Ngamalacinus nigelmarveni is known exclusively from the
Late Oligocene White Hunter site of Riversleigh, which has a date range of ~26-23 Ma. The environment inhabited by
N. nigelmarveni consisted of open temperate forests or woodlands, with patches of rainforest growing around forest pools and watercourses. Plant fossils indicate the presence of deciduous vine thickets and sclerophyllous vegetation. Living alongside
N. nigelmarveni were the thylacinids
Nimbacinus peterbridgei and
Badjcinus turnbulli, and the
thylacoleonids Wakaleo schouteni and
Lekaneleo roskellyae. The two families of carnivorous marsupials likely did not compete with each other due to differences in both body size and vertical habitat segregation. The teeth of
N. nigelmarveni show adaptations towards
hypercarnivory and were well equipped for longitudinal slicing. Fossils of
N. timmulvaneyi are only known from two Early Miocene deposits, the Camel Sputum and Inabeyance sites. The Camel Sputum site has been radiometrically dated to ~18.5–17.0 Ma, while the age of the Inabeyance site is thought to have been ~18.5-16.2 Ma. Both sites are interpreted as being open rainforest habitat. Contemporaneous with
N. timmulvaneyi was the similarly-sized, hypercarnivorous thylacinid
Wabulacinus ridei.
N. timmulvaneyi is thought to have been an unspecialised faunivore that fed on invertebrates and small vertebrates. == References ==