Two recently examined fossils suggest that Australia’s First Peoples valued big animals for their fossils as well as for ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
An Unexpectedly Large Vulture Soared Over South America 13,000 Years Ago
A bone fragment led Uruguayan paleontologists to reconstruct the existence of a colossal vulture, larger than the Andean ...
By far the largest ever found of its kind, the spiny fossil predator "would have made enough scampi to feed an army," one ...
Cliff-rappelling scientists uncovered a crossbow bolt, part of a slingshot and 25 shoes in ancient vulture nesting sites ...
The Cool Down on MSN
Researchers make stunning discovery after analyzing feces of critically endangered tortoise: 'Could trigger numerous negative effects'
Since the tortoises' digestion process can take 28 days, the researchers are worried about the effects of the trash.
Indigenous Australians may have been early "paleontologists," not big-game hunters, according to a new analysis ...
New dating has revealed that New Mexico's last dinosaurs were healthy, diverse and thriving at the end of the Cretaceous ...
Australia’s First Peoples may or may not have hunted the continent’s megafauna to extinction, but they definitely collected ...
Tens of thousands of years ago, Australia was still home to enigmatic megafauna—large land animals such as giant marsupial ...
In a new study, University of New South Wales Professor Mike Archer and colleagues re-examined the fossilized tibia (lower ...
New research led by UNSW Sydney paleontologists challenges the idea that Indigenous Australians hunted Australia's megafauna to extinction, suggesting instead they were fossil collectors.
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