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Oldest Footprints In North America Found in New Mexico Are 23,000 Years Old, Claims New Study The arrival of people in America was confirmed to be around 23,000 years ago, as geologists uncover ...
Paleontologists know the bone bed as PFV 393. The late fossil preparator Bill Amaral found the site in 2011 on a field trip to unearth new fossils that might provide information about the origins ...
Using new radiocarbon dating on ancient footprints found preserved in the gypsum-rich ground in White Sands, researchers have now confirmed that humans roamed North America 23,000 years ago.
Most remarkable of all, it yielded fossilized remains from the oldest pterosaur yet found in North America: Eotephradactylus mcintireae, or the “ash-winged dawn goddess.” ...
Tucked away in a remote bonebed in Arizona's Petrified Forest National Park laid hundreds of fossils, including a fragile jawbone belonging to one of the oldest-known flying reptiles: the ...
Researchers spent years quietly studying a stone carved with 255 runes and the image of a boat found in Ontario. Now, revealing the stone’s existence, they’re asking the public for help.
From the hundreds upon hundreds of fossils prepared from PFV 393, only three Eotephradactylus fossils have been found so far. The small collection includes a lower jawbone with teeth, an isolated ...