Showing 20 articles starting at article 1141
Categories: Geoscience: Earth Science, Paleontology: Fossils
Published Decrease in crucial trace element preceded ancient mass extinction
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A decline in the element molybdenum across the planet's oceans preceded a significant extinction event approximately 183 million years ago, new research shows.
Published World's oldest meal helps unravel mystery of our earliest animal ancestors
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The contents of the last meal consumed by the earliest animals known to inhabit Earth more than 550 million years ago has unearthed new clues about the physiology of our earliest animal ancestors, according to scientists.
Published Earth might be experiencing 7th mass extinction, not 6th
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Earth is currently in the midst of a mass extinction, losing thousands of species each year. New research suggests environmental changes caused the first such event in history, which occurred millions of years earlier than scientists previously realized.
Published 1,700-year-old spider monkey remains discovered in Teotihuacán, Mexico
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Original source 
The complete skeletal remains of a spider monkey -- seen as an exotic curiosity in pre-Hispanic Mexico -- grants researchers new evidence regarding social-political ties between two ancient powerhouses: Teotihuacán and Maya Indigenous rulers. The remains of other animals were also discovered, as well as thousands of Maya-style mural fragments and over 14,000 ceramic sherds from a grand feast. These pieces are more than 1,700 years old.
Published Solid salamander: Prehistoric amphibian was as heavy as a pygmy hippo
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Scientists have calculated the body mass of two ancient amphibians.
Published Rapid fluctuations in oxygen levels coincided with Earth's first mass extinction
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Rapid changes in marine oxygen levels may have played a significant role in driving Earth's first mass extinction, according to a new study.
Published Ray-finned fish survived mass extinction event
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Ray-finned fish, now the most diverse group of backboned animals, were not as hard hit by a mass extinction event 360 million years ago as scientists previously thought.
Published Tiniest ever ancient seawater pockets revealed
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Ancient seawater pockets offer a new source of clues to climate change in vanished oceans and our own.
Published Earth can regulate its own temperature over millennia, new study finds
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A new study confirms that the planet harbors a 'stabilizing feedback' mechanism that acts over hundreds of thousands of years to keep global temperatures within a steady, habitable range.
Published Footprints claimed as evidence of ice age humans in North America need better dating, new research shows
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The preserved footprints found in New Mexico's Lake Otero Basin would upend scientific understanding of how, and when, humans first arrived in North America, if they are accurately dated. A new study brings the age claim into question.
Published Welsh 'weird wonder' fossils add piece to puzzle of arthropod evolution
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Original source 
International team of researchers describe new fossil species discovered in fossil deposit near Llandrindod Wells in mid-Wales. The fossil, Mierridduryn bonniae, shares many features with Cambrian 'weird wonder' Opabinia, but is 40 million years younger. Robust phylogenetic analyses suggest that Mierridduryn is either the third opabiniid ever discovered, or is a distinct group that is key for understanding the evolution of the arthropod head.