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The article UC Berkeley Alumni Discovers New Flying Dinosaur-Like Species appeared first on Berkeley Patch. BERKELEY, CA — ...
From auction houses to the emergence of online retailers, the fossil trade risks robbing the world of research and ...
What did long-necked dinosaurs eat—and where did they roam to satisfy their hunger? A team of researchers has reconstructed ...
The Denver Museum of Nature and Science made a surprise discovery during a project on the museum's parking lot: a 70 ...
A new dinosaur fossil at t Museum of Nature & Science was found buried hundreds of feet under the facility’s parking lot in ...
The speedy, plant-eating creature lived in what is now Colorado roughly 150 million years ago, and its skeleton went on display in London this week ...
While drilling for a geothermal tap, museum scientists took the opportunity to study what lay below the surface. To their surprise, they hit something unexpected: a dinosaur bone -- the oldest and ...
An international research team, including a South Carolina professor, identified fossil tracks that don’t match the feet of any previously discovered dinosaur. Skip to content NOWCAST WYFF News ...
Paleontologists at the University of Uppsala in Sweden studied more than 500 pieces of fossilized dinosaur poop to find out how dinosaurs evolved.
Administrators at the fabled Dinosaur National Monument have decided to eliminate one paleontologist's job and redefine the other, in a streamlining move that has outraged some in the scientific ...
The subject of the new study-the 155-million-year-old Anchiornis huxleyi-turns out to have looked something like a woodpecker the size of a chicken, with black-and-white spangled wings and a rusty ...