
2 'Lazarus' animals thought to be extinct for over 7,000 years found alive in New Guinea
NBC News
Two marsupial species thought long extinct, until now known only from fossils, were found alive in New Guinea through a collaboration of scientists, indigenous communities and citizen scientists
Two marsupial species thought long extinct, until now known only from fossils, were found alive in New Guinea through a collaboration of scientists, indigenous communities and citizen scientists.
The discovery of the pygmy long-fingered possum and the ring-tailed glider marks the first confirmation of live specimens in over 7,000 years, the Bishop Museum, a natural history museum in Honolulu, announced on Tuesday.
“To be able to say that they indeed are alive brings me joy as a scientist and conservationist. It feels like a second chance to learn about, and protect, these remarkable animals,” Dr. Kristofer Helgen of the Bishop Museum said in a news release.
Helgen and the Australian Museum’s Dr. Tim Flannery, who both research mammalian species in New Guinea, worked over the past two years to prove the existence of these animals.
The two animals are known as “Lazarus species,” a term for organisms that reappear after being thought to be extinct. “The discovery of two Lazarus species, thought to be extinct for millennia, is unprecedented,” Flannery in the press release.

NEW YORK — As a man wearing a neon-blue jellyfish hat fought off draping tentacles to scroll through his phone and find the latest message from his personal AI assistant, three people wearing Pegasus wings flitted through a sweaty Manhattan apartment-turned-ballroom trying to recruit users for their latest AI solution.“It’s getting hot, and the lobster is getting warm,” said Michael Galpert, one of the hosts of the event, encouraging the thousand-plus crowd to settle down so the evening’s presentations could begin.

U.S. women's hockey gold medal-winning captain Hilary Knight revealed Monday in a television appearance that she played in Milan with a torn medial collateral ligament in one of her knees."I'm not walking around the best, and I'm missing a few games for the (PWHL's) Seattle Torrent," Knight said on "CBS Mornings.""To be able to play through injury was definitely a mental sort of gymnastic challenge for myself and also physical, but we've got some amazing support staff that did their best to get me out there and perform at my best — as best as I could."Knight, playing at what she said was her final Olympics at 36, tied the final against Canada with just over two minutes left in regulation.











