Forty researchers from the Denver Museum of Nature & Science have added 15 humans, two excavators, two track hoes and a few other pieces of machinery in hopes of accelerating their work recovering Ice Ace bones from Ziegler Reservoir near Snowmass Village. Read more
The bones of an extinct sea cow species that lived about 20 million years ago have been discovered in a cave in the Philippines by a team of Italian scientists, the expedition head said Monday. Several ribs and spine parts of the aquatic mammal were found in February and March in limestone rock above the waters of an underground river on the island of Palawan, said University of Florence geologist Leonardo Piccini. Read more
Our fossil-hunting grounds in Morocco included mud mounds that -- although today high and dry -- were born in a relatively shallow sea. Such submarine mud volcanoes can be the result of gas escaping from underneath Earth's crust, forcing great quantities of liquid and fine-grained rock to the surface. To my eyes, the mounds looked like ogres in a science fiction film, the ancient vents forming drooping eyes and a sagging, crumbling mouth. The monstrous mounds remained mute during our visit, but scientists are trying to learn their story by other means. A vein of travertine, for instance, is a clue that at least one of the mounds we visited had a hydrothermal origin. Other mounds may have been built by so-called "cold seeps," which have milder temperatures. Several mounds are lined up in a row, indicating they bubbled up along a natural fault in the Earth's crust. First identified by scientists in the 1930s, many of the Morocco mounds are made of carbonate mud (The term "mud" refers to the grain size of the rocks -- micrite and fine-silt -- rather than a composition of sediment mixed with clay). Read more
Bordglömda lådor med fossila delar av dinosaurier och däggdjur från 1920-talets Kina öppnas
Denna vecka öppnas 40 "bortglömda" lådor med fossilt stenmaterial från 1920-talets Kina på Evolutionsmuseet vid Uppsala universitet. Lådorna utgör en del av totalt 400 lådor med material som samlades in av museets grundare Carl Wiman. Flera av lådorna kommer från områden i Kina som är mycket rika på fossil från dinosaurier, hominider och utdöda däggdjur, så det är otroligt spännande, säger museiintendent Jan-Ove Ebbestad, som inventerar materialet i samarbete med forskare vid avdelningen för evolution och utvecklingsbiologi. Read more (Swedish)
A family from western P.E.I. found a surprise buried in their potato harvest last fall - what appears to be a fossil as old as the Island itself. Shelley Williams of Elmsdale thought little of the strange stone, which is about the size of a large potato, when her husband Whitney and 11-year-old son George came into the kitchen with it in the autumn. Read more
New study explains remarkable preservation of African fossils
The mystery of how an abundance of fossils have been marvellously preserved for nearly half a billion years in a remote region of Africa has been solved by a team of geologists from the University of Leicester's Department of Geology. They have established that an ancient wind brought life to the region - and was then instrumental in the preservation of the dead. Sarah Gabbott, Jan Zalasiewicz and colleagues investigated a site near the Table Mountains in South Africa. Their findings are published in the latest issue of the journal Geology. Read more
India's Gujarat state is home to one of the world's largest collections of dinosaur remains. The BBC's Soutik Biswas finds out how this is fuelling dinosaur tourism. About an hour's drive from busy Ahmedabad city in India's western Gujarat state is what many call the "Jurassic Park of India" - a nod to Steven Spielberg's spell-binding dinosaur film. Read more
Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH) and Geoheritage Fife say the trail was left by a six-legged water scorpion called Hibbertopterus as it scrabbled over damp sand millions of years before the arrival of dinosaurs. Judging by the size of the tracks, the animal, which is related to the modern-day scorpions and horseshoe crabs, was more than 6ft long and about 3ft broad. Read more
The tracks of a giant eurypterid called Hibbertopterus have been found in 330 million year old rocks in the UK. It is the largest known trackway of its kind and the size suggests that Hibbertopterus was about two meters long and one meter wide.
A cast is being made of tracks left by a two-metre long ancient animal in north east Fife. The tracks were made by a giant six-legged water scorpion called Hibbertopterus as it crawled over damp sand about 330 million years ago. It is the largest known walking trackway of a eurypterid or any invertebrate animal. Read more
A geologist from the University of Leicester is part of a team that has uncovered an ancient water flea-like creature from 425 million years ago - only the third of its kind ever to be discovered in ancient rocks. Professor David Siveter, of the Department of Geology at the University of Leicester worked with Professor Derek Siveter at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History, Professor Derek Briggs at Yale University USA and Dr Mark Sutton at Imperial College to make the rare discovery. The specimen, which was found in rocks in Herefordshire, represents a new species of ostracod, and has been named Nasunaris flata. Like water-fleas and shrimps, ostracods belong to the group of animals called Crustacea. The find is important because the fossil has been found with its soft parts preserved inside the shell. Read more