probably turned into fossils deep in the ground because they would be extinct.
OR. . . They will have evolved into an entirely different species to adapt to the changing climate.
As old as history itself, at least a few million years.
The Australian Koala Foundation estimates the population of wild koalas to be less than 100,000. This figure has stood for the past few years.
The Sun is not expected to change much in the next million years. In a few hundred million years, on the other hand, it will get so hot that life on Earth will be impossible.
There are just a few small populations of koalas in Western Australia. They are not native to the western half of Australia, and a few protected populations consisting of just a few dozen koalas have been successfully introduced into the southwestern corner.
Which natural event can occur either over a few weeks or over a few million years?
Koalas are only found in Australia. They feed on a variety of Eucalyptus leaves and they are nocturnal. Although eucalyptus leaves are poisonous to almost all animals, they are not to koalas. Koalas are an endangered specie and they are marsupials, like the kangaroo which also is only found in Australia. They are marsupials because they nurse their young and they have pouches
No. There are no koalas in Africa. Koalas are found only in Australia, and are mainly restricted to the eastern states, apart from a few introduced colonies in the far southwest.
It is highly unlikely. A million years is a short time on a geologic timescale. Earth will remain habitable for a few hundred million years into the future.
a few million years
The earliest dinosaurs appeared in the Triassic, about 228 million years ago. Most of the dinosaurs were wiped out at the end of the Cretaceous about 65 million years ago, though a few lingered on another few million years in Antarctica. Their total reign encompassed about 165 million years.
Not really. While koalas are the only known animal to have distinctive fingerprints, they can be distinguished from the fingerprints of a human. Like humans, their fingerprints comprise ridges in a variety of patterns.
They were formed in the last few million years