Paleo in the News

Evolutionary story of Australia's dingoes revealed by ancient DNA

New Scientist - Mon, 07/08/2024 - 15:00
Dingoes, the native wild dogs of Australia, arrived on the continent more than 3000 years ago and their gene pool has had little input from domestic dogs
Categories: Fossils

The dawn of the Antarctic ice sheets

Science Daily - Paleontology - Thu, 07/04/2024 - 19:15
In recent years global warming has left its mark on the Antarctic ice sheets. The 'eternal' ice in Antarctica is melting faster than previously assumed, particularly in West Antarctica more than East Antarctica. The root for this could lie in its formation, as an international research team has now discovered: sediment samples from drill cores combined with complex climate and ice-sheet modelling show that permanent glaciation of Antarctica began around 34 million years ago -- but did not encompass the entire continent as previously assumed, but rather was confined to the eastern region of the continent (East Antarctica).
Categories: Fossils

Blue whale mother caught feeding her calf on video for first time ever

New Scientist - Thu, 07/04/2024 - 08:31
A snorkelling tourist in East Timor has filmed a pygmy blue whale calf drinking its mother’s milk for the first time
Categories: Fossils

Vivid snake species with blue lips and yellow eyes is new to science

New Scientist - Thu, 07/04/2024 - 06:30
A grass-green snake from Vietnam with yellow eyes, blue lips and a brick-red tail has been identified as a distinct species
Categories: Fossils

Giant salamander-like creature was a top predator in the ice age before the dinosaurs

Science Daily - Paleontology - Wed, 07/03/2024 - 12:17
Meet Gaiasia jennyae, the swamp creature with a toilet seat-shaped head. It lived 40 million years before the first dinosaurs, and it was the top predator in its ecosystem.
Categories: Fossils

Giant salamander-like creature was a top predator in the ice age before the dinosaurs

Science Daily - Fossils - Wed, 07/03/2024 - 12:17
Meet Gaiasia jennyae, the swamp creature with a toilet seat-shaped head. It lived 40 million years before the first dinosaurs, and it was the top predator in its ecosystem.
Categories: Fossils

Extinct humans survived on the Tibetan plateau for 160,000 years

Science Daily - Paleontology - Wed, 07/03/2024 - 12:17
Bone remains found in a Tibetan cave 3,280 m above sea level indicate an ancient group of humans survived here for many millennia.
Categories: Fossils

Extinct humans survived on the Tibetan plateau for 160,000 years

Science Daily - Fossils - Wed, 07/03/2024 - 12:17
Bone remains found in a Tibetan cave 3,280 m above sea level indicate an ancient group of humans survived here for many millennia.
Categories: Fossils

Mighty floods of the Nile River during warmer and wetter climates

Science Daily - Paleontology - Wed, 07/03/2024 - 12:17
Global warming as well as recent droughts and floods threaten large populations along the Nile Valley. Sediment cores off the Nile mouth reveal insights into the effects and causes of heavy rainfall episodes about 9,000 years ago. That will help to prepare for weather extremes in a changing climate.
Categories: Fossils

Giant salamander-like predator roamed Namibia 280 million years ago

New Scientist - Wed, 07/03/2024 - 11:00
A fossil found in the Namib desert has been described as a 2.5-metre long predator that resembled a giant salamander
Categories: Fossils

More than 100 shark species may face major population declines by 2100

New Scientist - Wed, 07/03/2024 - 09:00
The egg hatch rate of one shark species may plummet by up to 90 per cent by the end of the century, suggesting that other egg-laying sharks are at risk
Categories: Fossils

Ants amputate their nestmates’ limbs to save them from infection

New Scientist - Tue, 07/02/2024 - 11:00
Ants are one of the few animals that tend to the injuries of their peers, and now it seems they are also the first non-humans known to perform life-saving amputations
Categories: Fossils

The evidence is mounting: humans were responsible for the extinction of large mammals

Science Daily - Paleontology - Mon, 07/01/2024 - 12:18
Human hunting, not climate change, played a decisive role in the extinction of large mammals over the last 50,000 years. This conclusion comes from researchers who reviewed over 300 scientific articles from many different fields of research.
Categories: Fossils

Sixty-million-year-old grape seeds reveal how the death of the dinosaurs may have paved the way for grapes to spread

Science Daily - Paleontology - Mon, 07/01/2024 - 12:17
Scientists discovered the oldest fossil grapes in the Western Hemisphere, which help show how after the death of the dinosaurs, grapes spread across the world.
Categories: Fossils

Sixty-million-year-old grape seeds reveal how the death of the dinosaurs may have paved the way for grapes to spread

Science Daily - Dinosaurs - Mon, 07/01/2024 - 12:17
Scientists discovered the oldest fossil grapes in the Western Hemisphere, which help show how after the death of the dinosaurs, grapes spread across the world.
Categories: Fossils

Sixty-million-year-old grape seeds reveal how the death of the dinosaurs may have paved the way for grapes to spread

Science Daily - Fossils - Mon, 07/01/2024 - 12:17
Scientists discovered the oldest fossil grapes in the Western Hemisphere, which help show how after the death of the dinosaurs, grapes spread across the world.
Categories: Fossils

Ammonites' fate sealed by meteor strike that wiped out dinosaurs

Science Daily - Paleontology - Thu, 06/27/2024 - 16:21
Ammonites were not in decline before their extinction, scientists have found.
Categories: Fossils

Ammonites' fate sealed by meteor strike that wiped out dinosaurs

Science Daily - Fossils - Thu, 06/27/2024 - 16:21
Ammonites were not in decline before their extinction, scientists have found.
Categories: Fossils

Last surviving woolly mammoths were inbred but not doomed to extinction

Science Daily - Paleontology - Thu, 06/27/2024 - 16:21
The last population of woolly mammoths was isolated on Wrangel Island off the coast of Siberia 10,000 years ago, when sea levels rose and cut the mountainous island off from the mainland. A new genomic analysis reveals that the isolated mammoths, who lived on the island for the subsequent 6,000 years, originated from at most 8 individuals but grew to 200--300 individuals within 20 generations. The researchers report that the Wrangel Island mammoths' genomes showed signs of inbreeding and low genetic diversity but not to the extent that it can explain their ultimate (and mysterious) extinction.
Categories: Fossils

Prehistoric 'Pompeii' discovered: Most pristine trilobite fossils ever found shake up scientific understanding of the long extinct group

Science Daily - Paleontology - Thu, 06/27/2024 - 16:19
Researchers have described some of the best-preserved three-dimensional trilobite fossils ever discovered. The fossils, which are more than 500 million years old, were collected in the High Atlas of Morocco and are being referred to by scientists as 'Pompeii' trilobites due to their remarkable preservation in ash.
Categories: Fossils

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