About 76 million years ago, a juvenile of one of the largest flying creatures in Earth's history, called Cryodrakon boreas, walked along a riverbank on a lush coastal plain and lowered its toothless ...
A juvenile pterosaur fossil found in Canada shows a crocodile bite from 76 million years ago, offering rare evidence of predator-prey dynamics during the Cretaceous Period. This marks the first North ...
Scientists have unearthed in the badlands of Alberta's Dinosaur Provincial Park the fossilized neck bone ... happened at the time of death during an attack or after the animal was already dead ...
In Dinosaur Provincial Park in Alberta, Canada ... hole on a pterosaur vertebra raised questions about a potential attack. Brown, et al (2025) Journal of Paleontology A scan of the bone found ...
Researchers said the "rare evidence provides insight into predator-prey dynamics in the region" during the Cretaceous Period. The bone was discovered in Dinosaur Provincial Park, Alberta, during a ...
The vertebra belonged to a juvenile Azhdarchid pterosaur, a species of giant, prehistoric flying reptile with bones similar to birds, making them thin and typically poorly preserved, researchers said.
Scientists in Alberta have discovered a fossilized neck bone of Cryodrakon boreas, hinting at an ancient croc attack.
Nowhere on Earth is as rich in quantity and quality of the prehistoric creatures' remains as the Badlands' arid Dinosaur Provincial Park, a UNESCO World Heritage site where digs are still under way.
当前正在显示可能无法访问的结果。
隐藏无法访问的结果