Paleo in the News

Plant-killing genetic technology could wipe out superweeds

New Scientist - Wed, 03/13/2024 - 05:00
A ‘gene drive’ that spreads through plant populations could be used to wipe out pests such as superweeds, or to help save species by making them resistant to heat or disease
Categories: Fossils

Alaska dinosaur tracks reveal a lush, wet environment

Science Daily - Paleontology - Tue, 03/12/2024 - 21:10
A large find of dinosaur tracks and fossilized plants and tree stumps in far northwestern Alaska provides new information about the climate and movement of animals near the time when they began traveling between the Asian and North American continents roughly 100 million years ago.
Categories: Fossils

Alaska dinosaur tracks reveal a lush, wet environment

Science Daily - Dinosaurs - Tue, 03/12/2024 - 21:10
A large find of dinosaur tracks and fossilized plants and tree stumps in far northwestern Alaska provides new information about the climate and movement of animals near the time when they began traveling between the Asian and North American continents roughly 100 million years ago.
Categories: Fossils

Alaska dinosaur tracks reveal a lush, wet environment

Science Daily - Fossils - Tue, 03/12/2024 - 21:10
A large find of dinosaur tracks and fossilized plants and tree stumps in far northwestern Alaska provides new information about the climate and movement of animals near the time when they began traveling between the Asian and North American continents roughly 100 million years ago.
Categories: Fossils

City moths may have evolved smaller wings due to light pollution

New Scientist - Tue, 03/12/2024 - 19:01
Populations of moths living in urban places may have evolved smaller wings to limit how much bright city lights disrupt their lives
Categories: Fossils

Giant sequoia trees are growing surprisingly quickly in the UK

New Scientist - Tue, 03/12/2024 - 19:01
Since their introduction in the 1800s, giant sequoia trees in the UK have grown up to 55 metres tall and capture 85 kilograms of carbon a year on average
Categories: Fossils

Higher carnivorous dinosaur biodiversity of famous Kem Kem beds, Morocco

Science Daily - Paleontology - Tue, 03/12/2024 - 12:38
An international team of palaeontologists applied recently developed methods to measure theropod (carnivorous) dinosaur species diversity. The newly applied method uses both traditional phylogenetic analysis, discriminant analysis as well as machine learning.
Categories: Fossils

Higher carnivorous dinosaur biodiversity of famous Kem Kem beds, Morocco

Science Daily - Dinosaurs - Tue, 03/12/2024 - 12:38
An international team of palaeontologists applied recently developed methods to measure theropod (carnivorous) dinosaur species diversity. The newly applied method uses both traditional phylogenetic analysis, discriminant analysis as well as machine learning.
Categories: Fossils

Plants send out 'distress calls' – but can other plants hear them?

New Scientist - Tue, 03/12/2024 - 09:00
Some studies have claimed that plants emit sounds when stressed and might perceive the distress calls of other plants, but a review finds the evidence is lacking
Categories: Fossils

The surprising ways animals react to a total solar eclipse

New Scientist - Tue, 03/12/2024 - 06:00
When the moon hides the sun in a total solar eclipse, some animals seem to think that it is briefly nighttime, while others pace anxiously or even gaze up at the sky
Categories: Fossils

Blind cave fish offers lessons in how to survive starvation

New Scientist - Mon, 03/11/2024 - 10:00
Unlike most other animals, the cave-dwelling Mexican tetra doesn’t get a fatty liver when it is malnourished – and its secrets could lead to medical benefits for other species
Categories: Fossils

Flightless terror birds stalked Antarctica after the dinosaurs' demise

New Scientist - Mon, 03/11/2024 - 05:50
Two fossil claws found on Seymour Island reveal that phorusrhacids, or terror birds, lived in Antarctica 50 million years ago and were probably the apex predator
Categories: Fossils

New study reveals insight into which animals are most vulnerable to extinction due to climate change

Science Daily - Paleontology - Thu, 03/07/2024 - 15:51
In a new study, researchers have used the fossil record to better understand what factors make animals more vulnerable to extinction from climate change. The results could help to identify species most at risk today from human-driven climate change.
Categories: Fossils

New study reveals insight into which animals are most vulnerable to extinction due to climate change

Science Daily - Fossils - Thu, 03/07/2024 - 15:51
In a new study, researchers have used the fossil record to better understand what factors make animals more vulnerable to extinction from climate change. The results could help to identify species most at risk today from human-driven climate change.
Categories: Fossils

Clownfish avoid the sting of their anemone hosts with sugary slime

New Scientist - Thu, 03/07/2024 - 15:20
As a clownfish spends time with an anemone, its mucus coating begins to change. Chemical tweaks to sugars in the slime may calm stinging cells in anemone tentacles
Categories: Fossils

Worm-like amphibian produces a kind of milk for its hatchlings

New Scientist - Thu, 03/07/2024 - 13:00
After hatching from eggs, young ringed caecilians feed on their mother’s skin, but also on a milk-like substance secreted from her rear end
Categories: Fossils

Earth's earliest forest revealed in Somerset fossils

Science Daily - Paleontology - Thu, 03/07/2024 - 10:07
The oldest fossilized forest known on Earth -- dating from 390 million years ago -- has been found in the high sandstone cliffs along the Devon and Somerset coast of South West England.
Categories: Fossils

Earth's earliest forest revealed in Somerset fossils

Science Daily - Fossils - Thu, 03/07/2024 - 10:07
The oldest fossilized forest known on Earth -- dating from 390 million years ago -- has been found in the high sandstone cliffs along the Devon and Somerset coast of South West England.
Categories: Fossils

Salmon farms are increasingly being hit by mass die-offs

New Scientist - Thu, 03/07/2024 - 10:00
Mass mortality events at salmon farms have been getting more frequent since 2011, sometimes killing millions of fish at once, with causes including heatwaves and poor living conditions
Categories: Fossils

Hunger-inducing mutation makes some Labradors more likely to get fat

New Scientist - Wed, 03/06/2024 - 13:00
Dogs with a mutation in the POMC gene, common in Labradors and flat-coated retrievers, have a stronger appetite for snacks between meals and a lower metabolic rate
Categories: Fossils

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