New study finds some of the oldest animals in the world living in a place you wouldn't expect: fishes in the Arizona desert.
Surprisingly, genome comparisons have failed to resolve a major question in animal evolution: Which living animals are the descendants of the earliest animals to evolve in the world's oceans? ...
The amazing survival strategies of polar marine creatures might help to explain how the first animals on Earth could have evolved earlier than the oldest fossils suggest according to new research. ... A stand of bald cypress trees in North Carolina, including one least 2,624 years old, are the oldest known living trees in eastern North America and the oldest wetland tree species in the world. They ...
When rains fell on the arid Atacama Desert, it was reasonable to expect floral blooms to follow. Instead, the water brought death. Planetary astrobiologists has found that after encountering ...Bizarre New Fossils Shed Light on Ancient Plankton
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Study uncovers hundred-year lifespans for three freshwater fish species in the Arizona desertA recent study has found some of the oldest animals in the world living in a place you wouldn't expect: fishes in the Arizona desert.
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New study shows that amphibians have one more thing to worry about: MethylmercuryThe first widescale assessment of methylmercury in adult amphibians in the U.S. to date shows that in amphibians, this toxic compound is common, widespread, and at least for some, can reach very high levels.
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New study explores role of post-impact dust in dinosaur extinctionInteresting Engineering is a cutting edge, leading community designed for all lovers of engineering, technology and science.
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Banned books often get circulation bump, new study findsCirculations of banned books increased 12% on average compared to similar non-banned titles, the study found.
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From biplanes to Cold War satellites, new study unlocks mysteries of ancient Roman fortsBuilding on an amazing collection of aerial photographs shot in the 1920s from a biplane flown by a Jesuit priest, researchers who just published findings in the journal Antiquity used declassified Cold War satellite imagery to reveal another 396 sites of ancient forts along the former eastern border of the Roman Empire.
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