Paleo in the News

We all have a (very tiny) glow of light, no movie magic needed

Science News - Wed, 10/15/2025 - 08:00
Normal cellular processes in living things — from germinating plants to our own cells — create biophotons, though escaping light isn’t visible to us.
Categories: Fossils

The viral Chicago ‘Rat Hole’ almost certainly wasn’t made by a rat

Science News - Tue, 10/14/2025 - 18:01
Researchers used methods from paleontology to analyze the quirky local landmark, created when a rodent of a certain size fell into wet concrete.
Categories: Fossils

How a Yurok family played a key role in the world’s largest dam removal project 

Science News - Tue, 10/14/2025 - 12:00
In The Water Remembers, Amy Bowers Cordalis shares her family’s account of the Indigenous-led fight to restore the Klamath River in the Pacific Northwest.
Categories: Fossils

New wetsuit designs offer a layer of protection against shark bites

Science News - Tue, 10/14/2025 - 08:00
By weaving Kevlar or polyethylene nanofibers into standard neoprene in wetsuits, researchers found ways to limit injury during rare encounters with sharks.
Categories: Fossils

Ancient humans in Italy butchered elephants and made tools from their bones

Science Daily - Fossils - Sun, 10/12/2025 - 22:24
Researchers in Italy discovered 400,000-year-old evidence that ancient humans butchered elephants for food and tools. At the Casal Lumbroso site near Rome, they found hundreds of bones and stone implements, many showing impact marks from butchery. The findings reveal a consistent prehistoric strategy for resource use during warmer Middle Pleistocene periods.
Categories: Fossils

Coral collapse signals Earth’s first climate tipping point

Science News - Sun, 10/12/2025 - 18:01
The global die-off of coral reefs signals a critical shift in Earth’s climate system with global environmental consequences along with economic ones.
Categories: Fossils

Archaeologists uncover lost land bridge that may rewrite human history

Science Daily - Paleontology - Sun, 10/12/2025 - 08:04
New research along Turkey’s Ayvalık coast reveals a once-submerged land bridge that may have helped early humans cross from Anatolia into Europe. Archaeologists uncovered 138 Paleolithic tools across 10 sites, indicating the region was a crucial migration corridor during the Ice Age. The findings challenge traditional migration theories centered on the Balkans and Levant, suggesting instead that humans used now-vanished pathways across the Aegean.
Categories: Fossils

Scientists unearth a 112-million-year-old time capsule filled with ancient insects

Science Daily - Paleontology - Sat, 10/11/2025 - 10:33
Researchers have unearthed South America’s first amber deposits containing ancient insects in an Ecuadorian quarry, offering a rare 112-million-year-old glimpse into life on the supercontinent Gondwana. The amber, found in the Hollín Formation, preserved a diverse range of insect species and plant material, revealing a humid, resin-rich forest teeming with life.
Categories: Fossils

Scientists unearth a 112-million-year-old time capsule filled with ancient insects

Science Daily - Fossils - Sat, 10/11/2025 - 10:33
Researchers have unearthed South America’s first amber deposits containing ancient insects in an Ecuadorian quarry, offering a rare 112-million-year-old glimpse into life on the supercontinent Gondwana. The amber, found in the Hollín Formation, preserved a diverse range of insect species and plant material, revealing a humid, resin-rich forest teeming with life.
Categories: Fossils

12,000-year-old rock art found in Arabia reveals a lost civilization

Science Daily - Paleontology - Sat, 10/11/2025 - 01:48
Archaeologists in Saudi Arabia discovered over 170 ancient rock engravings that may be among the earliest monumental artworks in the region. Created between 12,800 and 11,400 years ago, the massive figures were carved when water and life returned to the desert. The art likely marked territories and migration routes, revealing social and symbolic sophistication. Artifacts found nearby show early Arabian peoples connected to distant Neolithic communities.
Categories: Fossils

Astronomers saw a rogue planet going through a rapid growth spurt

Science News - Fri, 10/10/2025 - 12:00
The growth spurt hints that the free-floating object evolves like a star, providing clues about rogue planets’ mysterious origins.
Categories: Fossils

Brain scans reveal where taste and smell become flavor

Science News - Fri, 10/10/2025 - 10:00
The findings show the insula fuses taste and certain smells into the sensation of flavor.
Categories: Fossils

Lasers made muon beams, no massive accelerator needed

Science News - Fri, 10/10/2025 - 08:00
The advance hints at the possibility of portable muon-making devices that could help peer through solid materials for hidden contraband.
Categories: Fossils

Worlds Apart Crossword

Science News - Fri, 10/10/2025 - 07:00
Solve our latest interactive crossword. We'll publish science-themed crosswords and math puzzles on alternating months.
Categories: Fossils

'Sword Dragon' ichthyosaur had enormous eyes and a lethal snout

New Scientist - Thu, 10/09/2025 - 20:00
A beautifully preserved skeleton found on the UK’s Jurassic Coast has been identified as a new species of the marine reptiles known as ichthyosaurs
Categories: Fossils

Mic’d bats reveal midnight songbird attacks

Science News - Thu, 10/09/2025 - 13:00
Sensor data reveal greater noctule bats chasing, catching and chewing on birds during high-altitude, nighttime hunts.
Categories: Fossils

Toy-obsessed dogs give clues to addictive behaviors

Science News - Thu, 10/09/2025 - 10:00
Some dogs love playing with toys so intensely they can’t stop—offering scientists a window into behavioral addictions.
Categories: Fossils

You’re probably eating enough protein, but maybe not the right mix

Science News - Thu, 10/09/2025 - 08:00
Protein is having a moment. But even if most people are eating enough protein, studies suggest they may not be eating the right mix.
Categories: Fossils

Stunning images highlight fight to save Earth’s rich biodiversity 

New Scientist - Wed, 10/08/2025 - 13:00
From an alien-looking flat-faced longhorn beetle to an abandoned baby rhino, images at London’s Natural History Museum show what we stand to lose from the decimation of global biodiversity
Categories: Fossils

Chemistry that works like Hermione’s magic handbag wins a 2025 chemistry Nobel

Science News - Wed, 10/08/2025 - 12:27
Richard Robson, Susumu Kitagawa and Omar Yaghi developed metal-organic frameworks, structures that can collect water from air, capture CO₂ and more.
Categories: Fossils

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