3hon MSN
Scientists Discovered Remains of the Earliest Animals on Earth. They May Have Made a Big Mistake.
They looked like traces left behind by tiny creatures, but were most likely microbes.
Maiasaura dinosaur teeth carry a quiet clue: babies were not eating what adults ate. Tiny wear marks suggest young duck-bills ...
The Canadian fossils belong to the White Sea group. But they appear to be around 567 million years old – 5 to 10 million ...
Five years ago, Tokyo’s National Museum of Nature and Science unveiled an exhibition called the Pokémon Fossil Museum. When ...
Early eukaryotes, the lineage that later gave rise to animals, plants and fungi, may have depended on oxygen from the start.
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Scientists entered a New Zealand cave and uncovered 1 million-year-old fossils of mysterious species
A cave discovery on New Zealand’s North Island has revealed fossils from an ancient ecosystem that existed more than one ...
But more than half a billion years ago this wilderness was an ancient seafloor home to the wrinkled pancakes, fleshy fronds ...
Two heavyweights from different eras combine in the Field’s newest exhibition: Pokémon Fossil Museum
A collaboration between the Field, the National Museum of Nature and Science in Tokyo and the Pokemon Company International — the exhibition runs through April 11, 2027.
ScienceAlert on MSN
Fossil Kept in a Museum For Decades Turns Out to Be a Fearsome New Predator
This mosasaur skeleton is not what we thought. (Zietlow et al., Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 2026) A prehistoric predator to ...
A colossal new sea predator named Tylosaurus rex has been identified from fossils found in Texas, revealing a brutal 43-foot-long hunter that ruled ancient oceans 80 million years ago. The discovery ...
Indian Defence Review on MSN
Fossils found in old mining cores just answered one of science’s biggest questions
Dozens of rock cores drilled decades ago and left largely forgotten in a Darwin warehouse have yielded more than 12,000 ...
Hello parents, teachers and students! If you’re looking for a fun way to explore how fossils are made, check out these gummy worms and bread fossils. Be sure to check out GMSA@9 on Wednesdays, when ...
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