What’s 66-million-year-old vomit like? A lot more pleasant than the fresh stuff, says paleontologist Jesper Milan.
A 66-million-year-old fossilized vomit discovery in Denmark offers a rare glimpse into the prehistoric Cretaceous food chain.
Bischoff said the marine fossils align with what researchers ... an assistant curator at the Natural History Museum who specializes in invertebrate paleontology, spent hours sifting and sorting ...
A SCIENTIST made a bizarre discovery after breaking open a piece of chalk and finding 66 million-year-old fish vomit. The ...
These ancient marine arthropods lived in the ... lifestyles and evolution of these iconic invertebrate fossils. More than 22,000 species of trilobite have been named. This is largely because ...
Office: McGlothlin-Street Hall 226 Email: [[rxlock]] Office Phone: 757 221 2878 Research Areas: Paleontology, Paleobiology, Cenozoic Global Climate Change, Evolution/Ecology of Fossil Marine ...
Found along the Stevns Klint coastal cliff, the fossil is regurgitated lumps of sea lily - a type of marine invertebrate. They were eaten during the Cretaceous period tens of millions of years ago.
The geographic, stratigraphic and historical coverage of the seven million vertebrate, invertebrate and plant fossils in the Museum's palaeontology collection make it globally important. Our ...
Volcanic activity in the region likely contributed to the accumulation of these marine remains, according to Dr. Austin Hendy of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. The fossils were ...
Found along the Stevns Klint coastal cliff, the fossil is regurgitated lumps of sea lily - a type of marine invertebrate. They were eaten during the Cretaceous period tens of millions of years ago.