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Dinosaurs are not extinct. Although the mighty Tyrannosaurus won't make an appearance on your morning commute to work, you ...
Bird beaks come in almost every shape and size—from the straw-like beak of a hummingbird to the slicing, knife-like beak of ...
Bird beaks come in almost every shape and size, but what determines the form they will take? Just how exactly […] ...
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What was the fastest dinosaur?
"The fastest dinosaur was likely an Ornithomimosauria," Susannah Maidment, a paleontologist at the Natural History Museum in ...
Live reconstruction of a Bonapartenykus specimen by Abel G. Montes. (Image Credit: Meso et al. 2025, CC-BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 ...
Oviraptorosaurs are weird dinosaurs that look a bit like ... are the perfect group to study finger loss in theropods. Although modern birds did not evolve directly from oviraptorosaurs, they ...
The newly discovered theropod lived in a period earlier ... able to unravel the mechanism of the macroevolution (from dinosaurs to birds).” ...
Oviraptorosaurs are weird dinosaurs, which look a bit like ... are the perfect group to study finger loss in theropods. Although modern birds did not evolve directly from oviraptorosaurs, they ...
In theropods, the group of dinosaurs that T ... Now that we know that most bird and dinosaur beaks follow the power cascade, the next big step in our research is to study how bird beaks grow ...
After this discovery, we were very interested in how the power cascade might explain the shape of bird and other dinosaur beaks. How snouts and beaks of theropods follow the power cascade rule of ...