New dating of New Mexico rocks suggest diverse dinosaurs thrived there just before the impact, countering the idea dinos were already on their way out.
New research in a North American “mummy zone” in eastern Wyoming reveals how giant duck-billed dinosaurs were preserved in striking detail.
A child of the 80s and a teenager of the 90s, Jennie Baptiste grew up amongst the heyday of the UK’s hip hop scene and ...
A new study of dinosaur biodiversity challenges the belief that the megafauna were on their way out 66 million years ago ...
Dinosaurs weren’t dying out before the asteroid hit—they were thriving in vibrant, diverse habitats across North America.
Newly dated fossils from New Mexico challenge the idea that dinosaurs were in decline—and suggest instead they had formed ...
Dinosaurs appear to have been thriving before a giant asteroid hit the Earth 66 million years ago, paleontologists working in ...
New research suggests that dinosaur populations were thriving in North America before the asteroid impact 66 million years ...
New dating has revealed that New Mexico's last dinosaurs were healthy, diverse and thriving at the end of the Cretaceous ...
A fresh analysis of a site in New Mexico provides a glimpse into the final days of the dinosaurs, showing their diversity before going extinct.
Edmontosaurus, which munched plants with its broad and flat snout that vaguely resembled a duckbill, roamed western North ...
A new study reveals that as vegetation changed over millions of years, some plant-eating dinosaurs adapted by evolving faster ...