North American dinosaurs may have migrated well over 100 miles with the seasons, scientists have discovered after a close look at their teeth. A team led by Henry Fricke, a geochemist at Colorado ...
The results of a study published in the journal Nature shows that giant sauropod dinosaurs such as Camarasaurus had seasonal migratory tendencies. Scientists, led by Henry Fricke from Colorado College ...
Several histological studies have attempted to derive life history parameters of sauropod dinosaurs. However, verification of sexual maturity and growth rate has been impeded by strong remodeling in ...
Some plant-eating dinosaurs grew new teeth every couple of months, with some of the largest herbivores developing a replacement tooth every 35 days, to keep their chompers from getting too worn down ...
How dinosaurs spent their lives remains a great mystery of paleontology. We know they ate a lot, and presumably they had sex somehow. But it’s almost impossible to prove the existence of more complex ...
Sauropods were swamp monsters. At least, that’s what books, movies, and illustrations taught me when I first encountered the huge dinosaurs. If Diplodocus and Brachiosaurus didn’t actually spend most ...
A creature from Jurassic Park it's not. But an East Bay startup is working to give life to a baby Camarasaurus, a gentle, long-necked, plant-eating dinosaur that once roamed the Earth during the ...
Some plant-eating dinosaurs grew new teeth every couple of months, with some of the largest herbivores developing a replacement tooth every 35 days, to keep their chompers from getting too worn down ...
Some plant-eating dinosaurs grew new teeth every couple of months, with some of the largest herbivores developing a replacement tooth every 35 days, to keep their chompers from getting too worn down ...