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 ever to roam the Earth.
Humans' increasingly large footprint across the planet is forcing plants & animals to adapt and is affecting some species' evolutionary path.
Claudia Steffensen made a captivating discovery in the Italian Alps: a tropical ecosystem dating back 280 million years, made up of relics of the past such as plant fossils, raindrop tracks and ...
A joint dinosaur survey conducted by Okayama University of Science (OUS) and the Institute of Paleontology, Mongolian Academy ...
“The general rule of locomotion is that the faster the animal is moving, the farther apart the footprints will be,” Tanner, who was not involved in the excavation, said. The fifth pathway ...
Scientists from the Universities of Oxford and Birmingham have discovered a vast quarry floor covered with hundreds of ...
matching the direction of the vast majority of other dinosaur footprints left nearby. It’s not possible to say whether the animals shared a destination, but Edgar speculated that the sauropods ...
Researchers are now calling for a paradigm shift: zoos could preserve their breeding populations, raise awareness of conservation challenges and improve animal welfare and their carbon footprint ...