Two underwater sea lilies were eaten and regurgitated around 66 million years ago. They were preserved as fossilized vomit.
A 66-million-year-old fossilized vomit discovery in Denmark offers a rare glimpse into the prehistoric Cretaceous food chain.
That's good news for the patrons of Denmark's East Zealand Museum, where Milan is a curator, and where the preserved puke of a prehistoric ... hunting habits of sea creatures in the Cretaceous ...
Unearth the nine massive prehistoric animals that lived before ... While some of its features are recognizable in modern sea creatures, there are no present-day sea scorpions.
Colossal sea creatures that hunted massive marine life ... Its discovery in the Cerrejón coal mine, exposing invaluable insights into prehistoric ecosystems and climate conditions, has shown ...
"Here is an animal, probably a type of fish, that 66 million years ago ate sea lilies that lived on the bottom of the Cretaceous sea and regurgitated the skeletal parts back up." "Such a find ...
here are the animals that get my vote for “most prehistoric-looking.” They may not be the oldest animals on Earth, but they aren’t recent creations either. Most of all, when you look at them ...
In the quiet cliffs of Stevns, Denmark, a 79-year-old amateur fossil hunter split open a piece of chalk last November and ...
They contended that land animals that began to adapt to aquatic ... Thirty-seven million years ago, in the waters of the prehistoric Tethys ocean, a sinuous, 50-foot-long beast with gaping jaws ...