The iconic, armored, 14-foot-long Dunkleosteus was something of an "evolutionary oddball,” a new study has revealed.
Imagine a sea monster with bone blades for teeth, lurking in ancient waters 360 million years ago.
About 360 million years ago, the shallow sea above present-day Cleveland was home to a fearsome apex predator: Dunkleosteus terrelli. This 14-foot armored fish ruled the Late Devonian seas with ...
In a study appearing in Fossil Record, researchers Martin Ebert and Martina Kölbl-Ebert analyzed the remains of a unique ...
For decades scientists thought the Dunkleosteus terrelli utilized suction feeding. Now, we know the ancient predator used ...
Guided by faculty experts, an innovative restoration makes the beloved UChicago landmark a haven for visitors and wildlife ...
In the murky depths of prehistoric seas, a colossal predator known as Dunkleosteus once thrived. This ancient fish, measuring ...
Around 1000 markings on a slab of rock that was once a seafloor during the Cretaceous period may have been made by sea turtle ...
Regurgitalites — fossilized vomit — are extraordinarily rare. They require an improbable sequence of events. The expulsion ...
We spoke to officials at the Cedar Rapids facility and Coralville's Wastewater Treatment Plant to find out how these plants ...
Many of the gay and bisexual men on the thread also talked about being terrified of public nudity in high school due to their ...