... of California, Berkeley, and the Berkeley Geochronology Centre have pinpointed the date of the dinosaurs' extinction more precisely than ever thanks to refinements to a common technique for dating ...
A pile of dinosaur dung 130 million years old sold at a New York auction for nearly $1,000. The fossilized dung dates from the Jurassic era.
... very close to another such period.
While the “bounce” effect may have been bad news for dinosaurs, it may also have helped life to spread. The scientists suggest the impact may have thrown debris ...
New research shows that ancient beetles munched on dinosaur bones, helping to explain why some fossils have missing pieces.
... on the shape and angle of the different digits, they were able to identify the bipedal dinosaur as an ornithopod. The size, shape and spacing of the quadrupedal prints were used to identify the body ...
Ancient flying reptiles could have snacked on Tyrannosaurus rex babies and other landlubbing runts of the dinosaur world, paleontologists report.
Flying dinosaur preferred to hoof it while hunting [More]
... for a Texas museum recently spotted the fossilized bones of a 75-million-year-old duckbilled dinosaur while taking a tour of the area where a mummified duckbill was found eight years ago....
Scientists who dig dinosaurs in Eastern Montana will now be able to chemically analyze fossils the same day they're excavated and before degrading begins. Paleontologists from Montana State University ...
A rare fossil of a large meat-eater found in Australia suggests dinosaurs trekked north across a vast supercontinent much later than thought, scientists report.
Parts of a rare mummified dinosaur that has attracted worldwide interest went on display in North Dakota's state museum.
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -- A newly discovered batch of well-preserved dinosaur bones, petrified trees and even freshwater clams in southeastern Utah could provide new clues about life in the region some ...
EDMONTON, Alberta, June 18 (UPI) -- Canadian researchers say a partial dinosaur skeleton unearthed in 1971 from a remote British Columbia site might represent a new species.
An excavation revealed at least four plant-eating dinosaurs and two carnivorous ones that date to the late Jurassic period, state officials announced.
A fossil hunter has discovered that one of the largest known dinosaurs, a titanosaurid, almost certainly roamed New Zealand about 80 million years ago.