Sanderson, Ivan T. "Nature's Nightmares," The Cincinnati Enquirer (10 April 1949)
The waterless wastes of central Australia are penetrated only occasionally by lone prospectors and other adventurers. These men have a reputation for hard drinking. When they first brought back stories about 10-foot rabbits, the yarns were credited to their alcoholic tendencies. Then the famous Australian naturalist, Ambrose Pratt, drew attention to the skeletons of certain extinct animals called Diprotodons in the local museums. These creatures were just about 10 feet long and must have looked uncommonly like enormous rabbits. They were of the same general shape, tailless, with rounded rumps and a pair of enormous, rabbit-like front teeth. It's possible that the Diprotodon isn't as extinct as was thought. Australians who hunt the water buffaloes that now run wild in huge numbers in the north of their continent will tell you that this great beast can literally vanish before your eyes in fairly open country. A buffalo is nearly the size of a Diprotodon.
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