- UID
- 20
- Online time
- Hours
- Posts
- Reg time
- 24-8-2017
- Last login
- 1-1-1970
|
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━

Emma Jones/University of Alberta
▼ It isn’t every day that scientists dig up a dinosaur jaw—or unearth the remains of fossilized insects. So paleontologists couldn’t believe their luck when, in 2010, they found the 75-million-year-old jawbone of a duck-billed hadrosaur in Dinosaur Provincial Park in Canada’s Alberta province, topped with a 7-centimeter-wide blob of amber containing traces of trees and sap-sucking aphids (above).
The “remarkable” two-for-one fossil would have been preserved in an incredibly unlikely chain of events, (▪ ▪ ▪)
► Please, continue reading this news here: Source |
|