Dinosaur Fossils Don’t Get Much Better Than This
The as-yet-unnamed nodosaur was so well preserved that it “might have been walking around a couple of weeks ago.”
The as-yet-unnamed nodosaur was so well preserved that it “might have been walking around a couple of weeks ago.”
There is no ankylosaurus, only Zuul.
See who your neighbors would have been 100 million years ago.
The next time you’re feeling less than brave, remind yourself you’re already one of nature’s great success stories.
Less grunting, more hoarse screaming.
Though Anning didn't receive her due credit from the male naturalists who reaped the benefits of her labors, word of the fossil-hunter's many achievements still managed to spread far and wide during her lifetime.
The pale ale is called psuedoSue.
Paleontologists say a prehistoric marsupial called "Didelphodon vorax" had the strongest bite force of any mammal that’s ever lived.
The animal lived off the coast of what is now Washington state about 10 million years ago and probably fished like seals do, relying on the power of its oversized eyes to track its prey.
The American Museum of Natural History is highlighting its artifacts in a whole new way.
Two specimens of the Chihuahua-sized animals have just rearranged the branches of the carnivore family tree.
The presence and contents of a fossilized nest suggest that Australopithecus africanus lived in a dry, savannah-like environment.
But who was behind the hoax?
A new study finds that mammoths were roaming Alaska’s St. Paul Island as recently as 5600 years ago, but even then their days were numbered.
New evidence suggests that prehistoric turtle shells served a different purpose than we originally believed.
Researchers believe the discovery could be the key to identifying other ancient bird species.
Here's what a little stress and 45 million years can do to organic matter.
A new study finds that mammals were thriving 10 to 20 million years before dinosaur extinction.
Atopodentatus used its peg teeth and bizarre jaw to scrape plant matter off rocks on the sea floor.
When the mass extinction began, Lystrosaurus shortened its lifespan—and its mating cycle.
A new exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History argues that birds are just another kind of dinosaur.