The most recent species,
Genyornis newtoni, was certainly known to Aboriginal Australians during the Late Pleistocene. Cave paintings thought to depict this bird are known, as are carved footprints larger than those considered to represent emus. At Cuddie Springs,
Genyornis bones have been excavated in association with human artifacts. The issue of how much of an impact humans had on dromornithids and other large animals of the time is unresolved and much debated. Many scientists believe that human settlement and hunting were largely responsible for the extinction of dromornithids, as well as many other species of the Australian megafauna. The first Europeans to encounter the bones of dromornithids may have been
Thomas Mitchell and his team. While exploring the
Wellington Caves, one of his men tied his rope to a projecting object which broke when he tried to descend the rope. After the man had climbed back up, it was found that the projecting object was the fossilised long bone of a large bird. The first species to be described was
Dromornis australis. The specimen was found in a 55-metre deep well at
Peak Downs, Queensland, and subsequently described by
Richard Owen in 1872. Extensive collections of dromornithid fossils were first made at
Lake Callabonna,
South Australia. In 1892,
E. C. Stirling and
A. H. C. Zietz of the South Australian Museum received reports of large bones in a dry lake bed in the northwest of the state. Over the several next years, they made several trips to the site, collecting nearly complete skeletons of several individuals. They named the newly found species
Genyornis newtoni in 1896. Additional remains of
Genyornis have been found in other parts of South Australia and in New South Wales and Victoria. Other sites of importance were
Bullock Creek and
Alcoota, both in the Northern Territory. The specimen recovered there remained unstudied and unnamed until 1979, when
Patricia Rich described five new species and four new genera. • Impressions of the inside of the skull cavity (
endocranial casts or endocasts) have been found. Endocasts are formed when sediments fill the empty skull, after which the skull is destroyed. These fossils give a fairly accurate picture of dromornithid brains. ==Description==