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One of the most complete human ancestor fossils called Little Foot may be new species
When scientists finally freed the skeleton known as Little Foot from South African rock, they expected a familiar ancestor.
Expert tips on the best rides in each park, plus not-to-miss restaurants, and how to organize the best Florida theme park vacation for your family.
Iconic ‘Little Foot’ may actually be new human species, scientists say - Specimen found in South Africa was widely thought to ...
The Last of Us co-director Bruce Straley is making his return to video games with Coven of the Chicken Foot. The Windows PC ...
Police officers in Sarasota County, Florida have had their hands full with alligators lately. Last week, officers wrangled and relocated a 14-foot ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about biodiversity and the hidden quirks of the natural world. In the humid swamps of what is now Colombia, there was once ...
Correction: An earlier version of this story included a comment about a commitment from the state to funding for a traffic signal at the U.S. 20-Olive Street intersection. South Bend officials have ...
It was in egg-cellent condition. Argentine paleontologists found a real diamond in the rough after happening across a perfectly preserved 70 million-year-old dinosaur egg during an excavation. “It was ...
More than a century ago prolific fossil collector Charles Sternberg discovered the skeleton of a duck-billed Edmontosaurus dinosaur in the sandstone rocks of the Lance Formation in eastern Wyoming.
A trove of specimens from New Mexico may help settle a long-running argument about the diversity of dinosaurs before their extinction. A life reconstruction of Alamosaurus sanjuanensis, from the ...
New dating has revealed that New Mexico's last dinosaurs were healthy, diverse and thriving at the end of the Cretaceous period, suggesting non-avian dinosaurs weren't in decline before being snuffed ...
For decades, many scientists believed dinosaurs were already dwindling in number and variety long before an asteroid strike sealed their fate 66 million years ago. However, new research in the journal ...
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