Authors
  Burney DA.  Flannery TF.
Title
  Fifty millennia of catastrophic extinctions after human contact [Review]
Source
  Trends in Ecology & Evolution. 20(7):395-401, 2005 Jul.
Abstract
  Debate continues to rage between enthusiasts for climate change versus
  humans as a cause of the catastrophic faunal extinctions that have
  occurred in the wake of human arrival in previously uninhabited regions of
  the world. A global pattern of human arrival to such landmasses, followed
  by faunal collapse and other ecological changes, appears without known
  exception. This strongly suggests to some investigators that a more
  interesting extinction debate lies within the realm of potential
  human-caused explanations and how climate might exacerbate human impacts.
  New observations emerging from refined dating techniques, paleoecology and
  modeling suggest that the mega-faunal collapses of the Americas and
  Australia, as well as most prehistoric island biotic losses, trace to a
  variety of human impacts, including rapid overharvesting, biological
  invasions, habitat transformation and disease. [References: 67]
Institution
  Reprint available from:
  Burney DA
  Natl Trop Bot Garden
  3530 Papalina Rd
  Kalaheo, HI 96741
  USA