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Jaw Power: Ancient Lungfish Reveal the Feeding Strategies of Earth’s First Land AnimalsNewly analyzed jawbones from 380-million-year-old lungfish are shedding light on the feeding behaviors of our earliest ...
Paleontologist Darren Naish, creator of the Tetrapod Zoology blog, has written extensively about the evolution of pterosaurs and told Ars via e-mail that this new study is "exciting stuff." He ...
Tetrapod Limbs: If you want to see concrete evidence of evolution, look no further than your hand or your foot. Five fingers, five toes. There's nothing magical about the number, yet five digits ...
Research reveals surprisingly powerful bite of tiny early tetrapod. University of Lincoln. Journal Royal Society Open Science DOI 10.1098/rsos.182087 ...
Lost species are those that have not been observed in the wild for over 10 years, despite searches to find them. Lost tetrapod species (four-limbed vertebrate animals including amphibians, birds ...
At Tetrapod Zoology, Darren Naish gives an overview of this seven-decade-plus controversy:. Sivatherium was a large, short-necked giraffid, originally described for S. giganteus from the Siwalik ...
Over at Tetrapod Zoology, Darren Naish notes that there’s the outside possibility that the Rekhmire creature could be an extinct pygmy mammoth from the Greek isles instead of a dwarf or juvenile ...
E.D. Cope or O.C. Marsh – which Bone Wars icon do you prefer? The question pops up every now and then among paleontologists. (Tetrapod Zoology blogger Darren Naish asked just the other day over ...
Link: Tetrapod Zoology : How intelligent dinosaurs conquered the world. John's 1984 article describes his contemplation of a new psychiatric disorder he recognises in himself: evolutionary ...
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This T-Rex Look-a-like Had Primitive Feathers - MSNIt looks like a T-Rex and acts like a T-Rex, but it has feathers! Meet the Cryolophosaurus, the oldest known tetanuran and the only specimen from the Early Jurassic Period. This giant tetrapod ...
That technique is more art than science, Naish wrote on his blog, Tetrapod Zoology, predicting it would make some dinosaur researchers "vomit with rage." ...
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