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Ancient proteins resolve controversy over the identity of Genyornis eggshell.

Beatrice DemarchiJosefin StillerAlicia GrealyMeaghan MackieYuan DengTom GilbertJulia ClarkeLucas J LegendreRosa BoanoThomas Sicheritz-PonténJohn MageeGuo-Jie ZhangMichael BunceMatthew James CollinsGifford H Miller
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
SignificanceThe controversy over the taxonomic identity of the eggs exploited by Australia's first people around 50,000 y ago is resolved. The birds that laid these eggs are extinct, and distinguishing between two main candidates, a giant flightless "mihirung" Genyornis and a large megapode Progura , had proven impossible using morphological and geochemical methods. Ancient DNA sequencing remains inconclusive because of the age and burial temperature of the eggshell. In contrast, ancient protein sequences recovered from the eggshell enabled estimation of the evolutionary affinity between the egg and a range of extant taxa. The eggs are those of a Galloanseres (a group that includes extinct Dromornithidae, as well as extant landfowl and waterfowl), Genyornis , and not of the megapode (Megapodiidae, crown Galliformes).
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