“But here we have an animal, most likely some kind of fish, that 66 million years ago ate lilies that lived on the seabed of the Cretaceous Sea and then vomited up the skeletal parts.” Milàn added ...
A piece of fossilised vomit dating back to the time of the dinosaurs has been discovered in Denmark. Local fossil hunter Peter Bennicke found the fossil at Stevns Klint - a Unesco-listed coastal ...
In the Cretaceous period, a shark or another kind of fish found sea lilies less than digestible. What you might expect followed. By Victor Mather Let’s be candid here. Vomit is something you ...
Mr Bennicke took the fragments to be examined at the Museum of East Zealand, which confirmed the vomit could be dated to the end of the Cretaceous period 66 million years ago - a time when dinosaurs ...
All routes below lead to the Pavia Parking Garage on the Coral Gables Campus. If you park in Pavia, it’s an easy walk to the Office of Admissions Building. More information on parking can be found on ...
That was life – and death – in the Cretaceous Period in the Canadian province of Alberta. Scientists have unearthed in the badlands of Alberta’s Dinosaur Provincial Park the fossilized neck ...
Researchers say the new findings provide insight into predator-prey dynamics in the region during the Cretaceous period and mark the first evidence in North America of ancient crocodilians ...
Canada, in July 2023. The revelation of a 0.16-inch-wide tooth mark on the neck bone, the researchers said, provides a special insight into predator-prey dynamics of the Cretaceous Period.
Researchers say the new findings provide insight into predator-prey dynamics in the region during the Cretaceous period and mark the first evidence in North America of ancient crocodilians ...
These were no mean feet. Scientists put their “stamp” on prehistory after discovering a massive dinosaur footprint in Mongolia said to have belonged to one of the largest two-legged animals ...
Experts have named the huge dino Tameryraptor markgrafi and it's believed to have roamed Earth more than 90 million years ago, during the Cretaceous period. What's slightly unusual is that this ...