News @andrew_andrew__ Jul 4, 2021, 12:34 pm EDT | 1 min read Australian Wildlife Conservancy / Wayne LawlerThe arrival of European settlers to Australia decimated the native rodent population, leading to several species to extinction, including the shaggy Gould’s mouse. But new research into Australian rodents led to a shocking discovery—the Gould’s mouse didn’t go extinct in the 1840s, it’s just been hanging out on an island. This research, which was spearheaded by Emily Roycroft of the Australian National University and published in the Pro… Click below to read the full story from How To Geek
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