. . "Live Birth"@en . . "Black"@en . . . "Jurassic Park: Builder"@en . "Herbivore"@en . . . . "Diprotodon"@es . . . . "No"@en . . . . . . "Plants"@en . "Mammalia"@en . "Austraila"@en . . "2.0"^^ . . . . . . . "thumb|400px|Diprotodon OptatumEl Diprotodon es el mayor marsupial que ha existido nunca, pues tan\u00EDa 2 m de alto y 3 de largo. Era un animal desgarbado, de huesos pesados y gruesas extremidades, era bastante lento, pero con su tama\u00F1o ning\u00FAn Le\u00F3n marsupial osar\u00EDa atacartlo, pero alg\u00FAn Megalania de grandes dimensiones podr\u00EDa vencerlo. Se desplazaba en grandes reba\u00F1os en b\u00FAsqueda de alimento. A pesar de tener unas fuertes mand\u00EDbulas y un cr\u00E1neo enorme, ten\u00EDa el cerebro de un tama\u00F1o muy reducido. Ten\u00EDa los t\u00EDpicos molares de un herb\u00EDvoro y unos grandes incisivos para arrancar la vegetaci\u00F3n. Categor\u00EDa:Fauna del Pleistoceno Categor\u00EDa:Mam\u00EDferos Categor\u00EDa:Marsupiales Categor\u00EDa:Diprotodontes"@es . . "3.0"^^ . "Diprotodon was a large marsupial related to wombats that lived in Australia during the Ice Age."@en . . . "Diprotodon species fossils have been found in sites across mainland Australia, including complete skulls and skeletons, as well as hair and foot impressions.[1] Female skeletons have been found with babies located where the mother's pouch would have been.[1] The largest specimens were hippopotamus-sized: about 3 metres (10 ft) from nose to tail, standing 2 metres (6.6 ft) tall at the shoulder and weighing up to 2,800 kilograms (6,200 lb).[3][4] Aboriginal rock art images in Quinkan traditional country (Queensland, Australia) have been claimed to depict diprotodonts.[5] They inhabited open forest, woodlands, and grasslands, possibly staying close to water, and eating leaves, shrubs, and some grasses."@en . "Two Forward Teeth"@en . "Extinct"@en . "Diprotodon"@en . . . "Diprotodon is a large extinct marsupial featured in Zoo Tycoon 2: Extinct Animals that resembles a shaggy wombat. In some people's games, the female Diprotodon is five times larger than the male. This is an unusual glitch but it does not affect gameplay."@en . . . "Diprotodon was a large marsupial related to wombats that lived in Australia during the Ice Age."@en . . . . . . "Diprotodontidae"@en . "Marsupialia"@en . "Diprotodon"@en . . . . "thumb|400px|Diprotodon OptatumEl Diprotodon es el mayor marsupial que ha existido nunca, pues tan\u00EDa 2 m de alto y 3 de largo. Era un animal desgarbado, de huesos pesados y gruesas extremidades, era bastante lento, pero con su tama\u00F1o ning\u00FAn Le\u00F3n marsupial osar\u00EDa atacartlo, pero alg\u00FAn Megalania de grandes dimensiones podr\u00EDa vencerlo. Se desplazaba en grandes reba\u00F1os en b\u00FAsqueda de alimento. A pesar de tener unas fuertes mand\u00EDbulas y un cr\u00E1neo enorme, ten\u00EDa el cerebro de un tama\u00F1o muy reducido. Ten\u00EDa los t\u00EDpicos molares de un herb\u00EDvoro y unos grandes incisivos para arrancar la vegetaci\u00F3n. Categor\u00EDa:Fauna del Pleistoceno Categor\u00EDa:Mam\u00EDferos Categor\u00EDa:Marsupiales Categor\u00EDa:Diprotodontes"@es . . . . "2790"^^ . . "Marsupial"@en . . "Diprotodon is a large extinct marsupial featured in Zoo Tycoon 2: Extinct Animals that resembles a shaggy wombat. In some people's games, the female Diprotodon is five times larger than the male. This is an unusual glitch but it does not affect gameplay."@en . "Diprotodon species fossils have been found in sites across mainland Australia, including complete skulls and skeletons, as well as hair and foot impressions.[1] Female skeletons have been found with babies located where the mother's pouch would have been.[1] The largest specimens were hippopotamus-sized: about 3 metres (10 ft) from nose to tail, standing 2 metres (6.6 ft) tall at the shoulder and weighing up to 2,800 kilograms (6,200 lb).[3][4] Aboriginal rock art images in Quinkan traditional country (Queensland, Australia) have been claimed to depict diprotodonts.[5] They inhabited open forest, woodlands, and grasslands, possibly staying close to water, and eating leaves, shrubs, and some grasses. The closest surviving relatives of Diprotodon are the wombats and the koala. It is suggested that diprotodonts may have been an inspiration for the legends of the bunyip, as some Aboriginal tribes identify Diprotodon bones as those of \"bunyips\"."@en . . . . "Chordata"@en .