|
Home / News / Tags / dinosaur
|
|
More: next 50 >>
The recent discovery of the Microraptor gui species of dinosaur (translated as “Small thief” or “Small raider”) stands as further proof that dinosaurs are the ancestors of modern birds. The fact that puzzled researchers was its being provided with two sets of wings, which is highly unusua... |
9 October 2008 10:00 GMT |
 |
Found in the Rio Colorado region of Argentina, the fossilized remains of a dinosaur called Aerosteon Riocoloradensis may aid scientists track the evolution of birds' breathing systems.Jeffrey Wilson and his team of paleontologists from the University of Michigan took part in dinosaur specialist Paul Sereno'... |
1 October 2008 08:54 GMT |
 |
In 2005, a team of paleontologists rushed to claim that they had discovered soft tissue in a dinosaur fossil belonging to a Tyrannosaurus rex that lived more than 65 million years ago. Now, a new study contests the findings of the previous one by revealing that the so-called soft tissue sample is in fact only a biofi... |
30 July 2008 06:36 GMT |
 |
The fossilized skeleton of a dinosaur closely related to the famous giant carnivorous Tyrannosaurus, unearthed in the Gobi Desert in Mongolia in 2006 by Japanese and Mongolian scientists, is now presented by the Hayashibara Museum of Natural Sciences as one of the most complete fossils of this species ever found. The... |
25 July 2008 03:14 GMT |
 |
The long debate over a complexly colored fossilized feather belonging to a species of bird that flew in the Earth's skies some 100 million years ago has been settled recently by scientists after they revealed that the coloring patterns were of biological origin, and might contain clues to some of the hues displa... |
9 July 2008 04:38 GMT |
 |
In 1971, while prospecting for thorium in the northern regions of British Columbia, geologist Kenny Larsen discovered the fossils of a dinosaur. Since thorium is a radioactive element, Larsen was equipped with instruments capable of measuring the levels of radiation in the surrounding medium. Thus, he detected a radi... |
14 June 2008 03:52 GMT |
 |
During a tour of a region where nearly eight years ago a mummified duckbill was found, a public relations coordinator from the Texas museum discovered the fossil of a duckbilled dinosaur that roamed the Earth some 75 million years ago. Leonardo, as the mummified specimen found in Montana was named, is currently on di... |
4 June 2008 05:45 GMT |
 |
You would think that with a reputation such as that of Tyrannosaurus rex even their youngsters would be at bay from predators. A new study now says that this was hardly the case, especially in the presence of flying reptiles such as Pterosaurs, a dinosaur living between 230 and 65 million years ago. Prior to the stu... |
29 May 2008 06:38 GMT |
 |
Similar dinosaur tracks have been found throughout the world during the years, but this is the first time when these are found in the Arabian Peninsula. The site of the discovery presents the fossilized footprints of 11 sauropods walking together roughly at the same speed along a Mesozoic coastal mudflat. Sauropods w... |
21 May 2008 05:37 GMT |
 |
T-Rex is by far the most famous of dinosaur species. For 150 years, Tyrannosaurus rex was considered the largest carnivorous species that have ever roamed the earth. And it was, indeed, a huge beast - up to 12.8 (42 ft) in length and 7.2 tonnes in weight. Bigger than an elephant! Meanwhile, in 1993, a longer carnivor... |
7 May 2008 04:03 GMT |
 |
The ordinary lard is more than familiar to most of us. However, mammals also have a different fatty tissue called brown fat, involved in generating heat. A new study made at New York Medical College and published in the journal BMC Biology has discovered why birds lack this tissue. In the end, birds are actually livi... |
24 April 2008 02:44 GMT |
 |
They are considered the rams of the dinosaur world. But the dome-headed dinosaurs were able to batter their heads only when teenagers, to avoid brain damage, as revealed by a new research published in the Palaeontologia Electronica journal. The pachycephalosaurs or thick-headed dinosaurs, not very large (up to 5 m (1... |
29 March 2008 06:20 GMT |
 |
One of the most familiar dinosaur images is that of the veggie horned rhino called ceratopsid dinosaur. A new member has been added to this gallery: a Mexican species with large neck frill and three giant horns that lived on a lush beach environment 72 Ma ago (in the Late Cretaceous). The species was found in Coahuil... |
28 March 2008 05:34 GMT |
 |
One group of huge marine reptiles that dominated the seas during the dinosaur eras (Jurassic and Cretaceous, 200 to 65 Ma ago) was represented by the plesiosaurs, long-necked small-headed carnivore animals with flippers resembling those of the sea turtles. These were the animals that inspired the legend of the Loch N... |
25 March 2008 04:51 GMT |
 |
There are mummies which can be older than those of the ancient pharaohs. Some even older than 65 Ma. An amazingly preserved "dinosaur mummy", containing a lot of tissues and bones inside skin wrapping, is being brought to light in North Dakota's state museum. Dakota is an Edmontosaurus, one of the largest duckb... |
20 March 2008 03:42 GMT |
 |
Following the Paleozoic, when life started to get complex, the Mezozoic ("middle life", Secondary era) spanning from 250 to 65 Ma, was an era when reptiles were the rulers of the world. In fact, the dinosaurs were the real masters for over 150 million years. 1. Triassic (250-200 Ma) is named so because there are thre... |
13 March 2008 09:45 GMT |
 |
We know that some carnivorous (theropod) dinosaurs were feathered. Archaeopteryx, the oldest bird-dinosaur fossil discovered, was feathered, too. But the fossils preserved only imprints of feathers, as the feathers themselves degrade in time. However, this new discovery published in the journal "Proceedings of the R... |
12 March 2008 03:40 GMT |
 |
180 Ma ago, northern dinosaurs were separated, on a supercontinent called Laurasia, from the southern dinosaurs, located on a supercontinent called Gondwana. About 10 new species of dinosaurs are found annually, and the hotbed of southern dinosaur discoveries is represented by Patagonia (the southern part of Argentin... |
28 February 2008 10:13 GMT |
 |
72 millions year ago, the Mexican beaches were not roamed by tourists and mariachi, but by dinosaurs. One of them has been described in the "Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology": a large duck-billed veggie dinosaur with a sail-shaped crest. Velafrons coahuilensis lived just 7 million years before the dinosaur demise. ... |
27 February 2008 05:37 GMT |
 |
There are around 800 species of dinosaurs described worldwide. Dinosaur fossils have been found in all continents, Antarctica included. But, if you ask somebody about dinosaurs, the most popular are those discovered in North America, like Tyrannosaurus and Triceratops. Other hotbeds of dinosaur discoveries are Argent... |
21 February 2008 10:08 GMT |
 |
These were the masters of Africa 110-million-year ago: two large theropode (carnivore) dinosaurs that grew up to 25 ft (7.6 m) long. The two new species described in the Acta Palaeontologica Polonica journal are Eocarcharia dinops ("fierce-eyed dawn shark"), a predator armed with huge, shark-like teeth, and Kryptop... |
15 February 2008 04:15 GMT |
 |
The largest ever land animals were the enormous plant-eater dinosaurs called sauropods, of which Apatosaurus (former Brontosaurus) is the best known. These creatures could grow up to 42 m (130 ft) in length (but the neck and tail could be longer than their body) and at least 110 tons in weight. Researchers have been... |
8 February 2008 03:30 GMT |
 |
Crayfish are found an all continents and adapted to diverse freshwater environments, but even if they resemble tiny lobsters, the freshwater decapods cannot survive in the saltwater of the sea, that's why biologists have been puzzled for 150 years by their wide range. Now, extremely old fossils explain this on t... |
7 February 2008 04:56 GMT |
 |
Crocodiles are the living relatives of the only surviving Archosauria group of reptiles (birds are directly evolved from dinosaurs, thus living dinosaurs). But what you may have not suspected is that crocodiles evolved from land animals (even if you are accustomed with the image of the beast stalking in the water), f... |
1 February 2008 03:19 GMT |
 |
Birds are the only living dinosaurs, and the transition from hatchling to adult appears to be like a transition from flightless dinosaurs to flying dinosaurs. A new research published in "Nature" reveals how young birds must control the wing angles in order to achieve flying.The team led by Kenneth Dial of the Univer... |
25 January 2008 03:14 GMT |
 |
When the first platypus furs were brought to Europe, people thought that duck bills had been glued to the skins. The platypuses and the four current echidna species are the only living "monotremes," mammals with reptilian traits as they lay eggs and have a cloaca and three bones in the shoulder girdle (the other mamm... |
24 January 2008 02:58 GMT |
 |
This is more than bones and fossilized feces: the fossilized skin of this dinosaur found in northeastern China (Liaoning Province) even had a wound, and it is by now the best sample of dinosaur skin. The 130-million-year-old Psittacosaurus (parrot lizard) was a sheep sized beaked dino, forebear of the later more famo... |
17 January 2008 02:49 GMT |
 |
1.The name "dinosaur" comes from Old Greek "deinos" ("terrible") and "saurus" ("lizard"), and was advanced by Richard Owen in 1841. The dinosaurs emerged at the end of the Triassic, about 225 million years ago, from a group of reptiles called Archosauria. Archosauria was a sister group to lizards and they gave birth ... |
14 January 2008 17:06 GMT |
 |
We are more familiarized with the ferocious meat-eating dinosaurs, like T-rex. But some appear to have been skilled fishers, too! Baryonyx was found in 1983 near Dorking in Surrey, UK. It was 125 million years old, and was classified to the family of spinosaurs. The beast was up to 10 m (33 ft) long and weighed up to... |
14 January 2008 06:10 GMT |
 |
We talk about asteroid impacts or massive volcanic eruptions, but in fact the largest beasts that roamed the Earth could have been wiped out by one of the tiniest: insects. More precisely, biting, disease-carrying insects. And this proof could emerge from amber."There are serious problems with the sudden impact theor... |
4 January 2008 04:12 GMT |
 |
There are more described beetle species than all the other described animal species. And it is believed that there are even more undescribed species, by the order of millions, to be included into the beetles' Coleoptera Order, with 17 "superfamilies" and 168 families. Many will disappear before description, as w... |
27 December 2007 05:46 GMT |
 |
T-rex was not exactly the champ of the bullies during the dinosaur era. It was indeed up to 12.8 (38 ft) long and 7.2 tonnes heavy (more than an elephant!), but the 1993 discovered Giganotosaurus from Argentine was longer: up to 13.6 m (40 ft) long. Still, the largest carnivore dinosaur (and land carnivore in genera... |
12 December 2007 05:10 GMT |
 |
Today, Antarctica is a frozen desert. But once, it was covered by a lush tropical vegetation and inhabited by heat-loving dinosaurs. A new research, published in the journal "Acta Palaeontologica Polonica", describes a large dinosaur that wandered across the Antarctica about 190 million years ago, during the early Ju... |
12 December 2007 04:17 GMT |
 |
Mummies can go far beyond the era of the ancient pharaohs. Even to the dinosaur era. Researchers have just revealed the discovery of an amazingly preserved "dinosaur mummy", containing a lot of tissues and bones inside skin wrapping, including well preserved tendons and ligaments, which are seldom discovered nowadays... |
4 December 2007 02:59 GMT |
 |
Those enormous long-necked dinosaurs are presented like some kind of giraffes of the dinosaur era, devastating tree tops. But a new odd 110-million-year-old species with a vacuum cleaner-like muzzle suggests that not all of them did this, as presented in a new research published online in the journal PLoS One. A team... |
16 November 2007 04:29 GMT |
 |
Bird flight has fascinated humans since ever. And by over 150 years, with the discovery of the oldest bird, Archaeopteryx, a vivid debate divides scientists into two camps: those who say birds evolved from ground-dwelling ancestors and developed flight by taking off from the ground and those saying that birds evolved... |
8 November 2007 07:11 GMT |
 |
Only few doubt that birds are just living dinosaurs. Besides clues like feathers and similar bones, a new research comes with novel proofs that dinosaurs did resemble birds. The researchers at the University of Manchester point in their article published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences ... |
7 November 2007 06:06 GMT |
 |
Dinosaurs may have been big, but these ones dwarf them all: a newly discovered herbivorous dinosaur from Patagonia (Southern Argentina) was 105-foot (32-meter) long! Based on the neck structure, the new dino seems to represent a novel type of Titanosaur.It was dubbed Futalognkosaurus dukei, meaning "giant chief" in ... |
18 October 2007 04:44 GMT |
 |
"God creates dinosaurs. God destroys dinosaurs. God creates man. Man destroys God. Man creates dinosaurs... ". First of all, the Roboraptor is not a toy. It's the plastic proof that technology and personality can nicely mix. The robotic dinosaur features realistic biometric motions, direct control and autonomous... |
17 October 2007 04:28 GMT |
 |
It is the symbol of the huge carnivorous dinosaurs. Yet just one previous possible T. rex footprint has been found so far, in New Mexico, in 1983 and made public in 1994. Now, a second T-rex footprint could have been found by Dr Phil Manning, from the Manchester Museum, University of Manchester. The metre-square, thr... |
10 October 2007 06:08 GMT |
 |
They are separated since the Jurassic era (175 million years ago) by the Atlantic ocean, still the European common lizard (Lacerta vivipara) has been found to display the same love game as a North American lizard, the side blotched lizard (Uta stansburiana). "The triangle of competing strategies may be far more commo... |
5 October 2007 06:37 GMT |
 |
This was a giant in the world of the duck-billed dinosaurs. It lived in what is now southern Utah, some 75 million years ago. The well-preserved skull reveals a muscular vegetarian, with hundreds of teeth and huge jaws. "It could have eaten whatever [vegetation] was in its way," said lead researcher Terry Gates, a pa... |
4 October 2007 07:06 GMT |
 |
The Triceratops is one of the best known species of dinosaurs: the huge, horned, rhinoceros like beast, up to 9 m (30 ft) long, 3 m (10 ft) tall and 12 tonnes heavy. But the huge beast and its relatives rooted from dwarf, dog-sized hornless Asian dinosaurs. A new species of dinosaurs discovered in a Montana is the lo... |
4 October 2007 06:13 GMT |
 |
T-rex might have been one of the most fearsome meat eaters ever to walk the Earth, but, surprisingly, there was a group of closely related dinosaurs that were plant-eaters; they were called the therizinosaurs. One of these odd waddling dinosaurs with long arms and enormous claws has been recently found in Gansu Provi... |
4 October 2007 02:43 GMT |
 |
If you had walked the Earth 150 to 65 million years ago, the birds would have seemed very strange to you. First, they all displayed a mouth full of fearsome teeth. Too few flew, and many had well developed arms, with a lizard-like tail covered by feathers. In fact, all these strange birds were not birds at all, but d... |
3 October 2007 17:11 GMT |
 |
Birds are dinosaurs; or is it…some dinosaurs were in fact birds? It's quite difficult to answer this question, but what's certain is that many carnivorous dinosaurs were feathered. Some of the feathered dinosaurs were even as big as a rhino. However, few dino fossils discovered up to now were feathered. A n... |
21 September 2007 06:47 GMT |
 |
Unlike the present-day lizards, dinosaurs had a social behavior. And now the fossils of six young dinosaurs discovered together in a Chinese "nursery" reveal that these animals formed social groups much earlier than previously believed. "The find sheds light on the life of the beaked dinosaur Psittacosaurus and on th... |
20 September 2007 03:25 GMT |
 |
Birds are considered dwarf flying dinosaurs. Now, an 80-million-year-old recently found dwarf dinosaur in the southern Gobi desert (Mongolia) could be a missing link in the evolutionary question of how the tiny birds evolved from the huge beasts. The new feathered dinosaur, called Mahakala (after a Tibetan god) omnog... |
7 September 2007 02:49 GMT |
 |
A breakup in the asteroid belt of the Sun System has now been connected by an American-Czech team from Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) and Charles University in Prague to the catastrophic event that destroyed the dinosaurs and many contemporaneous species 65 million years ago, after combining observations with va... |
6 September 2007 03:54 GMT |
 |
We do not know if dino lover boys used them to impress their girls, but dinosaurs surely enjoyed orchids before their demise, as revealed by a newfound fossil. A block of amber (fossil resin) encasing an extinct, stingless bee (Proplebeia dominicana) carrying a clump of orchid pollen on its back shows that these "mas... |
30 August 2007 04:25 GMT |
 |
|
|
|