Mosasaurs underwent a major lifestyle change during the late Cretaceous period and adapted to living in a completely new environment. Researchers found a tooth that led them to find something shocking ...
Discoveries ranging from the oldest known example of human mummification to first deliberate use of fire by people were made ...
Islands.com on MSN
Bizarre Facts You Probably Didn't Know About The Grand Canyon
From an ancient Egyptian hoax to a mysterious disappearances and Cold War history, here are 10 bizarre facts you probably ...
Honey badgers are not actually named for their love of honey, in fact, they raid bee hives to loot the delicious, protein-rich larva inside, which seems like an overly complicated way to get protein.
IFLScience on MSN
It was bigger than a killer whale: 66 million-year-old tooth suggests mosasaurs were hunting in rivers, not just seas
A mosasaur tooth has been found at one of the most famous Late Cretaceous fossil sites in the world. That means the famous marine predators adapted to a freshwater environment, and it seems they ...
New research in Yellowstone National Park has found a connection between earthquake swarms and the chemical reactions needed ...
In the province of San Juan, in western Argentina, Ischigualasto Park offers a breathtaking journey through petrified landscapes, carved out by wind, water and dust over 200 million years. It is a ...
Thermopolis boasts the world’s largest mineral hot springs, where retirees can soak for free at Hot Springs State Park. This town of about 3,000 residents sits along the winding Bighorn River, ...
Saratoga’s claim to fame is its free public hot springs, where locals soak away their troubles. This town of roughly 1,600 people sits along the North Platte River, famous for its blue-ribbon trout ...
While hiking in the Italian Alps in September, a nature photographer came upon a surface speckled with more than 2,000 ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Rare spinosaurid fossil reveals 25-foot fish-eating dinosaur in Thailand
A rare fossil from Thailand identifies a 25-foot spinosaurid that lived along river systems 125 million years ago.
The prints were discovered on a near-vertical rock face 2,000 metres above sea level, which was once the floor of a warm ...
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