Paleontologists Susannah Maidment and Chinzorig Tsogtbaatar share details about some of the cool dinosaurs discovered last ...
A 67-million-year-old claw fossil reveals a new dinosaur species that may have used its hand spikes to snatch and pierce eggs ...
RICHMOND, Va. — The Science Museum of Virginia is inviting guests to leave their perception of dinosaurs in the past and dig into some extraordinary new dinosaur developments. The touring exhibition ...
The largest-ever study of how the “king of dinosaurs” grew shows a much longer, slower path to adulthood than scientists ...
The Daily Digest on MSN
Dinosaurs’ extinction revisited: What the latest science says
For a long time, the prevailing theory was that dinosaurs were already in decline before the Chicxulub asteroid struck Earth approximately 66 million years ago, leading to the extinction of about 70% ...
There are some 700 known dinosaur species, but this number could change with more discoveries. Dinosaur footprints in the Connecticut River Valley rate as the first known evidence of dinosaurs ...
RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — The Science Museum of Virginia is traveling back in time with its new “Ultimate Dinosaurs” exhibit. The exhibit will be open to the public starting May 31 and will remain open ...
Live Science on MSN
Giant 'cow of the Cretaceous' discovered almost 100 years ago identified as new duck-billed dinosaur
Scientists have discovered an enormous species of duck-billed dinosaur that lived in what is now New Mexico about 75 million ...
RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — The new “Ultimate Dinosaurs” exhibition will roar its way into the Science Museum of Virginia this summer. Starting Saturday, May 31 through Sept. 1, The Science Museum will ...
Once thought missing from Europe, horned dinosaurs were hiding in plain sight, misidentified for decades, until new scans ...
The Center for Science Teaching and Learning at Tanglewood Preserve, in time for its 25th anniversary, has unveiled three new animatronic dinosaurs, including the now-tallest animatronic in the ...
Dinosaurs weren’t dying out before the asteroid hit—they were thriving in vibrant, diverse habitats across North America. Fossil evidence from New Mexico shows that distinct “bioprovinces” of ...
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