Galaxy Geeks on MSN
EGGS! The Good Dinosaur REACTION!
Movie REACTION! Join Luke and Audrey for our first time watching this heartwarming Disney Pixar adventure! We're diving into ...
Galaxy Geeks on MSN
It’s A Dinosaur! The Good Dinosaur REACTION!
Movie REACTION! Join Luke and Audrey for our first time watching this heartwarming Disney Pixar adventure! We're diving into ...
Some are quick to point out that movies like Jurassic Park may get the appearance of dinosaurs wrong. If so, it is for good reason. Scientists primarily have fossils of bones and teeth to guide their ...
“I’m so excited that Maple and her friends no longer have to get Fake IDs to attend Good Things 2025,” said Good Things promoter Chris O’Brien. The fish-eye music video was shot on their neighbour’s ...
Scientists in Argentina have discovered a new species of dinosaur that they believe could be at least 70 million years old. The Joaquinraptor was discovered in 2019 in Patagonia, the southern tip of ...
Paleontologists have discovered a new species of iguanodontian dinosaur that lived 125 million years ago during the Cretaceous period, they said in a research paper. Examination of fossils found in ...
Paleontologists in Mongolia have discovered a new dome-headed dinosaur species, and it’s notable for both its age and its condition. The species, called Zavacephale rinpoche, is the earliest known ...
Dome-headed dinosaurs, officially called pachycephalosaurs, are one of the “most enigmatic” creatures from the Cretaceous (145 million to 66 million years ago). While these herbivores often appear in ...
The most complete skeleton of a pachycephalosaur was found in Mongolia. Paleontologists have found the fossilized remains of the oldest dome-headed dinosaur ever discovered. The skeleton, found in the ...
Tyrannosaurus rex (pictured in a 3D illustration of a fossil skeleton) had the strongest bite of any known land animal, extinct or alive. Credit: Shutterstock Scientists have announced the discovery ...
Dinosaur eggs from China found to be around 86 million years old, according to ‘atomic clock’ dating
A clutch of 28 dinosaur eggs found in the Qinglongshan fossil reserve in central China is about 86 million years old, according to scientists who used an “atomic clock” method to date the samples.
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