A self-appointed fossil hunter in Denmark discovered fossilized vomit from 66 million years ago. The chalky find contains portion of sea lilies likely consumed by a fish predator from the ...
During this period, oceans formed as land shifted and broke out of one big supercontinent into smaller ones. 3 min read Continents were on the move in the Cretaceous, busy remodeling the shape and ...
You might know the Cretaceous Period for big animals such as Tyrannosaurus rex and Triceratops, or for being the end of the age of dinosaurs. But what was the world like in the millions of years ...
Nestled in Alberta’s badlands, the Royal Tyrrell Museum houses some of the world’s most incredible fossils of prehistoric life. Indeed, life in Western Canada back then was a far cry from the ...
On Monday, the Museum of Eastern Denmark announced a finding of a 66-million-year-old piece of fossilized vomit. The specimen was discovered by local fossil hunter Peter Bennicke. Bennicke made ...
A Danish fossil hunter discovered a 66-million-year-old chunk of fossilised vomit, likely from a fish that couldn't digest sea lilies.