Space.com on MSN
Walk through the asteroid strike that killed the dinosaurs with American Museum of Natural History's new 'Impact' exhibit
"It sounds like science fiction or the stuff of Hollywood movies." ...
Berlin’s Museum of Natural History is one of the world's most important research institutions. Home to an incredible ...
The largest museum of its kind in the Middle East opens today with an awe-inspiring dinosaur wing, a massive blue whale ...
Around 115 million years ago, northern Australia’s seas hosted a colossal shark that rewrites what we thought we knew about ...
Extremely rare” discovery of this newly identified armor-plated carnivorous reptile strengthens our understanding of the link ...
That day is the center of “Impact: The End of the Age of the Dinosaurs,” a new exhibition at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City. “There’s no doubt — well, arguably at least — that ...
4don MSN
Holiday tree featuring thousands of origami works opens at NYC’s American Museum of Natural History
A beloved Christmas tree tradition is returning to Manhattan this holiday season. The Origami Holiday Tree at the American ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Coffee and Potatoes Survived the Dinosaur Apocalypse, Thanks to This Fossil!
What if the coffee you drink and the potatoes you eat today have a hidden survival story dating back 80 million years? An ...
The Nature Network on MSN
How Iguanodon Became One of the Most Well-Known Dinosaurs in History
Iguanodon isn’t as flashy as T. rex or as massive as Brachiosaurus, but it holds a special place in dinosaur […] ...
Jane, the world-famous tyrannosaur fossil at the Burpee Museum of Natural History, may not be a Tyrannosaurus rex after all. A new study published in Nature by Lindsay Zanno of the North Carolina ...
Tainrakuasuchus bellator, a swift croc ancestor from Brazil, reveals that fierce reptile predators ruled Earth long before ...
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