Articles for category: NEWS

Sameen David

Bringing marine life back to South Florida's 'forgotten edge'

Mangrove Planters Bring Marine Life Back to the Edge of South Florida’s Seawalls

South Florida – Workers in Pompano Beach recently drilled into a sleek new seawall along a residential canal, securing experimental planters designed to host living mangrove trees. These additions address a critical gap in coastal infrastructure, where smooth barriers have replaced vibrant natural shorelines. The effort highlights a shift toward designs that protect both property ...

Sameen David

Duck-Billed Dinosaur Fossil Shows Direct Evidence of Tyrannosaur Attack

Tyrannosaur Tooth Lodged in Edmontosaurus Skull Reveals Brutal Predatory Strike

In the rugged badlands of the Hell Creek Formation, a remarkable fossil discovery has captured the raw violence of the Late Cretaceous. A semi-complete skull from an adult Edmontosaurus, a duck-billed dinosaur, bears an embedded tyrannosaur tooth in its face. This find offers unprecedented direct evidence of a predator-prey confrontation, preserved for millions of years. ...

Sameen David

Testing shows Myfanwy the mammoth roamed Anglesey 15,000 years ago

Anglesey – Myfanwy the Mammoth’s 15,000-Year Journey Unveiled

Radiocarbon analysis has dated a woolly mammoth known as Myfanwy to approximately 15,000 years ago, positioning her among the earliest to reclaim Britain following the intense chill of the Last Glacial Maximum. Workers unearthed the remains in Holyhead Harbour more than 160 years ago, preserving a piece of Ice Age history now housed in a ...

Sameen David

Puzzling Jaws Emerge from Isolation

Scientists Discover a “Twisted Jaw Fossil” with Teeth That Point Sideways, in the Amazon Rainforest

Northeastern Brazil — Scientists recently described a peculiar fossil from a dry riverbed near the Amazon rainforest, shedding new light on early vertebrate evolution. The specimen, dating to 275 million years ago during the early Permian period, belonged to Tanyka amnicola, a stem tetrapod with a dramatically twisted lower jaw and teeth oriented sideways. This ...

Sameen David

A Prize from Haughton Crater

Scientists Discover 23-million-year-old ‘frosty rhino’ in the High Arctic

Devon Island, Nunavut – Scientists have revealed a nearly complete skeleton of a hornless rhinoceros that roamed the High Arctic 23 million years ago. This extraordinary find, dubbed the “frosty rhino,” pushes the known range of ancient rhinos far beyond previous limits. Preserved in the sediments of an ancient lake, the fossil offers fresh clues ...

Sameen David

Unearth our prehistoric past at the Wyoming Dinosaur Center in Thermopolis

Wyoming Dinosaur Center Illuminates Prehistoric Mammals Amid Dinosaur Giants

Thermopolis, Wyoming – Deep in the Bighorn Basin, the Wyoming Dinosaur Center draws paleontology enthusiasts to its vast collection of fossils unearthed from nearby ranchlands. The museum houses over 70 mounted skeletons and hundreds of displays that span millions of years of Earth’s history. Exhibits highlight not only Jurassic behemoths but also ancient mammals, revealing ...

Sameen David

Unearthing a Prehistoric Killing Field

Neanderthals Hunted Straight-Tusked Elephants That Roamed Europe 125,000 Years Ago

Northeastern Germany – More than 125,000 years ago, the shores of ancient lakes at Neumark-Nord drew massive straight-tusked elephants from across Europe. Neanderthals turned this resource-rich landscape into a hunting ground, systematically processing the remains of over 70 of these colossal animals. A recent study examining fossilized teeth has unveiled the elephants’ extensive migrations and ...

Sameen David

Songbird trade threatens lesser-known ‘master birds’ with secondary extinctions: Study

Southeast Asia – Master Birds Face ‘Secondary Extinctions’ Amid Booming Songbird Trade

Intense demand for songbirds in Southeast Asia has placed lesser-known species known as “master birds” at risk of secondary extinctions, researchers report. These birds serve as vocal coaches for prized competitors in elaborate singing contests but rarely grace the stages themselves. A recent study highlights how this indirect pressure from the pet trade threatens wild ...

Sameen David

The 48,000-year-old weapon that powered early human survival

48,000-Year-Old Bone Arrows from Sri Lanka Unveil Early Human Ingenuity in Rainforest Survival

Sri Lanka – Deep within the lush rainforests of southwestern Sri Lanka, archaeologists uncovered remnants of a sophisticated hunting culture that thrived 48,000 years ago. Butchered bones of monkeys and squirrels in Fa-Hien Lena cave point to the use of bone-tipped arrows, marking the earliest known evidence of bow-and-arrow technology outside Africa. These finds challenge ...

Sameen David

A Century-Old Mystery Cracked Open

Dordogne Breakthrough: First Precise Dates for Ancient Cave Art Confirmed

Dordogne – Researchers have accomplished a scientific milestone by securing the first absolute radiocarbon dates for Paleolithic cave paintings in the region. The team analyzed charcoal-based pigments from Font-de-Gaume cave near Les Eyzies, revealing ages slightly more recent than earlier stylistic assessments. This advance confirms the artworks originated during the Upper Paleolithic period, despite longstanding ...