The 300 million-year-old Tyrannoroter heberti had teeth specialized for eating plants, making it one of the oldest species to ...
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250 million-year-old amphibian fossils from Australia reveal global spread of ‘sea-salamanders’
The Kimberley region in the north-west corner of Western Australia is full of rugged ranges and gorges, and long stretches of ...
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A “Smiling” Stone Found at a Sacred Shrine Turns Out to Be 350 Million-Year-Old Fossil
A chance discovery on Holy Island reveals how a 350-million-year-old marine fossil became part of medieval legend.
This football-sized creature could grind its teeth like a hard-core plant-eater, back before that was really a thing — and it may be the earliest vertebrate herbivore ever found.
The unusual looking fossil is estimated to be a few hundred million years old dating to the Carboniferous period.
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