The website of the
Australian Museum contains an entry for the "drop bear legend" written in a serious tone similar to entries for other, real, species. The entry classifies the drop bear as
Thylarctos plummetus and describes them as "a large, arboreal, predatory marsupial related to the koala", the size of a
leopard, having coarse orange fur with dark mottling, with powerful forearms for climbing and attacking prey, and a bite made using broad powerful
premolars rather than
canines. Specifically it states that they weigh and have a length of . The tongue-in-cheek entry was created for "
silly season". The Australian Museum also established a small display in the museum itself, exhibiting artefacts which it stated "may, or may not, relate to actual drop bears." The article was based on a 2012 paper published in
Australian Geographer, and despite referencing the Australian Museum entry on drop bears in several places, images included with the
Australian Geographic article were sourced from
Australian Geographer and did not match the Australian Museum's species description. In the
Discworld novel
The Last Continent by
Terry Pratchett, drop bears inhabit the continent of Fourecks, a land portrayed as a parody of Australia. This version of the drop bear tale shows the animals with well-padded backsides to cushion their fall. Australian Chris Toms and New Zealand musician Johnny Batchelor formed a band named
Dropbears in 1981. == Similarities to
Thylacoleo ==