland and Simon Barker of Victoria University of Wellington.

The findings suggest that about 33-50% of species went extinct during the million years before humans arrived in Aotearoa New Zealand.

These extinctions were driven by relatively rapid climate shifts and cataclysmic volcanic eruptions, says co-author and Canterbury Museum Senior Curator of Natural History Dr Paul Scofield.

“From our excavations at St Bathans in Central Otago over many years, we have a snapshot of life in Aotearoa between 20 and 16 million years ago. These new findings cast light on the 15 million year period from then to 1 million years ago, which is largely absent from New Zealand’s fossil record,” says Dr Scofield.

“This wasn’t a missing chapter in New Zealand’s ancient history, it was a missing volume.”

One of the most significant finds is a new species of parrot, Strigops insulaborealis, an ancient relative of the Kākāpō. While the modern Kākāpō is famous for being a heavy, flightless parrot, this newly described ancestor may have been able to fly. 

Analysis of the fossil suggests it had weaker legs than its modern descendant, implying it was a less adept climber. More research is required to confirm whether the ancestor could fly.

The cave also yielded an extinct ancestor of the modern Takahē, which allows researchers to track the evolution of this iconic New Zealand bird, and an extinct species of pigeon closely related to Australian bronzewing pigeons.

“The shifting forest and shrubland habitats forced a reset of the bird populations,” adds Dr Scofield. 

“We believe this was a major driver for the evolutionary diversification of birds and other fauna in the North Island.”

The fossils could be accurately dated as they were between two layers of volcanic ash preserved in the cave. One layer was from an eruption 1.55 million years ago, while the other was from a massive eruption 1 million years ago.

The more recent eruption would have blanketed much of the North Island in metres of ash. Most of it would have been washed away, but some would have been preserved in caves. The older layer found at this fossil site proves it is the oldest known cave in the North Island.

Associate Professor Worthy says the fossils “provide a critical, missing baseline for New Zealand’s natural history”.

“For decades, the extinction of New Zealand’s birds was viewed primarily through the lens of human arrival 750 years ago. This study proves that natural forces like super-volcanoes and dramatic climate shifts were already sculpting the unique identity of our wildlife over a million years ago.”

The article, 'The first Early Pleistocene (ca 1 Ma) fossil terrestrial vertebrate fauna from a cave in New Zealand reveals substantial avifaunal turnover in the last million years' (2026) by Trevor H Worthy, R Paul Scofield, Sneha Suresh, Simon J Barker, Colin JN Wilson, Paul W Williams and Joel A Baker published in Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Living heritage: How ancient buildings on Hainan Island sustain hidden plant diversity

2026-01-29
On Hainan Island, centuries-old masonry supports an unexpectedly rich diversity of epilithic, or rock-dwelling, plants, highlighting a close intersection between cultural heritage and natural biodiversity. By integrating island-wide field surveys with statistical modeling, the team demonstrates how geographic gradients, architectural features, and human activities jointly shape these often-overlooked plant communities, offering new scientific evidence to support more balanced and ecologically informed strategies for heritage conservation. Rapid urbanization across China has placed increasing pressure on historic architecture, particularly in tropical ...

Just the smell of lynx can reduce deer browsing damage in recovering forests

2026-01-29
New research shows that the mere smell of predators is enough to change deer behavior and limit browsing damage to tree saplings. The findings offer a potential tool for forest recovery and highlight the important role large predators play. The research is published in the British Ecological Society’s Journal of Applied Ecology. Research conducted in the forests of south-eastern Germany, shows that the smell of large predators, like lynx and wolves, is enough to make deer more cautious and spend less time eating tree saplings. In an experiment that involved adding lynx and wolf urine and scat to plots of saplings, researchers from the University of Freiburg found ...

Hidden struggles: Cambridge scientists share the truth behind their success

2026-01-29
Hidden behind every successful career story is the reality that progression isn’t often a smooth and easy path. Rejections, setbacks, and the doubts they seed are rarely shared - leaving us to believe that they don’t happen to other people the way they happen to us. Adrian Liston, Professor of Pathology at the University of Cambridge, mentors hundreds of scientists early in their careers, and repeatedly hears them worry that they’re not up to the task. He has decided it’s time to share the truth behind the ...

Cellular hazmat team cleans up tau. Could it prevent dementia?

2026-01-28
Researchers at UC San Francisco have identified a hazardous waste collector in the brain that disposes of the toxic clumps of tau protein that can lead to dementia.   Neurons with more of this garbage collector, technically known as CUL5, are less vulnerable to Alzheimer’s disease.   The research helps explain how some brain cells may remain resilient even in advanced disease ...

Innovation Crossroads startup revolutionizes wildfire prevention through grid hardening

2026-01-28
Witching Hour, a hard tech startup and member of Cohort 2025 of Innovation Crossroads, is wielding the support of the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory to develop technology that reduces wildfire risk by retrofitting powerlines with insulation in fire-prone areas. ORNL is the site of the Powerline Conductor Accelerated Testing Facility, one of the only facilities in the country where companies can try out new transmission line technologies for long time periods in a real-world environment. In 2025, wildfires across the United States cost ...

ICCUB astronomers lead the most ambitious study of runaway massive stars in the Milky Way

2026-01-28
Researchers from the Institute of Cosmos Sciences of the University of Barcelona (ICCUB) and the Institute of Space Studies of Catalonia (IEEC), in collaboration with the Institute of Astrophysics of the Canary Islands (IAC), have led the most extensive observational study to date of runaway massive stars, which includes an analysis of the rotation and binarity of these stars in our galaxy. This study, published today in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics, sheds new light on how these stellar “runaways” are ejected into ...

Artificial Intelligence can generate a feeling of intimacy

2026-01-28
People can develop emotional closeness to Artificial Intelligence (AI) – under certain conditions, even more so than to other people. This is shown by a new study conducted by a research team led by Prof. Dr Markus Heinrichs and Dr Tobias Kleinert from the Department of Psychology at the University of Freiburg and Prof. Dr Bastian Schiller from Heidelberg University’s Institute of Psychology. Participants felt a sense of closeness especially when they did not know that they were communicating with AI. The results have been published in the renowned journal Communications Psychology. Questions about life experiences and friendships In ...

Antidepressants not associated with serious complications from TBI

2026-01-28
MINNEAPOLIS — Taking certain antidepressants at the time of a traumatic brain injury (TBI) is not associated with an increased risk of death, brain surgery or longer hospital stays, according to a study published on January 28, 2026, in Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. For the study, researchers looked at serotonergic antidepressants, which treat anxiety and depression by increasing serotonin activity in the brain. These included selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), serotonin ...

Evasive butterfly mimicry reveals a supercharged biodiversity feedback loop

2026-01-28
Key points Scientists constructed a family tree for butterflies in the genus Adelpha, which are native to North and South America and display perplexing color patterns that may represent an unusual case of evasive mimicry. They found the first known correlation between latitude and the rate of mimicry evolution in butterflies, consistent with a longstanding theory of biodiversity that can trace its origin to Alfred Russel Wallace, the co-discoverer of evolution by natural selection. The tree helps ...

Hearing angry or happy human voices is linked to changes in dogs’ balance

2026-01-28
In a small study, dogs experienced both stabilization and destabilization of their balance upon hearing angry or happy human voices, but angry voices were linked to the biggest destabilizing effects. Nadja Affenzeller and colleagues at the University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna, Austria, present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS One on January 28, 2026. For humans and animals alike, stable posture underpins the ability to stand still, walk, and perform other activities without falling. To maintain stability, our muscles rely on visual cues as well as the body’s sense of its own position. Recent research in humans suggests that external sounds may also ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution study cautions that deep-sea fishing could undermine valuable tuna fisheries

Embedding critical thinking from a young age

Study maps the climate-related evolution of modern kangaroos and wallabies

Researchers develop soft biodegradable implants for long-distance and wide-angle sensing

Early-life pollution leaves a multigenerational mark on fish skeletons

Unlocking the genetic switches behind efficient feeding in aquaculture fish

Fish liver self-defense: How autophagy helps pufferfish survive under the cold and copper stress

A lost world: Ancient cave reveals million-year-old wildlife

Living heritage: How ancient buildings on Hainan Island sustain hidden plant diversity

Just the smell of lynx can reduce deer browsing damage in recovering forests

Hidden struggles: Cambridge scientists share the truth behind their success

Cellular hazmat team cleans up tau. Could it prevent dementia?

Innovation Crossroads startup revolutionizes wildfire prevention through grid hardening

ICCUB astronomers lead the most ambitious study of runaway massive stars in the Milky Way

Artificial Intelligence can generate a feeling of intimacy

Antidepressants not associated with serious complications from TBI

Evasive butterfly mimicry reveals a supercharged biodiversity feedback loop

Hearing angry or happy human voices is linked to changes in dogs’ balance

Microplastics are found in a third of surveyed fish off the coasts of remote Pacific Islands

De-stigmatizing self-reported data in health care research

US individuals traveling from strongly blue or red US counties may favor everyday travel to like-minded destinations

Study reveals how superionic state enables long-term water storage in Earth's interior

AI machine learning can optimize patient risk assessments

Efficacy of immunosuppressive regimens for survival of stem cell-derived grafts

Glowing bacterial sensors detect gut illness in mice before symptoms emerge

GLP-1 RAs and prior major adverse limb events in patients with diabetes

Life-course psychosocial stress and risk of dementia and stroke in middle-aged and older adults

Cells have a built-in capacity limit for copying DNA, and it could impact cancer treatment

Study finds longer hospital stays and higher readmissions for young adults with complex childhood conditions

Study maps how varied genetic forms of autism lead to common features

[Press-News.org] A lost world: Ancient cave reveals million-year-old wildlife
Major fossil discoveries in New Zealand Aotearoa