Scientists have discovered a new Cretaceous-era dinosaur species by examining photos of a fossil lost during an allied air ...
Newly identified giant horned dinosaur fossils from Egypt Rediscovered after being lost during WWII bombings Significant implications for dinosaur diversity in North ...
For over a century, paleontologists have been unraveling Earth’s prehistoric mysteries. Recent findings from archival photographs have brought a new chapter to life: the discovery of Tameryraptor ...
A massive species of dinosaur has been identified by scientists, and it's thought that it lived around 95 million years ago in modern-day Africa. At a whopping 10-metres long, it is thought to be one ...
The fossil was shipped to Germany and placed in the Bavarian State Collection for Paleontology and Geology. At the time, Stromer classified the specimen as Carcharodontosaurus, a genus of large ...
Over the years, palaeontologists have added more members of the Carcharodontosaurus group. In the 1990s, a relatively complete carcharodontosaurid skull from Morocco became a prime example of the ...
The fossil, destroyed in an air raid 80 years ago, had faded from memory until a paleontologist found archival images.
Stromer initially classified the dinosaur as a Carcharodontosaurus ... showcased parts of the skull, spine, and hind limbs. They collaborated with dinosaur experts to analyze the images.
But the specimen, originally classified as Carcharodontosaurus, meaning ‘shark-toothed lizard’, was destroyed during World War II when the museum was bombed on July 21 1944. Reconstruction of ...
The photos show parts of the dinosaur's skull, spine and legs ... fossil depicted there differs significantly from more recent Carcharodontosaurus found in Morocco.” “Stromer’s original ...
The fossils were first described in 1931 by the German paleontologist Ernst Stromer von Reichenbach as the carcharodontosaurid species Carcharodontosaurus saharicus ... from a locality in the northern ...
A blanket of snow isn’t enough to keep a hungry fox from a hot meal. In wintry landscapes, mice and other rodents find refuge in tunnels beneath the snow’s surface. But a wily fox will tilt ...
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