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What happened to all the megafauna? From moas to mammoths, many large animals went extinct between 50 and 10,000 years ago.
For years, it was known as the Puntledge River fossil. From its discovery in 1988 by a father-daughter duo, right up to the ...
Fossils unearthed in New Zealand reveal Kumimanu fordycei, a giant penguin from the Paleocene epoch, weighing around 350 ...
A 183-million-year-old plesiosaur fossil unveils rare skin details, reshaping our understanding of ancient marine life.
A study led by the University of Leicester has linked fossilized tracks of flying reptiles to the specific animals that ...
Stromer named it Spinosaurus aegyptiacus, the Egyptian Spine Lizard. The bones were added to the Bavarian State Collection of ...
A prehistoric sea monster never-before-known to man was hunting prey in North America 85 million years ago, fossils found decades ago in Canada reveal.
Matt Balazik surveyed Virginia’s James River for the carcass of a local legend. Growing up along the 340-mile tributary to ...
The more species of Homo there were, the higher the rate of speciation. So when those niches got filled, something drove even more species to emerge. This is almost unparalleled in evolutionary ...
The massive megalodon was not hunting only large marine mammals such as whales as researchers widely thought, a new study of ...