A lost cache of 250-million-year-old fossils from Australia has rewritten part of the story of life after Earth’s worst mass extinction. Instead of a single marine amphibian species, researchers ...
Forgotten fossils from the Kimberley show how marine amphibians rebounded and spread across the globe after the end-Permian mass extinction.
The idea that extreme climate change could one day cause a mass extinction and end the human dominance is not as farfetched ...
Learn how Triassic marine amphibian fossils from the Kimberley region in Australia reveal rapid global dispersal after the ...
The cataclysmic end-Permian mass extinction and extreme global warming prompted the emergence of modern marine ecosystems at the beginning of the Age of Dinosaurs (or Mesozoic era), some 252 million y ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Researchers identify globe-trotting ‘sea monsters’ that lived 250 million years ago
The dusty plains of Western Australia’s Kimberley region are a long way from the ...
Around 250 million years ago, what is today scorching desert in remote northwestern Australia was the shore of a shallow bay ...
2don MSN
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 ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Scientists discovered a fossil hiding in a museum all along, and it revealed two ancient predators instead of one
A new study has uncovered how strange amphibians that once lived in north-western Western Australia became early evolutionary ...
Researchers have rediscovered 250 million-year-old fossils, revealing that ancient, crocodile-like "sea-salamanders" ...
Around 250 million years ago, what is today scorching desert in remote northwestern Australia was the shore of a shallow bay bordering a vast ...
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