What’s 66-million-year-old vomit like? A lot more pleasant than the fresh stuff, says paleontologist Jesper Milan.
A groundbreaking discovery was made in the deep waters of the Palau Islands when the research vessel E/V Nautilus encountered ...
Paleontologists in Denmark found a once-gloopy, now-hardened mess that they believe was spat up by a Cretaceous-era fish.
Two underwater sea lilies were eaten and regurgitated around 66 million years ago. They were preserved as fossilized vomit.
Journey into prehistory as the article explores seven monstrous serpents that once ruled land and sea. From the colossal ...
A stunning discovery in Denmark has revealed an unexpected link to the world of dinosaurs: fossilized vomit dating back 66 ...
Amateur fossil hunter Peter Bennicke made a “truly unusual find”, as the fossilised vomit now resides in the Museum of East ...
Researchers aboard the E/V Nautilus recently discovered four rare Palau nautiluses, ancient cephalopods also ... unchanged since the days of the dinosaurs. The sighting thrilled even seasoned ...
A paleontologist hailed the discovery as "truly an unusual find," adding it helped explain the relationships in the prehistoric food chain.
A piece of fossilised vomit, dating back to when dinosaurs roamed the earth, has been discovered in Denmark, the Museum of ...
A man was hunting for fossils along a beach in Denmark when he noticed a "strange little collection of sea lily pieces in a piece of chalk he had just split," according to a press release from ...
Experts say it could offer clues about the diets of sea predators in ... event that wiped out the dinosaurs. At that time, modern-day Denmark was under a vast prehistoric ocean.