IFLScience on MSN
300 million years ago, insects were enormous. That stopped – and we’re probably wrong about why
Fossil relatives of dragonflies, known as griffinflies, had wingspans of 70 centimeters (28 inches) 300 million years ago, and they weren’t the era’s only insects that far exceeded their modern ...
Lost Worlds in Livermore, California is exactly that kind of place, except I’m terrible at keeping secrets, especially when ...
Live Science on MSN
A trove of exceptional fossils in NSW Australia
Buried in Australia's so-called dead heart, a trove of exceptional fossils, including those of trapdoor spiders, giant cicadas, tiny fish and a feather from an ancient bird, reveal a unique snapshot ...
Learn how ancient oxygen levels in the Paleozoic era were linked to giant insect size, and why that theory is now being ...
9hon MSN
Massive insect body size 300 million years ago may not have been due to high atmospheric oxygen
Three-hundred-million years ago, Earth was very different. The continents had coalesced into Pangea, which was dominated in ...
Researchers have re-analysed a set of elephant bones and a wooden spear found in Germany in 1948, which provide compelling ...
Aeon Must Die!, Agents of Mayhem, Aidan In Danger, Alwa's Legacy, A Memoir Blue, Ancestors Legacy (EU) and more ...
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