This animal was found on an access road in Montreal Goldfields surrounded by disturbed vegetation done 2 days previously in preparation for a control burn.
Two adjacent stringybarks with bark removed at the base, I believe by native herbivores eating it, rather than rubbing by deer. The bucket for scale indicates the stripping only extends to about 50cm above the ground and the amount of disturbance around the base is more commensurate with something the size of a wombat than a deer. Also, we've been seeing this effect on our place for the whole 40 years we have been here, whereas the deer have only turned up in the last decade or so. Wombat is my best guess for this.
group of fungi growing on a burnt Angophora stump (photo #5). photo #1, 3 show luminescence, #2, 4 show corresponding fields of view in torch light