News

In the backwash of Fennario The black and bloody mire The dire wolf collects his due While the boys sing ‘round the fire” – ...
Most people see the Central Valley as all agriculture,” one paleontologist said, but it’s a rich source of prehistoric ...
Most fashionistas like to try and stay ahead of the curve. But a new style involves going quite far the other way - around 70 ...
Giant kangaroos stayed local, and rapid climate change gradually destroyed their lush rainforest home, leading to extinction.
Large kangaroos today roam long distances across the outback, often surviving droughts by moving in mobs to find new food ...
Deinosuchus had a wide snout like an alligator’s. But unlike alligators, it thrived in salty waters. It lived between 82 and ...
Imagine stepping onto the icy shores of ancient Antarctica—not to see today’s tuxedoed, knee-high Emperor penguins, but to ...
A new study indicates the giant reptile Deinosuchus is not a close relative of modern alligators, as scientists previously ...
Researchers may have discovered Mississippi's largest ever mosasaur after pulling a Cretaceous-aged fossil out of a riverbed ...
Dire wolves — or really, wolves with traits like the extinct species — are back. But New York has plenty of its own ...
Scientists made the discovery at an outback research site in Central Queensland’s Mt Etna Caves region. For thousands of ...
A new peer-reviewed study has found that, unlike modern kangaroos, the extinct marsupial megafauna Protemnodon were less ...