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Aspy343 t1_itpe4iw wrote

The islands above Australia (Papua New Guinea, Indonesia, etc.) were all connected to Australia recently enough that humans and dogs could just walk there.

Indians may have arrived 4000 years ago but other people arrived WAY before that. At the very minimum 50,000 years ago, but that's just the oldest we know about, so probably much longer than that.

Genetic studies show that Dingos arrived around 10,000 years ago, so a long time after humans.

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[deleted] OP t1_itqolmf wrote

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Jusfiq t1_itzjpm4 wrote

> That's why tigers lived free in Sumatra, but not in Australia.

Sumatra and Australia have indeed never been connected since before the Ice Age. Sumatra is part of Sunda Shelf and Australia is part of Sahul Shelf. As part of Sahul Shelf however, Australia and the island of New Guinea was connected. Part of New Guinea today is territory of Indonesia.

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[deleted] OP t1_itsmc3k wrote

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Jusfiq t1_itzjts3 wrote

>...you couldn’t walk to Australia, it remained isolated.

Australia was connected to New Guinea, part of the island is territory of Indonesia.

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ZekeDarwin t1_itzti95 wrote

New Guinea was not connected to the mainland, so you couldn’t walk to Australia (or New Guinea)

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