Paleo in the News

The last woolly mammoths on Earth died from bad luck, not inbreeding

New Scientist - Thu, 06/27/2024 - 11:00
A genetic study of woolly mammoths found on an isolated Arctic island shows they reached a stable population that lasted millennia, so were probably wiped out by a random event rather than inbreeding
Categories: Fossils

Almonds, pottery, wood help date famed Kyrenia shipwreck

Science Daily - Fossils - Wed, 06/26/2024 - 14:21
Researchers have identified the likeliest timeline of the famous Hellenistic-era Kyrenia shipwreck, discovered and recovered off the north coast of Cyprus in the 1960s.
Categories: Fossils

Shocked quartz reveals evidence of historical cosmic airburst

Science Daily - Paleontology - Wed, 06/26/2024 - 14:20
Researchers continue to expand the case for the Younger Dryas Impact hypothesis. The idea proposes that a fragmented comet smashed into the Earth's atmosphere 12,800 years ago, causing a widespread climatic shift that, among other things, led to the abrupt reversal of the Earth's warming trend and into an anomalous near-glacial period called the Younger Dryas.
Categories: Fossils

Winter ‘sauna’ helps endangered frogs fight off fungal disease

New Scientist - Wed, 06/26/2024 - 11:00
Warm retreats made using bricks in greenhouses give frogs a place to keep toasty in winter, which helps protect them from deadly chytrid fungal infections
Categories: Fossils

Dazzling photos capture the unreal beauty of insects

New Scientist - Mon, 06/24/2024 - 19:01
Sleeping cuckoo bees, colourful cotton harlequin bugs and a thorny lacewing trapped in amber appear in some of the best entries to the Royal Entomological Society Photography Competition
Categories: Fossils

New study finds dinosaur fossils did not inspire the mythological griffin

Science Daily - Paleontology - Thu, 06/20/2024 - 18:40
For centuries, scientists thought they knew where the griffin legend came from. A new study takes a closer look at the data and folklore's influence on science.
Categories: Fossils

New study finds dinosaur fossils did not inspire the mythological griffin

Science Daily - Dinosaurs - Thu, 06/20/2024 - 18:40
For centuries, scientists thought they knew where the griffin legend came from. A new study takes a closer look at the data and folklore's influence on science.
Categories: Fossils

New study finds dinosaur fossils did not inspire the mythological griffin

Science Daily - Fossils - Thu, 06/20/2024 - 18:40
For centuries, scientists thought they knew where the griffin legend came from. A new study takes a closer look at the data and folklore's influence on science.
Categories: Fossils

Newly discovered dinosaur boasts big, blade-like horns

Science Daily - Paleontology - Thu, 06/20/2024 - 14:22
A new dinosaur has been identified and named. The dinosaur's name, Lokiceratops rangiformis, translates roughly to 'Loki's horned face that looks like a caribou.'
Categories: Fossils

Newly discovered dinosaur boasts big, blade-like horns

Science Daily - Dinosaurs - Thu, 06/20/2024 - 14:22
A new dinosaur has been identified and named. The dinosaur's name, Lokiceratops rangiformis, translates roughly to 'Loki's horned face that looks like a caribou.'
Categories: Fossils

Newly discovered dinosaur boasts big, blade-like horns

Science Daily - Fossils - Thu, 06/20/2024 - 14:22
A new dinosaur has been identified and named. The dinosaur's name, Lokiceratops rangiformis, translates roughly to 'Loki's horned face that looks like a caribou.'
Categories: Fossils

Sick chimpanzees seek out range of plants with medicinal properties

New Scientist - Thu, 06/20/2024 - 14:00
Chimpanzees with wounds or gut infections seem to add unusual plants to their diet, and tests show that many of these plants have antibacterial or anti-inflammatory effects
Categories: Fossils

Watch leeches jump by coiling their bodies like cobras

New Scientist - Thu, 06/20/2024 - 10:00
Researchers have confirmed a centuries-old rumour that leeches can jump, which they may do to land their next blood meal
Categories: Fossils

Triceratops relative had the weirdest horns ever seen on a dinosaur

New Scientist - Thu, 06/20/2024 - 08:00
A new species of dinosaur discovered in Montana and related to Triceratops had one of the strangest, most asymmetrical skulls that scientists have ever studied
Categories: Fossils

Could we merge biologically with the fungal network and live forever?

New Scientist - Wed, 06/19/2024 - 13:00
In this week's Future Chronicles column, which explores an imagined history of future inventions, we visit a cult in 2080s Japan that engineered a way of becoming chimeric with fungal biology. Rowan Hooper reveals their history
Categories: Fossils

Rare corpse flower that stinks of rotting flesh blooms at Kew Gardens

New Scientist - Wed, 06/19/2024 - 10:09
A giant flower, one of the smelliest in the world, is currently blooming at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
Categories: Fossils

Why herbs evolved to smell and taste so delicious

New Scientist - Tue, 06/18/2024 - 16:18
Humans may have shaped the development of aromatic herbs like lavender and mint, but did herbs also shape our own evolution?
Categories: Fossils

The world's oldest wine discovered

Science Daily - Fossils - Tue, 06/18/2024 - 10:56
A white wine over 2,000 years old, of Andalusian origin, is the oldest wine ever discovered.
Categories: Fossils

Ancient polar sea reptile fossil is oldest ever found in Southern Hemisphere

Science Daily - Paleontology - Mon, 06/17/2024 - 16:34
An international team of scientists has identified the oldest fossil of a sea-going reptile from the Southern Hemisphere -- a nothosaur vertebra found on New Zealand's South Island. 246 million years ago, at the beginning of the Age of Dinosaurs, New Zealand was located on the southern polar coast of a vast super-ocean called Panthalassa. 'The nothosaur found in New Zealand is over 40 million years older than the previously oldest known sauropterygian fossils from the Southern Hemisphere.
Categories: Fossils

Ancient polar sea reptile fossil is oldest ever found in Southern Hemisphere

Science Daily - Dinosaurs - Mon, 06/17/2024 - 16:34
An international team of scientists has identified the oldest fossil of a sea-going reptile from the Southern Hemisphere -- a nothosaur vertebra found on New Zealand's South Island. 246 million years ago, at the beginning of the Age of Dinosaurs, New Zealand was located on the southern polar coast of a vast super-ocean called Panthalassa. 'The nothosaur found in New Zealand is over 40 million years older than the previously oldest known sauropterygian fossils from the Southern Hemisphere.
Categories: Fossils

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