Sixty-six million years ago, a marine creature, minding its own business at the bottom of a Cretaceous sea, munched on some ...
Two underwater sea lilies were eaten and regurgitated around 66 million years ago. They were preserved as fossilized vomit.
The scientific term for fossilized vomit is regurgitalite. Surprisingly, the timeless throw up is far from the oldest out ...
Fossil evidence discovered in southern Alberta suggests a crocodile-like creature bit a flying reptile 76 million years ago, ...
In the Cretaceous period, a shark or another kind of fish found sea lilies less than digestible. What you might expect ...
About 76 million years ago, a juvenile of one of the largest flying creatures in Earth's history, called Cryodrakon boreas, ...
This week, scientists with Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute reported that a key current, the Atlantic Meridional ...
A stunning discovery in Denmark has revealed an unexpected link to the world of dinosaurs: fossilized vomit dating back 66 ...
That was life - and death - in the Cretaceous Period in the Canadian province of ... "There is no sign of healing, so the wound either happened at the time of death during an attack or after ...
Discover the fossilized remains of a young Cryodrakon pterosaur in Alberta, revealing a deadly encounter with a crocodile.