Roughly half a million years ago, a group of armadillo-like mammals, horses, and sloths met their end in a sinkhole in what ...
About half a million years ago, several sloths, armadillos, and horses fell into a sinkhole in Florida’s Big Bend region. […] ...
While fossil hunting underwater, I made an insane discovery—a massive Megalodon shark tooth!
About half a million years ago, several horses, sloths and armadillos fell into a sinkhole in Florida's Big Bend region and ...
Some paleontologists think that fossils recovered from Antarctica are evidence of birds similar to modern geese and ducks ...
Discover the fascinating story of a sea cow fossil in Venezuela, providing insights into prehistoric marine life and predator ...
The ratios of strontium isotopes in fossil shark teeth can be used to better understand how coastal environments evolved in ancient times, according ...
Remarkably, fossil shark teeth are also incredibly abundant ... During the Great American Biotic Interchange, animals from the north (depicted in green) migrated south, while animals from the ...
With serpentine necks, flippers and a mouth full of needle-sharp teeth, plesiosaurs have captured imaginations since palaeontologists uncovered ...
But the tooth almost certainly came from a very large ichthyosaur comparable in size to the blue whale, Sander said, pointing to jaw fossils from the United Kingdom that came from animals estimated at ...
Klaus Nilkens/Urwelt-Museum Hauff Supported by By Sara Novak With serpentine necks, flippers and a mouth full of needle-sharp teeth ... from fossils. “I don’t see this animal spending a ...