Category: Fossils

  • Link About It: This Week’s Picks

    Link About It: This Week’s Picks

    [ad_1] East Coast skate culture, expanding reproductive health access, protein pulled from air and more news Producing Protein From Air Using Solar Energy Helsinki-based cellular agriculture pioneer Solar Foods intends to produce 100 tonnes of their alternative protein, Solein, per year upon the forthcoming opening of their commercial-scale factory. This output could be transformed into […]

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  • Link About It: This Week’s Picks

    Link About It: This Week’s Picks

    [ad_1] An “upcycled” skyscraper, a magnet for microplastics, a swimming dinosaur discovery and more Paleontologists Discover a Swimming Dinosaur In Mongolia’s Gobi Desert, scientists discovered the bones of a previously unknown dinosaur species, Natovenator polydontus, the first and only dinosaur found that had specific adaptions suited for swimming. Hailing from prehistoric Mongolia about 71 million years […]

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  • Paleontologists Discover a Swimming Dinosaur – COOL HUNTING®

    Paleontologists Discover a Swimming Dinosaur – COOL HUNTING®

    [ad_1] In Mongolia’s Gobi Desert, scientists discovered the bones of a previously unknown dinosaur species, Natovenator polydontus, the first and only dinosaur found that had specific adaptions suited for swimming. Hailing from prehistoric Mongolia about 71 million years ago, the Natovenator was a “many-toothed hunting swimmer” that measured around a foot long. A relative of the […]

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  • Link About It: This Week’s Picks

    Link About It: This Week’s Picks

    [ad_1] Fossilized worm brains, cranberry packaging, the wet history of Mars and more inspiration from nature World’s Oldest Fossilized Brain Discovered A 525-million-year-old fossil of an extinct worm-like animal known as the Cardiodictyon catenulum was first discovered in China in 1984, but only recently have scientists found that the barely half-an-inch animal has a brain. […]

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  • World’s Oldest Fossilized Brain Discovered – COOL HUNTING®

    World’s Oldest Fossilized Brain Discovered – COOL HUNTING®

    [ad_1] A 525-million-year-old fossil of an extinct worm-like animal known as the Cardiodictyon catenulum was first discovered in China in 1984, but only recently have scientists found that the barely half-an-inch animal has a brain. Using a technique called “chromatic filtering,” scientists were able to reveal the animal’s nervous system and brain in an unsegmented […]

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  • Insights From Rare Mummified Dinosaur Skin – COOL HUNTING®

    Insights From Rare Mummified Dinosaur Skin – COOL HUNTING®

    [ad_1] Insights into the Mesozoic era usually come from fossilized bones, making the preserved skin of “Dakota”—a duck-billed dinosaur from an Edmontosaurus specimen—particularly rare. The finding, discovered in South Dakota in 1999, is uncommon because skin is trickier than bones to preserve but new research makes the discovery even more peculiar. Previously, scientists believed that […]

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  • Link About It: This Week’s Picks

    Link About It: This Week’s Picks

    [ad_1] Apollo mission photography restored, pulverizing glass for coastal restoration, bowfin regurgitalite and more Recycling Glass into Sand and Gravel to Fight Climate Change Founded in 2020, Glass Half Full is a New Orleans-based startup that recycles glass to make sand and gravel to be used in disaster relief, construction, new products and boosting coastal […]

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  • 150-Million-Year-Old Fossilized Vomit Discovered in Utah – COOL HUNTING®

    150-Million-Year-Old Fossilized Vomit Discovered in Utah – COOL HUNTING®

    [ad_1] In southeast Utah, paleontologists discovered 150-million-year-old fossilized vomit that offers new insight about Jurassic ecosystems. While surveying the Morrison Formation, a famous paleontological site, the team came across an odd pile of amphibian bones, including ones that were only 0.12 inches long and regurgitalite (the fossilized form vomit). Scientists suspect that a bowfin fish […]

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  • Link About It: This Week’s Picks

    Link About It: This Week’s Picks

    [ad_1] An explosion of color in Stockholm, NASA’s Mars precautions, updates to our perception of marijuana and more NASA’s Preventative Measures Against Potential Martian Pathogens Although the risk is small that threatening organisms will make their way to Earth via the Martian rock samples currently being collected, NASA is taking precautions. These samples—set to arrive […]

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  • Rare Fossils That Predate Dinosaurs Found in Canada – COOL HUNTING®

    Rare Fossils That Predate Dinosaurs Found in Canada – COOL HUNTING®

    [ad_1] While walking her dog on the picturesque Canadian province of Prince Edward Island, high school teacher Lisa St Coeur Cormier came across something sticking out of the sand. What she discovered turned out to be extremely rare fossils (including the spine, skull and ribcage) of an unidentified animal that is believed to be 300 […]

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  • Link About It: This Week’s Picks

    Link About It: This Week’s Picks

    [ad_1] Bacteria-based batteries, a new armored dinosaur, India’s forest bridges and more from around the web A Battery Powered by Bacteria and Sweat Researchers from the University of Massachusetts Amherst have engineered a bacteria-based battery that can produce power from human sweat. The key to their innovation is bacterium Geobacter sulfurreducens, a bacteria that can […]

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  • Fossils of Previously Unknown Dinosaur Discovered – COOL HUNTING®

    Fossils of Previously Unknown Dinosaur Discovered – COOL HUNTING®

    [ad_1] Researchers have found the fossils of a previously unknown dinosaur—named the Jakapil kaniukura—in the La Buitrera palaeontological zone in Patagonia’s Río Negro province. The dinosaur existed during the Cretaceous period (between 145.5 and 65.5 million years ago) and would have been well-protected thanks to disc-shaped armor covering its neck, back and tail. Its armored […]

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  • Link About It: This Week’s Picks

    Link About It: This Week’s Picks

    [ad_1] Record-setting diamonds, prehistoric reptiles, a supernova discovery and more from around the web Mushroom-Inspired Ring Breaks World Record for Most Diamonds By setting 24,679 diamonds into one ring, Kerala, India-based jewelry company SWA Diamonds broke the world record for most diamonds in a single ring. The shimmering piece of jewelry features nearly double the number of […]

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  • Prehistoric Reptile Fossil Suggest How The Loch Ness Monster Might Have Existed – COOL HUNTING®

    Prehistoric Reptile Fossil Suggest How The Loch Ness Monster Might Have Existed – COOL HUNTING®

    [ad_1] The fossils of a plesiosaur (a marine reptile with a long neck and four long flippers, that existed in the Mesozoic era) found in a 100-million-year-old riverbed in Morocco’s Sahara Desert contribute to the theory that “saltwater sea creatures may have lived in freshwater systems.” Remarkably, researchers at the University of Bath have applied […]

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  • Massive Species that Resembles a Floppy-Eared Hound Discovered in Burgess Shale – COOL HUNTING®

    Massive Species that Resembles a Floppy-Eared Hound Discovered in Burgess Shale – COOL HUNTING®

    [ad_1] With fossils dating back 500 million years ago, the well-preserved Burgess Shale in British Columbia is home to increasingly unlocked mysteries of the Cambrian Period, the era in which many of Earth’s major groups of animals appeared. From this site, researchers recently identified a new species: Balhuticaris voltae, a bivalved arthropod (“distantly similar to […]

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