ZME Science on MSN
Paleontologists discover 62-foot kraken-like octopus that ruled the Cretaceous ocean
A fossil beak from an ancient octopus has forced scientists to rethink who ruled the Cretaceous seas. Researchers say two ...
Owned and operated by Jefferson Munroe, the farm is also home to the Twin Beaks Fried Chicken trailer that can be seen at ...
Good Housekeeping on MSN
20 vibrant flowers that will attract hummingbirds to your garden
Look no further than these pollinator-friendly blooms.
The massive invertebrates may have been top predators, according to an analysis of their fossilized jaws. The work suggests ...
In late April, nearly 1,000 blue-tailed bee-eaters have returned as expected to the banks of the Nujiang River in Baoshan, ...
It has a dagger beak, red throat and torpedo body – and its eerie cry is echoing across remote lochs
An extraordinary eerie cry echoes across small Scottish lochs each spring. Sometimes answered by another mysterious voice and ...
Petrels and shearwaters are seabirds often referred to as “tubenoses,” a name derived from the distinctive tube-shaped ...
Gentoo penguins at Edinburgh Zoo court mates by choosing pebbles hand-painted by children at a local hospital.
The intense wear observed on the beaks is consistent, the researchers said, with repeated crushing of hard structures such as bones and shells, indicative of a predator that hunted large fish, ...
The top predator prowling the seas during the age of the dinosaurs 100 million years ago may have been the octopus. New ...
According to CNN, Japanese researchers used recently discovered fossils to compare jaw sizes with modern species and found that these ancient cephalopods reached lengths of 23 to 62 feet, with the ...
Some 80 million years ago, the late Cretaceous oceans were patrolled by 17-meter mosasaurs, long-necked plesiosaurs, and ...
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