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A new study has uncovered evidence that a giant marine reptile from the Early Jurassic period used stealth to hunt its prey in deep or dark waters—much like owls on land today.
A new marine reptile from the Cretaceous period, Traskasaura sandrae, had an unprecedented vertical hunting style.
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The Daily Galaxy on MSNThis 183-Million-Year-Old Fossil Is Unlike Anything Seen Before—Here’s Why?The discovery of a 183-million-year-old plesiosaur fossil in Germany has provided scientists with unprecedented insights into ...
Photograph of Drs Lomax and Lindgren, together with fellow researcher Sven Sachs, examining one part of the flipper at Lund ...
Soft tissues are preserved along one side of the metre-long flipper where it’s believed to have been pressed into the ...
The evolutionary quirks unveiled by the new research offer insight into how a subset of ichthyosaurs lived and hunted– and ...
Serrations at the edges of a fossilized flipper of the ancient marine reptile Temnodontosaurussuggests it may have been able to swim silently.
A landowner in Argentina discovered the fossilized remains of a prehistoric marine reptile, identified as an ichthyosaur, in the province of Neuquén.
Paleontologists in southwestern China have unearthed fossils of *Dinocephalosaurus orientalis*, a 240-million-year-old marine ...
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