A new extinct flying reptile species has been discovered in fossilized dinosaur vomit. Known as "regurgitalite," the remains ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
This Amateur Fossil Hunter Discovered a 151-Million-Year-Old Insect—and It’s a New Species
Amateur fossil hunter Robert Beattie has been searching for remnants of the past ever since he was a child. Now, some of his ...
Researchers from the Natural History Museum and Sainsbury Laboratory, Cambridge University (SLCU) have identified a new ...
An extinct snake has slithered its way out of obscurity over four decades after its discovery. The newly described species of ...
1don MSN
30,000 fossils uncovered in the Arctic show how oceans came back to life after the ‘Great Dying’
Arctic fossils reveal the oldest known oceanic reptile ecosystem from the Age of Dinosaurs. Over 30,000 specimens show marine ...
list25 on MSN
25 Most Bizarre Fossils Ever Discovered
Facts That Make Us Doubt How Well We Know the World:: 25 Most Bizarre Artifacts Ever Discovered On Construction Sites: Some AMAZING things have been discovered in fossils, from a baby dinosaur nest, ...
The 98 million-year-old remains were discovered in 2012 in the Neuquén River Valley of northwest Patagonia, but have not yet ...
A newly discovered ancient sawshark species in Chile has been named after Chainsaw Man’s Pochita, blending science and anime ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Meeting Lucy: How a World-First European Exhibition Brought Visitors Face to Face With the Fossil That ‘Shrinks Time’
Two Australopithecus fossils named Lucy and Selam made a rare trip out of Ethiopia for a 60-day display at the National ...
Around 110 million years ago, an apparent dinosaur ate two pterosaurs and four fish and, for whatever reason, threw them back ...
Indian Defence Review on MSN
Discovery Of 249-Million-Year-Old Lost World In The Arctic Filled With Giant Sea Predators Stuns Scientists!
A fossil-rich site on the Arctic island of Spitsbergen has revealed an extraordinary ecosystem that thrived 249 million years ...
Scientists working on the Arctic archipelago’s largest island, Spitsbergen, uncovered a 249-million-year-old bonebed on the side of Mount Marmier. They estimate that it contains more than 30,000 ...
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