Miniature versions of three big lizards have been turned into limited-edition pendants by the artist Jake Chapman and the ...
The study gives new insight into how Komodo dragons keep their teeth razor-sharp and may provide clues to how dinosaurs like Tyrannosaurus rex killed ... Scientists Assess How Large Dinosaurs ...
A gigantic dinosaur twice the size of a city bus will soon be on display for the public to see – its one-of-a-kind green bones and all. The team of paleontologists who discovered, recovered and ...
Paleontologists have suggested the prints may belong to a plant-eating dinosaur that roamed the area more than 200 million years ago Abigail Adams is a Human Interest Writer and Reporter for PEOPLE.
Did all dinosaurs become extinct, killed when an asteroid hit the Earth 66 million years ago? Or could a few of them, somehow, have survived that mass extinction event – with their descendants living ...
A 10-year-old found 220-million-year-old dinosaur tracks in Wales while fossil hunting. Tegan Jones and her mother found the tracks, which hadn't been seen in over 140 years. An expert thinks a ...
What will you be doing this weekend around the Jersey Shore? Autism Beach Bash, Clear the Shelters, 9/11 ceremony and more ...
German scientists think they've cracked the case on the origins of the giant asteroid that all but wiped out the dinosaurs 66 million years ago. Now, a team of geoscientists from the University of ...
After the first find in 2007, an NHMLAC team spent the next 10 summers at the remote Utah site as they unearthed a jumble of massive dinosaur bones from different species. “You’re playing pick ...
The aftereffects of the collision resulted in the extinction of an estimated 75% of animal species, including most dinosaurs except for birds. But practically nothing of the asteroid itself remains.
The asteroid that led to the extinction of the dinosaurs 66 million years ago probably came from the outer solar system. Geoscientists from the University of Cologne have led an international ...
The asteroid was 20 times larger than the one that collided with what’s now the Yucatán Peninsula in Chicxulub, Mexico, and led to the downfall of dinosaurs on Earth 66 million years ago.