taxonID	type	format	identifier	references	title	description	created	creator	contributor	publisher	audience	source	license	rightsHolder	datasetID
03EE2F75FFD9281CFC76B8FAFE7C218B.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/5297888/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5297888	Fig. 2. Phascolarctid gen et sp. indet. dentary (QMF52287) from site QML7, Chinchilla, eastern Australia. (A) External view, (B) Internal view, and (C) Occlusal view.	Fig. 2. Phascolarctid gen et sp. indet. dentary (QMF52287) from site QML7, Chinchilla, eastern Australia. (A) External view, (B) Internal view, and (C) Occlusal view.	2009-05-27	Price, Gilbert J.;Zhao, Jian-xin;Feng, Yue-xing;Hocknull, Scott A.		Zenodo	biologists	Price, Gilbert J.;Zhao, Jian-xin;Feng, Yue-xing;Hocknull, Scott A.			
03EE2F75FFD9281CFC76B8FAFE7C218B.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/5297890/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5297890	Fig. 3. Morphometrics of fossil koala specimens. (A) Depth versus width of dentaries of modern Phascolarctos cinereus from eastern Queensland (Appendix), fossil Cundokoala (?Ph.) yorkensis (SAMP24904) from Corra Lynn Cave (South Australia), and phascolarctid gen et. sp. indet (QMF52287) from Chinchilla, eastern Australia. Note that the depth of the Chinchilla koala dentary is a minimum measurement because the specimen is broken along the alveolar border (Fig. 2). (B) Anterior versus posterior width of Phascolarctos spp. M2 (See Appendix for list of modern Ph. cinereus specimens examined).	Fig. 3. Morphometrics of fossil koala specimens. (A) Depth versus width of dentaries of modern Phascolarctos cinereus from eastern Queensland (Appendix), fossil Cundokoala (?Ph.) yorkensis (SAMP24904) from Corra Lynn Cave (South Australia), and phascolarctid gen et. sp. indet (QMF52287) from Chinchilla, eastern Australia. Note that the depth of the Chinchilla koala dentary is a minimum measurement because the specimen is broken along the alveolar border (Fig. 2). (B) Anterior versus posterior width of Phascolarctos spp. M2 (See Appendix for list of modern Ph. cinereus specimens examined).	2009-05-27	Price, Gilbert J.;Zhao, Jian-xin;Feng, Yue-xing;Hocknull, Scott A.		Zenodo	biologists	Price, Gilbert J.;Zhao, Jian-xin;Feng, Yue-xing;Hocknull, Scott A.			
03EE2F75FFDE281DFEE2BC01FC2E218F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/5297892/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5297892	Fig. 4. Photographs of fossil koala teeth from eastern Australia. (A) QMF52288, LM2 of Phascolarctos sp., site QML1384, Mt. Etna. (B) QMF52289, RM1, 2 or 3 metacone fragment of Ph.?stirtoni, Chinchilla. (C) QMF52290, RM2 protocone fragment of Ph.?stirtoni, Marmor.	Fig. 4. Photographs of fossil koala teeth from eastern Australia. (A) QMF52288, LM2 of Phascolarctos sp., site QML1384, Mt. Etna. (B) QMF52289, RM1, 2 or 3 metacone fragment of Ph.?stirtoni, Chinchilla. (C) QMF52290, RM2 protocone fragment of Ph.?stirtoni, Marmor.	2009-05-27	Price, Gilbert J.;Zhao, Jian-xin;Feng, Yue-xing;Hocknull, Scott A.		Zenodo	biologists	Price, Gilbert J.;Zhao, Jian-xin;Feng, Yue-xing;Hocknull, Scott A.			
