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A paleobiologist has found evidence of predation in ancient microbial ecosystems dating back more than 740 million years. Using a scanning electron microscope to examine minute fossils, Porter found perfectly circular drill holes that may have been formed by an … Continue reading
Sea surface temperatures dipped dramatically during a period from 7 million to 5.4 million years ago, a time of massive global ecological change, scientists have discovered. Geology News — ScienceDaily
Sea surface temperatures dipped dramatically during a period from 7 million to 5.4 million years ago, a time of massive global ecological change, scientists have discovered. Paleontology News — ScienceDaily
Millions of years ago, Africa’s savannas were covered with thick, ancient forests, which disappeared and turned into the grassy ecosystems that they are today. read more (e) Science News – Paleontology & Archaeology
A paleobiologist has found evidence of predation in ancient microbial ecosystems dating back more than 740 million years. Using a scanning electron microscope to examine minute fossils, Porter found perfectly circular drill holes that may have been formed by an … Continue reading
Computer simulations have allowed scientists to work out how a puzzling 555-million-year-old organism with no known modern relatives fed, revealing that some of the first large, complex organisms on Earth formed ecosystems that were much more complex than previously thought. … Continue reading
Image of a computer simulation of water flow around a 3-D model of Tribrachidium The international team of researchers from Canada, the UK and the USA, including Dr Imran Rahman from the University of Bristol, UK studied fossils of an … Continue reading
Computer simulations have allowed scientists to work out how a puzzling 555-million-year-old organism with no known modern relatives fed, revealing that some of the first large, complex organisms on Earth formed ecosystems that were much more complex than previously thought. … Continue reading
Intense, violent attacks by large packs of some of the world’s biggest carnivores — including extinct lions much larger than those of today, and sabertooth cats — limited the population sizes of mammoths, mastodons and other species, and prevented widespread … Continue reading