The find was made by an amateur fossil hunter on the Cliffs of Stevns, which offers “exceptional evidence” of the meteorite impact on Earth about 65 million years ago that brought an end to ...
A local fossil hunter found animal vomit at a Danish geological site that is believed to be 66 million years old.
A paleontologist hailed the discovery as "truly an unusual find," adding it helped explain the relationships in the prehistoric food chain.
Learn about the time period that took place 65 to 23 million years ago. 3 min read At the dawn of the Paleogene—the beginning of the Cenozoic era—dinosaurs, pterosaurs, and giant marine ...
It is widely agreed that such an object -- 10 kilometers across -- struck just off the coast of the Yucatan peninsula 65 million years ago. According to scientists who maintain that dinosaur ...
Although they came into their own only after the extinction of the dinosaurs some 65 million years ago, mammals had maintained a low-profile existence for some 150 million years before that.
This ancient fish was once thought to have died out 65 million years ago, until it was rediscovered ... [+] in the 1930s. Coelacanths are part of an ancient lineage of lobe-finned fish that date ...
They inhabited the island of Madagascar during the Late Cretaceous, about 65 to 70 million years ago. These largely terrestrial frogs may have been as ill-tempered and aggressive as their living ...
DNA is a relatively fragile molecule, and dinosaurs went extinct 65 million years ago, so the idea of sequencing DNA from these ancient creatures has so far remained science fiction. In the new study, ...
Researchers dated the fossil animal regurgitate to the end of the Cretaceous era nearly 66 million years ago. They concluded the fossil vomit contained two species of sea lilies that were likely ...