@WFS,World Fossil Society,Riffin T Sajeev,Russel T Sajeev A team of researchers, led by the University of Bristol, has uncovered that ancient fossils, thought to be some of the world’s earliest examples of animal remains, could in fact belong to other groups such as algae. The Weng’an Biota is a fossil Konservat-Lagerstätte in South China that […]
Posts Tagged ‘Russel T Sajeev’
WFS News: Oldest orchid fossil on record identified.
@WFS,World Fossil Society,Riffin T Sajeev,Russel T Sajeev The orchid family has some 28,000 species — more than double the number of bird species and quadruple the mammal species. As it turns out, they’ve also been around for a while. A newly published study documents evidence of an orchid fossil trapped in Baltic amber that dates […]
WFS News:Fossil sheds light on ‘Jurassic Park’ dinosaurs
@ WFS,World Fossil Society,Riffin T Sajeev,Russel T Sajeev Brachiosaurus, depicted in Jurassic Park, now has an early relative, providing clues to the evolution of some of the biggest creatures on Earth.Scientists say the plant-eating dinosaur was longer than a double-decker bus and weighed 15,000kg.Its remains were found in the 1930s in the Jura region of […]
WFS News: Early organic carbon got deep burial in mantle
@WFS,World Fossil Society,Riffin T Sajeev,Russel T Sajeev Rice University petrologists who recreated hot, high-pressure conditions from 60 miles below Earth’s surface have found a new clue about a crucial event in the planet’s deep past. Their study describes how fossilized carbon — the remains of Earth’s earliest single-celled creatures — could have been subsumed and […]
WFS News: long-held theory of Tsunami formation challenged
@WFS,World Fossil Society,Riffin T Sajeev,Russel T Sajeev A new NASA study is challenging a long-held theory that tsunamis form and acquire their energy mostly from vertical movement of the seafloor. An undisputed fact was that most tsunamis result from a massive shifting of the seafloor — usually from the subduction, or sliding, of one tectonic […]
WFS News: Tokummia Katalepsis, a Cambrian-era predator
@WFS,World Fossil Society,Riffin T Sajeev,Russel T Sajeev,Tokummia Katalepsis The newest creature discovered at the Burgess Shale fossil site in B.C. looks like it’s part centipede, part crab and part can-opener. Meet the tokummia katalepsis, a Cambrian-era predator, found by paleontologists from the University of Toronto and the Royal Ontario Museum.The team released news of the […]
WFS News: Moabosaurus discovered in Utah’s ‘gold mine’
@WFS,World Fossil Society,Moabosaurus,Riffin T Sajeev,Russel T Sajeev The Moabosaurus discovery was published this week by the University of Michigan’s Contributions from the Museum of Paleontology. The paper, authored by three Brigham Young University researchers and a BYU graduate at Auburn University, profiles Moabosaurus, a 125-million-year-old dinosaur whose skeleton was assembled using bones extracted from the […]
WFS News: Evidence of Earthquakes recorded on fossils
@WFS,World Fossil Society,Riffin T Sajeev,Russel T Sajeev The Cascadia subduction zone (CSZ) has captured major attention from paleoseismologists due to evidence from several large (magnitude 8-9) earthquakes preserved in coastal salt marshes. Stratigraphic records are proving to be useful for learning about the CSZ’s past, and microfossils may provide more answers about large ancient earthquakes. […]
WFS News: How the darkness and the cold killed the dinosaurs
@ WFS,World Fossil Society,Riffin T Sajeev,Russel T Sajeev,WFS News Sixty six million years ago, the sudden extinction of the dinosaurs started the ascent of the mammals, ultimately resulting in humankind’s reign on Earth. Climate scientists now reconstructed how tiny droplets of sulfuric acid formed high up in the air after the well-known impact of a […]