News
Seventeen footprints preserved in a slab of sandstone discovered in southeastern Australia dating to about 355 million years ...
1d
TAG24 on MSNWhen did ancient vertebrates leave the oceans for dry land? New evidence tweaks the timeline!After a brief rain 350 million years ago, a reptile pressed its claws into the ground. Its tracks now show the oldest-known ...
A new study suggests two fossil trackways found in Australia were made by an early amniote, a group that today includes ...
5d
ZME Science on MSNEarliest Reptile Footprints Found By Amateur Paleontologist in 355-Million-Year-Old Rock Push Back the Dawn of Land AnimalsEmbedded in the slab’s fine sandstone are delicate imprints: long toes ending in sharp claws, left by an animal that trotted ...
19h
The Daily Galaxy on MSNOldest Reptile Prints Discovered Overturns the Chronology of Life’s First Steps Onto Dry Land by Millions of YearsA sandstone slab discovered in the Snowy Plains Formation, located in the Mansfield Basin of southeast Australia, preserves ...
In Aotearoa New Zealand, hapori Māori (tribal groups) are the kaitiaki (guardians) of many threatened taonga (treasured) ...
5don MSN
The ancient footprints from Australia were found on a slab of sandstone recovered near Melbourne and show reptile-like feet ...
New fossil tracks found in Australia may rewrite everything we thought we knew about animals’ move from sea to land.
A snail named after painter Pablo Picasso is one of many species named after artists, but some researchers question whether ...
But in a study published in Journal of Vertebrate Palaeontology ... understanding the evolutionary relationships of different groups of animals, these studies should be calibrated using knowledge ...
15h
Inquirer on MSNPterosaur fossil found in Japan identified as new speciesA fossilized cervical vertebra discovered back in 1996 in southwestern Japan was found to have been a new genus and species ...
The existence of any prehistoric apex predators in the islands of the Caribbean used to be doubted. While their absence would have probably made it even more of a paradise for prey animals, fossils ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results