Three small and gracile jaw fragments are recovered from the Boren Quarry, one of the lowest fossil quarries of the Upper Triassic Dockum Group of Texas. The specimens are referred to archosauromorphs, where the morphology of the dentary and teeth of two specimens resemble what is observed in...
North America Alphadon- a primitive marsupial mammal, about 1 foot (30 cm) long. This omnivore (eating insects, small animals, seeds and fruit) lived in trees, had opposable toes, and a prehensile tail. Found in western North America from Alberta, Canada to New Mexico, USA. ...
Zanno is head of paleontology at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences and an associate professor at North Carolina State University, where she teaches the next generation of researchers. When Zanno is not in the classroom or at the museum, she walks the grounds of the American...
North America Acrocanthosaurus- a sail-backed Allosaurid (meat-eater) 30 feet (9 m) long. From Oklahoma and Texas, USA, 115-105 mya. Astrodon- a sauropod (a long-necked plant-eater) 33 ft (10 m) long, from Maryland, USA, and Niger, Africa, 130-120 mya. ...
Scandal at the North Pole is revealed in "Unsolved Case Files: Claus & Effect." The A-Team solves its problems with maximum firepower and minimal intelligence. EP 17 Operation Rich in Spirit A video dating experience takes a turn for the worse. An Oriental massage also takes a turn for ...
Eryops fossils have been established in Texas, USA, North America. In 1887 Eryops was named by E. D. Cope Scientific Classification:Kingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ChordataClass: AmphibiaOrder: TemnospondyliSuborder: EuskeliaSuperfamily: Eryopoidea
- 125 million years ago - that lived in eastern Asia, especially north-east China. Hundreds of samples have been collected which show it was a beaked plant-eater, an early representative of the Ceratopsia, which had later relatives with great neck frills and face horns, such as Triceratops...
Most early tetrapod fossils hail from hot, prehistoric coal swamps along the equator in what's now North America and Europe. But these latest remnants, dating back to about 280 million years ago, were found in modern-day Namibia, an area in Africa that was once encrusted with glaciers and ...