This Site in Bolivia Boasts 16,600 Exposed Dinosaur Footprints—The Most Ever Found in One Location
Paleontologists counted the record-setting tracks and uncovered evidence of dinosaurs swimming and dragging their tails along what was a muddy superhighway for the animals millions of years ago
This Amateur Fossil Hunter Discovered a 151-Million-Year-Old Insect—and It’s a New Species
Retired teacher Robert Beattie, now 82, has been digging up remnants of the past ever since he was a child
This Tiny Tyrannosaur Could Settle a Huge Scientific Debate
A new analysis of a fossil unearthed in 2006 provides a fresh line of evidence that a separate tyrannosaur lineage called Nanotyrannus lived alongside the famous T. rex
Scientists Finally Know What This ‘Mummified’ Dinosaur Looked Like
A recent study suggests the unique geology of an area in Wyoming makes it a trove of unusually preserved fossils
Scientists Discover ‘Frosty’ Polar Rhino That Roamed the Canadian Arctic 23 Million Years Ago
The newly identified species was small, hornless and possibly covered in fur, which would have helped it survive dark, cold winters above the Arctic Circle
A new study of dinosaur biodiversity challenges the belief that the megafauna were on their way out 66 million years ago
A Giant Kangaroo Bone Is Challenging the Idea That Humans Wiped Out Australia’s Megafauna
Indigenous Australians may have been early “paleontologists,” not big-game hunters, according to a new analysis
Chicago’s Famous ‘Rat Hole’ Wasn’t Actually Made by a Rat, According to a Statistical Analysis
Scientists are almost certain the viral imprint in a city sidewalk was actually made by an unlucky squirrel
Meet the Extinct Camels of North America, From Ice Age Giants to Sheep-Size Runners
Largely outshone by fossils of horses, the earliest camels are getting another look from scientists determined to sort out the relationships and adaptations of these “absolutely bonkers” herbivores
112-Million-Year-Old Amber Samples Preserve a Snapshot of an Ancient Forest
The deposits from the time of the dinosaurs contain fragile insects and a spider’s web
What Led Life to Flourish Roughly 520 Million Years Ago?
Changes to the world’s oceans and the rise of certain predators may have driven diversification
Early Penguins Had Long, Dagger-Like Beaks for Skewering Fish, New Zealand Fossils Reveal
Paleontologists describe four new species of extinct ancestral penguins that help shed light on how the iconic birds evolved after dinosaurs went extinct
From Dinosaur Scratches to Insects in Amber, How Paleontologists Uncover Prehistoric Courtship
Researchers have found fossil evidence of varied creatures wooing and mating, as they continue to search for the telltale signs of dinosaurs copulating
Oldest Known Fossil of an Armored Ankylosaur Is ‘Far Weirder’ Than Paleontologists Expected
The 13-foot dinosaur, covered in long spikes fused into its bones, suggests ankylosaurs developed tail weapons 30 million years earlier than thought
Before Whales Took to the Sea, These Ten Species Walked on Land
The creatures, which ranged in size from that of a fox to more than 50 feet long, divided their time between the coast and the water
Fifteen large prints were probably left behind by meat-eating dinosaurs, and they were revealed as floodwaters washed away dirt in early July
The species was named for its pointy teeth and could shed light on early mammal adaptations
What Happened to the Bone-Crushing Dogs That Once Hunted Across North America?
Before going extinct roughly two million years ago, canids known as borophagines took down and consumed much larger prey
Paleontologists Identify a ‘Rapacious’ Velociraptor Relative With Powerful Hands and a Strong Bite
The dinosaur Shri rapax likely relied on its grip strength to take down prey in what is now Mongolia
Rocks found along the Colorado River in Arizona turned out to contain fossilized fragments of soft-bodied creatures, suggesting the site may have been an “evolutionary hotbed”
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