@WhatIfScienceShow

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@virtualtrucker26

Credits to Australia, they’ve been consistent ever since.

@hjonk1351

As an Australian I can confirm that we still have tons of dangerous animals waiting for foreign tourists to arrive so they can fest on there fleash

@raymondreacts1652

As an Australian, I can confidently say that living in Prehistoric Australia is the same as living in Modern Australia

@lariayuyam7393

You really have to give credits to the Indigenous Australians that had to deal with all of this and still survived.

@internetuser2291

the camera man as usual Isn't getting paid enough... kudos to him for filming all these creatures and things

@Saltyleemon

Australia is prehistoric RIGHT NOW!

@sharlharmakhis280

I will forever treasure PBS Eons' description of Thylacoleo carnifex as the 'combat wombat'. 🤣

@randyb3468

"4 to 6 metrer long snake!" Mate! I've  got a 4 and a half meter one hiding down in the shed right now!?..

@LostAncients

I can hear Paul Hogan as the Mr. Crocodile Dundee saying "An Australia? That's not an Australia. Now THIS is an Australia!"

@aminmaster1653

Like Australia isn't dangerous enough already-

@marthanewsome6375

Saltwater crocs are more dangerous than Freshwater crocs.

@Atomic_Thoughts_Official

What if you lived in Prehistoric Australia??
Meanwhile me: Chilling at home and wondering how this man got to know all this stuff...

@Guvament_bs

Australian Aboriginals did not build stone structures to live in. They used existing caves and overhangs. They were nomadic and built temporary timber, brush and leaf structures to live in.

@BenjaminWarntaparri-x5g

Our ancestors told stories about these creatures, they used to live among them, some of these creatures were hunted down as game.  Most of our knowledge were past down from generation to generation

@caustichonu

The marsupial being migratory makes sense, especially when you think of how much they must have destroyed the flora of an area...

@JabbarMuhammad-e4l

The megafauna in Australia was truly spectacular looking

@em1osmurf

"hey, boss!  are we gonna die?"  "everybody dies, son.  some sooner that others."  Shrub's sandbox war games.

@godfreyozzy7128

Pretty sure megalania wasn't preying on deer or wild pigs, considering they went extinct 50,000 years before the first artiodactyls ever set foot in Australia.

@Sylmarys24

If Diprotodon is anything like modern day wombats, a cape buffalo-like herd of them would be the most terrifying sight in Pleistocene Australia.