Dinosaurs ‘too successful for their own good’0
- Ancient Archeology, From Around the Web
- February 9, 2018
A study mapping how dinosaurs spread across the world shows they may have been a victim of their own success.
A study mapping how dinosaurs spread across the world shows they may have been a victim of their own success.
Can you imagine how beautiful it might be to witness snow falling on the rust-colored surface of Mars or a steady rain of glittering diamonds on blue Neptune?
A new technology, called ProjectDR, allows clinicians to observe patients’ internal anatomy without the need for them to go under the knife.
A proposal ditches the traditional dino family tree.
The World Health Organization chief Wednesday said a deadly plague epidemic appeared to have been brought under control in Madagascar, but warned the next outbreak would likely be stronger.
The term extraterrestrial used to stand for something truly great. Now, as far as the general public is concerned, it has all but lost its meaning. The same applies to the related phrase, extraterrestrial intelligence.
U.S. feels the walls closing in as drug-resistant infections spread.
Exactly How Much Snow Falls Over Antarctica, and How Much is Just Blowing In the Wind?
The most economical way to kill bacteria that cause common food-borne illnesses—mostly caused by Salmonella enterica—is heat, but, the mechanisms that kill Salmonella at lower temperatures were not fully understood until now, according to a team of researchers.
Part 2: Mauro Biglino is an Italian scholar of religious studies, for about thirty years he has been researching the so-called “sacred texts”, in the belief that only knowledge and direct analysis of the ancient writers’ message can lead to true and profound understanding of the religious thought expressed by humanity.