Sponges may be ancient, but their timeline has been murky. New research suggests the earliest sponges were soft and ...
The first animals with mineral skeletons changed the way sediments develop on Earth forever, according to new research. Sediments are often modified by the mineral-rich skeletons of living organisms.
New research shows that the earliest sponges were soft bodied and lacked skeletons, explaining why their oldest fossils are ...
Although she had all the permits and the paperwork, researcher Jamie Knaub still felt nervous as her durable yellow suitcase ventured into the TSA scanner. Knaub was the guardian of over 260 bones ...
A new database offers access to over 6,000 3D scans of primate skeletons housed in the American Museum of Natural History, Stony Brook University, the National Museum of Natural History, the Cleveland ...
Fifty years ago, a remarkable fossil was unearthed in the Afar Rift Valley of Ethiopia, forever transforming our understanding of human evolution. Uncovered by a young paleoanthropologist, Donald ...
The earliest sponges to live on the earth were soft and skeletonless pioneers - rewriting the story of the origin of animal ...
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