A T. Rex missing link, a spike-fossil and a raptor still eating its dinner are just a few of the interesting dinosaur ...
New Scientist on MSN
6 incredible new dinosaurs we discovered in 2025
Palaeontologists reported some remarkable dinosaur fossils this year, including a Velociraptor relative, a dome-headed ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
Top 9 Dinosaur Discoveries of 2025 — From the Oldest Ankylosaur to Mongolia’s Dragon Prince
Spiked armor, tyrannosaurids, and new discoveries from the early development of birds mark important milestones in 2025.
The fossil was originally found in New Mexico that year. Then, in 1935, scientists classified it as a Kritosaurus, which, ...
Live Science on MSN
Giant 'cow of the Cretaceous' discovered almost 100 years ago identified as new duck-billed dinosaur
Giant 'cow of the Cretaceous' discovered almost 100 years ago identified as new duck-billed dinosaur Scientists have ...
Over 70 new species, from insects to dinosaurs, were identified in 2025 by combining fieldwork, museum collections, and modern science.
Researchers have discovered a new species of giant, bird-like dinosaur that made nests larger than monster truck tires in what is now central China, a study says.
Paleontologists at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences have discovered a new species of dinosaur called nanotyrannus lancensis. The discovery came after studying a fossil called "Dueling ...
Paleontologist Peter Makovicky is seen at the excavation site in Argentina's northern Patagonia region where fossils of the Cretaceous Period meat-eating dinosaur Meraxes gigas, Akiko Shinya via ...
TUCSON- A new dinosaur species was found in southern Arizona by a Tucson native. The dinosaur is called Crittendenceratops krzyzanowskii and is a new horned dinosaur that is 73 million years old. “The ...
Researchers have unearthed two dinosaur "mummies" in the badlands of Wyoming, confirming duck-billed dinosaurs had hooves, alongside a string of other discoveries. When you purchase through links on ...
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 ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results