In a groundbreaking discovery, scientists have identified a remarkable new flying reptile species, Bakiribu waridza, a 100-million-year-old regurgitate (scientific name), or fossilised dinosaur vomit.
Paleontologist Lísie V. S. Damke holding an enlarged model of the brain of Venetoraptor gassenae. (Rodrigo Temp Müller via SWNS) By Stephen Beech The brain of a 233-million-year-old ancestor of the ...
The brain of a 233-million-year-old ancestor of the first flying reptiles has been reconstructed in a bid to work out how they took flight. Scientists say Venetoraptor was around 13 inches (33 ...
The latest clues hint at where pterosaurs — the first vertebrates to fly — came from, how they evolved, what they ate and more.
The Montana Dinosaur Center’s collection continues to grow, thanks in part to numerous fossil donations from local ranchers ...
For such a wild and beautiful state, North Carolina is a surprisingly risky place to be a rare animal or plant. From misty ...
The animal kingdom stretches anatomy far beyond human expectations. Some creatures carry organs that rival furniture in size, ...
Pangaea takes the concept of themed dining and runs with it all the way back to the Mesozoic Era, dragging delicious food along for the journey. The restaurant sits in Scottsdale like a time machine ...
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