Tyrannosaurus rex is one of the most recognizable names of the dinosaur world, a hulking and terrifying meat-eating behemoth.
A 74-million-year-old bone discovered in New Mexico may belong to an ancestor of T. rex, offering clues about the giant ...
A galaxy whose light set out when Tyrannosaurus rex had just died out has been captured in striking detail by the James Webb ...
We know Tyrannosaurus rex, history’s most infamous carnivore, only ate meat. But did the top predator’s cousin prefer it with ...
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Giant tyrannosaur fossil in North America is largest of its era
A fossil tyrannosaur pulled from the badlands of southern New Mexico has forced paleontologists to rethink when giant predatory dinosaurs first reached extreme body sizes in North America. The ...
D analysis of bite marks on a tyrannosaur foot bone shows that smaller tyrannosaurs scavenged carcasses, likely consuming the final remains after most flesh was gone. Tyrannosaurs are usually imagined ...
Did a T. rex relative roam the Land of Enchantment millions of years ago? A new discovery out of the New Mexico Museum of ...
Agents of change: ‘POTUS: Or, Behind Every Great Dumbass Are Seven Women Trying To Keep Him Alive’ turns a lens on the dynamics of power Highlands Central Market near Presbyterian Hospital is expected ...
Scientists identified a fossil from New Mexico as belonging to a dinosaur that may have been an ancestor of the Tyrannosaurus Rex.
Tiny fossil teeth from Colorado are revealing new clues about the very first relatives of primates, including humans.
A sediment-washing “bubbler” helped researchers recover 65.5-million-year-old teeth that illuminate how early primate relatives spread after the mass extinction.
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