"They are amazing but ephemeral glimpses of an early Cretaceous world and its inhabitants," tour company Wight Coast Fossils said of such clay prints Erin Clack is a Staff Editor for PEOPLE. She has ...
More than a century ago prolific fossil collector Charles Sternberg discovered the skeleton of a duck-billed Edmontosaurus dinosaur in the sandstone rocks of the Lance Formation in eastern Wyoming.
TwistedSifter on MSN
An extremely well-preserved dinosaur called Edmontosaurus proves that at least one species had hooves
What a remarkable find.
More than a century ago prolific fossil collector Charles Sternberg discovered the skeleton of a duck-billed Edmontosaurus dinosaur in the sandstone rocks of the Lance Formation in eastern Wyoming.
In the badlands of eastern Wyoming, the Lance Formation is a trove of prehistoric fossils. And one area in particular — a region less than 10 kilometers (6 miles) across — has provided scientists with ...
Long before horses thundered across the plains, a plant-eating giant with hooves of its own left footprints in the mud. Newly described fossils of Edmontosaurus annectens—a duck-billed dinosaur that ...
Exceptionally preserved fossils from the Ediacaran period challenge what scientists thought was possible in sandstone. In the fossil record, creatures without hard shells or skeletons, such as ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results