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BEIJING, 6th May, 2025 (WAM) -- By studying 140-million-year-old oyster fossils, a joint team of Chinese and international scientists has uncovered clues about Earth’s climate during the Early ...
BI-1910 Poster at PAGE 2025 Title: A population modelling framework to support early clinical development of BI-1910, an agonist monoclonal antibody for tumor necrosis factor 2 Abstract Number: 11618 ...
Paleontologists have uncovered a new genus and species of small lambeosaurine hadrosaurid dinosaur named Taleta taleta from fossilized jaws found in the Maastrichtian phosphates of Morocco. This ...
According to a new study published in Science, birds have been nesting in the Arctic for far longer than previously known.Though places like Alaska are rife with birds and their young today, this ...
sports Stars. National reaction to Oilers eliminating Stars: Benching Jake Oettinger ‘unforgivable’ Stars coach Pete DeBoer shockingly benched Oettinger early in the first period with Dallas ...
The Early Cretaceous epoch – between roughly 140 million and 100 million years ago – represents one of the warmest periods in the last half a billion years of Earth’s history.
Fossilized bird bones from Alaska's Prince Creek Formation indicate that multiple bird species, including early relatives of loons, gulls, ducks, and geese, nested in the Arctic 73 million years ago.
The Early Cretaceous epoch – between roughly 140 million and 100 million years ago – represents one of the warmest periods in the last half a billion years of Earth’s history.