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A team of international scientists say they have found a " lost world "

in an Indonesian jungle, home to dozens of new species of animals and

plants.

" It's as close to the Garden of Eden as you're going to find on

Earth, " said Bruce Beehler, co-leader of the team.

 

The scientists claim to have discovered 20 frog species, four

butterfly species and at least five new types of palms.

 

But their discoveries will have to be reviewed by peers before being

officially classified as new species.

 

The team - from the US, Indonesia and Australia - surveyed a region

near the Foja Mountains in Papua province in eastern Indonesia, which

covers an area of more than a million hectares (two million acres) of

forest.

 

" There was not a single trail, no sign of civilisation, no sign of

even local communities ever having been there, " Mr Beehler told the

Associated Press.

 

He said that even two local tribesmen, who accompanied the

scientists, were astonished at the area's isolation.

 

" As far as they knew, neither of their clans had ever been to the

area, " Mr Beehler said.

 

Unafraid of humans

 

One of the team's most remarkable discoveries was a honey-eater bird

with a bright orange patch on its face - the first new bird species

to be sighted in the area for more than 60 years.

 

 

They also found a Golden-Mantled Tree Kangaroo, which was previously

thought to have been hunted to near-extinction, and took the first

known photographs of the Berlepsch's Six-Wired Bird of Paradise,

first described by hunters in the 19th Century.

 

Mr Beehler said some of the creatures the team came into contact with

were remarkably unafraid of humans.

 

Two Long-Beaked Echidnas, primitive egg-laying mammals, even allowed

scientists to pick them up and bring them back to their camp to be

studied, he added.

 

The December 2005 expedition was organised by the US-based

organisation Conservation International, together with the Indonesian

Institute of Sciences.

 

The team admit that in their month-long trip, they did not have

enough time to survey the area completely.

 

" We just scratched the surface, " Mr Beehler told reporters. " Anyone

who goes there will come back with a mystery. "

 

Mr Beehler himself hopes to return later this year.

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