If you come across a clutch of eggs in the grass, you might have discovered snake eggs. Or perhaps turtle, turkey, or quail. The differences are easy to spot.
If you spot some oddly oblong eggs in your yard, they could be snake eggs. Here's what to do next to keep yourself — and the ...
WASHINGTON -- The remains of a giant sea creature are providing the first proof that these prehistoric reptiles gave birth to their young rather than laying eggs. Plesiosaurs, which lived at the time ...
It’s an exceptional thrill and a privilege of living on our coast: watching a huge sea turtle lumber in from the ocean, lay her eggs on the beach and head back to the water. Green sea turtle season ...
In many homes, especially in warm areas, you can see house lizards all the time. People often see them quietly sitting on ...
You wake up, head out to check your mail, and see a collection of small, strange eggs nestled in the grass. Are you looking at a clutch of snake or bird eggs? The clues as to whether the eggs are the ...
PENNSYLVANIA (WHTM) — Herpetologist Jesse Rothacker from Forgotten Friend Reptile Sanctuary wanted to show people what to do when they come across nesting snapping turtles, and he ended up filming ...
New fossil egg discoveries show early dinosaurs and marine reptiles laid soft-shell eggs like those of turtles, snakes and lizards and not the hard shells of bird eggs today, according to a new study.