The iconic, armored, 14-foot-long Dunkleosteus was something of an "evolutionary oddball,” a new study has revealed.
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 ...
New York-based artist Jo Fish navigates a fluid space between figuration and abstraction with poignancy, evoking the same ...
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 ...
Since its discovery in the 1860s, Dunkleosteus terrelli has captivated scientists and the public alike, becoming one of the most recognizable prehistoric animals. Casts of its bony-plated skull and ...
OSU study shows deep-sea fish evolution results in diverse body shapes due to different environmental pressures.
The research provides direct evidence that at least one pterosaur species ate plants. That simple gut snapshot shifts a ...