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Showing posts with the label Paleontology

50-foot ancient snake discovered in India may be one of the largest ever

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50-foot ancient snake discovered in India may be one of the largest ever 🇺🇸 A Fossil Find Like No Other Picture this: you're in Gujarat, India, and suddenly you stumble upon giant vertebrae sticking out of the ground in a lignite mine. Massive bones, ancient stuff. Someone figured out pretty quick these belonged to a snake—an enormous one. Vasuki indicus is what they named it. Could it be the largest ever? It's thought to have lived 47 million years ago and was huge, like 11 to 15 meters long huge. That's comparable to Titanoboa, if you've heard of that legendary snake. A creature this size must’ve been quite a sight back then. 🇪🇸 Un hallazgo fósil extraordinario Imagina que estás en una mina de lignito en Gujarat, India, y te topas con vértebras gigantes saliendo del suelo. Huesos masivos, reliquias antiguas. Alguien se dio cuenta rápidamente de que pertenecían a una serpiente... y enorme además. La llamaron Vasuki indicus. ¿Sería la...

Blood vessels found in T. rex bones are rewriting dinosaur science

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Blood vessels found in T. rex bones are rewriting dinosaur science 🇺🇸 Peering Inside Scotty's Bones Inside the fossilized rib of a Tyrannosaurus rex named Scotty, researchers found something unexpected. Blood vessels! Hidden away for 66 million years. They weren't out in the open, but buried within a bone that had once fractured and begun to heal. Using synchrotron X-rays from particle accelerators (fancy words for powerful tech), scientists managed to look inside without breaking anything apart. Imagine seeing inside something so old without cracking it open! The iron-rich structures they discovered likely formed as part of the healing process back in the dino days. It's like looking into ancient biological history—through time itself. 🇪🇸 Dentro de los huesos de Scotty En una costilla fosilizada del famoso Tiranosaurio rex llamado Scotty, encontraron vasos sanguíneos preservados. Algo inesperado después de 66 millones de años. No estaban...

This 100 million-year-old snake had hind legs and a lost bone that changes evolution

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This 100 million-year-old snake had hind legs and a lost bone that changes evolution 🇺🇸 A 100-Million-Year-Old Surprise Imagine stumbling upon a fossil that completely changes what you thought you knew about snakes. That's what happened in Argentina with Najash rionegrina. This isn't just any old snake fossil; it's got something special, like a time capsule from when snakes had legs. Hind legs. And not just tiny stubs—actual limbs that help paint a picture of a creature that's more complex than its sleek descendants today. It's like finding out your cat was once part dragon, but in snake terms. I kept rereading that detail: hind legs and a cheekbone... which modern snakes have basically lost over millions of years of evolution. 🇪🇸 Una Sorpresa de 100 Millones de Años Imagina encontrar un fósil que cambia completamente lo que creías saber sobre las serpientes. Pues eso pasó en Argentina con Najash rionegrina. Este fósil no es ...

This 31-foot “terror croc” ate dinosaurs. Now it’s back

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This 31-foot “terror croc” ate dinosaurs. Now it’s back 🇺🇸 The Discovery Meet Deinosuchus schwimmeri, a prehistoric predator that roamed what is now the southeastern United States over 75 million years ago. Known as the "terror croc," this massive creature could stretch over 30 feet, making it the apex predator of its time. Fossil fragments have fascinated paleontologists for years, but now, for the first time, a full skeleton has been reconstructed. This detailed replica is on display at the Tellus Science Museum, allowing visitors to witness the sheer scale and power of a predator that once dined on dinosaurs. It's a thrilling opportunity to step back in time and appreciate the complexity of Earth's ancient ecosystems. 🇪🇸 El Descubrimiento Conozcan a Deinosuchus schwimmeri, un depredador prehistórico que merodeó lo que hoy conocemos como el sureste de los Estados Unidos hace más de 75 millones de años. Conocido como el "c...

Morocco and the Deep Roots of Humanity

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Morocco and the Deep Roots of Humanity What 773,000 Year Old Fossils Really Mean for Our Understanding of Human Origins A Discovery That Quietly Shifts the Ground Beneath Us Some discoveries arrive with fireworks. Others land more quietly, but end up changing how we think in deeper, more lasting ways. The recent discovery of human fossils in Morocco belongs firmly in the second category. In early January 2026, Moroccan researchers announced that they had uncovered human remains dating back roughly 773,000 years in a cave near Casablanca. At first glance, that might sound like just another impressive number in the long timeline of human evolution. But once you sit with it for a moment, it becomes clear this isn’t just about age. It’s about geography, continuity, and a growing realization that the story of humanity is far less linear and far less Eurocentric than we once assumed. These fossils, found in a cave at the Thomas I quarry on the outskirts of Casablanca, include adult and chil...

Wait, Jurassic Park Actually Got Something Right?

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Wait, Jurassic Park Actually Got Something Right Look, we all love Jurassic Park. The suspense, the wonder, the terrifying velociraptors hunting in coordinated packs like some kind of prehistoric SWAT team. But let's be honest the science in those movies is... well, it's mostly nonsense dressed up in cool CGI. The dinosaurs were missing feathers (which we now know many of them had), the behaviors were wildly exaggerated, and don't even get me started on the whole "frog DNA to fill in the gaps" thing. But here's the twist nobody saw coming: that central idea the one about extracting ancient DNA from mosquitoes trapped in amber might not be as ridiculous as scientists initially thought. Not in the "let's resurrect a T Rex" sense, obviously. That's still firmly in fantasy territory. But the basic concept that mosquitoes can serve as these incredibly efficient biological sampling machines Turns out, that part holds up surprisingly well. ...