Paleontology
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PaleontologyThe Last Lost World
Ice Ages, Human Origins, and the Invention of the Pleistocene, by Lydia V. Pyne and Stephen J. Pyne.
By Sid Perkins -
PaleontologyNot your typical pterosaur
A beautifully preserved fossil from Germany displays a wing unlike any ever seen.
By Janet Raloff -
PaleontologyT. rex has another fine, feathered cousin
A trio of fossils from China may tip the scales on dinosaurs’ public image.
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PaleontologyTriceratops reigns alone again
Fossil comparison fends off a challenge that holds the dinosaur is but the immature version of the Torosaurus.
By Devin Powell -
PaleontologyEarly animals dethroned
Cell division patterns in controversial Chinese fossils place them outside the animal kingdom.
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PaleontologyDNA suggests North American mammoth species interbred
Supposedly separate types may really have been one.
By Susan Milius -
PaleontologyTooth stranger than fiction
A mammal fossil unearthed in South America resembles ‘Ice Age’ saber-toothed squirrel.
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PaleontologyOxygen blew up ancient amoebas
Single-celled creatures' size spiked as oxygen levels rose.
By Devin Powell -
PaleontologyAcidifying oceans helped fuel mass extinction
The great die-off 250 million years ago could trace in part to hostile water conditions, a modeling study suggests.
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PaleontologySea monsters made great mothers
Fossilized plesiosaur with fetus suggests ancient reptiles cared for their young.
By Nadia Drake -
PaleontologyDinosaurs died of rickets
After more than 80 years, a theory that too little vitamin D led to the demise of the dinos still awaits a shred of evidence.
By Science News -
PaleontologyBig dinosaurs kept their cool
Body temperature of long-gone beasts resembled that of mammals, study of fossil teeth suggests.