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GlobalData on MSNAker BP, partners discover dry well in North Sea’s Njargasas prospectAker BP and its partners have discovered a dry well in the Njargasas prospect of Norwegian North Sea. The wildcat well 35/6-5 S in production licence 1110 was awarded in February 2021 as part of the ...
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Hosted on MSNExperts Declare a 66-Million-Year-Old Fish's Vomit as a National Treasure, Call it world's most famous puke ever'Experts Declare a 66-Million-Year-Old Fish's Vomit as a National Treasure, Call it world's most famous puke ever' A fossil ...
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An amateur fossil hunter has uncovered a piece of animal vomit dating back 66 million years on a beach in Denmark.
Sharks and rays have populated the world's oceans for around 450 million years, but more than a third of the species living today are severely threatened by overfishing and the loss of their habitat.
A 66-million-year-old fossilized vomit discovery in Denmark offers a rare glimpse into the prehistoric Cretaceous food chain.
A marine animal snacked on some sea lilies that did not agree with its stomach—and we now know what happened next ...
The lump of vomit —more scientifically referred to as ‘regurgitate’—was discovered by Peter Bennicke as he walked along the ...
An amateur fossil hunter in Denmark uncovers a 66-million-year-old pile of fish vomit, offering new insights into the Cretaceous period's marine food chain.
A fossil hunter found a lump of prehistoric vomit roughly dated to the time of the mass extinction that wiped out the dinosaurs.
Paleontologists in Denmark found a once-gloopy, now-hardened mess that they believe was spat up by a Cretaceous-era fish.
Milàn postulated that a fish ate the sea lilies living at the bottom of the Cretaceous Sea, which, according to the Utah State University Prehistoric Museum, was a narrow and shallow sea that ...
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