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Searching In features, blog entries, column entries & articles, Under the topic Paleontology
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Fossils suggest that the bipedal dinosaur occasionally walked on all fours and could open its mouth wide to gather foliage.Published: Tuesday, November 10th, 2009Found in: Paleontology -
Scorpionflies with long-reaching mouthparts may have helped plants procreate long before blossoms evolved. (p. 12)Published: December 5th, 2009; Vol.176 #12Found in: Earth, Life, Paleobiology and Paleontology -
Fossil analyses hint that several species thrived during the world’s largest mass extinction. (p. 10)Published: November 7th, 2009; Vol.176 #10Found in: Life, Paleobiology and Paleontology -
An infection known to afflict modern birds may have led to starvation in several dinosaurs.Published: Tuesday, September 29th, 2009Found in: Biology and Paleontology -
Home / News / October 24th, 2009; Vol.176 #9 / Fish death, mammal extinction and tiny dino footprintsPaleontologists in Bristol, England, at the annual meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology report on fish fossils in Wyoming, the loss of Australia’s megafauna and the smallest dinosaur tracks. (p. 8)Published: October 24th, 2009; Vol.176 #9Found in: Paleontology
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Scientists have uncovered a feather-laden, peacock-sized dinosaur that predates the oldest known bird. (p. 8)Published: October 24th, 2009; Vol.176 #9Found in: Life, Paleobiology and Paleontology -
Paleontologists discover fossilized skeleton of bus-sized marine reptile that had teeth with serrated edges.Published: Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009Found in: Life, Paleobiology and Paleontology
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Fossils of new species suggest peculiar features weren’t limited to the biggest dinosaurs (p. 12)Published: October 10th, 2009; Vol.176 #8Found in: Life and Paleontology -
Nanostructures on a preserved feather offer the first fossil evidence of bird colors not from pigments, a new study says.Published: Friday, August 28th, 2009Found in: Paleontology and Zoology -
A New Zealand tree’s peculiar leaves may have served as defenses against long-gone giant birds. (p. 10)Published: September 12th, 2009; Vol.176 #6Found in: Botany, Earth, Life, Paleontology and Zoology -
Nevada find contradicts long-held view of Europe and Asia as the native land of all honeybees. (p. 13)Published: August 15th, 2009; Vol.176 #4Found in: Earth Science, Life, Paleontology and Zoology -
Structures found in Australian rocks may be the filled-in remains of the world’s oldest dinosaur burrows.Published: Monday, July 20th, 2009Found in: Materials Science, Paleobiology and Paleontology -
Home / News / August 1st, 2009; Vol.176 #3 / Flexible molars made chewing champions out of duck-billed dinosaursTiny scratches in the fossilized teeth of Edmontosaurus suggest what these large herbivores ate and how they ate it. (p. 13)Published: August 1st, 2009; Vol.176 #3Found in: Paleontology -
Fossils of two new daddy longlegs species have been unearthed in China.Published: Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009Found in: Life, Paleobiology and Paleontology -
Fossilized fingers strengthen evolutionary link between dinosaurs and avian relatives. (p. 12)Published: July 18th, 2009; Vol.176 #2Found in: Life, Paleobiology and Paleontology
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