IFLScience on MSN
415-million-year-old fossils confirm the world’s largest scorpion was a meter-long apex predator that may have hunted on land and underwater
Museums are home to many mysteries. For all their labels and information panels, there remain specimens that elude ...
Sharks may be known for being the greatest terror of the seas, but even they can be attacked and killed. In fact, this hunter ...
The megalodon was the apex predator of its day, eating whatever it wanted and roaming Earth’s oceans for millions of years.
"California should focus on managing the predators it already has before even thinking about introducing new ones." ...
Grizzly bears have taken one lumbering step closer to roaming California again. California’s State Senate voted 29-9 on party ...
New analyses of fossilized jaws reveal that massive, kraken-like octopuses once hunted alongside other marine predators.
A massive predator once roamed the Earth, towering over its rivals and casting a long shadow on the ancestors of T. rex. This giant, now known as Ulughbegasaurus, ruled the prehistoric world around 90 ...
"Terrestrial apex predators may preferentially wander close to water sources —especially in dry seasons—as these areas may set an ideal scenario for terrestrial predators to feed on aquatic taxa, or ...
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