vimarsana.com

Page 106 - எங்களுக்கு பணியகம் ஆஃப் நில மேலாண்மை News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Tyrannosaurs may have hunted together in packs like wolves

Wild Horse And Burro Adoption Event Coming To SW Michigan

Wild Horse And Burro Adoption Event Coming To SW Michigan Battle Creek and Kalamazoo area residents who have the capability to care for a wild horse or burro will get a chance to adopt or purchase one or more next month.  The U.S. Government Bureau of Land Management is staging one of its popular adoption events at a farm in Cassopolis.  That’s a little over an hour s drive from Battle Creek, not far from Niles. The Red Horse Ranch there is the host site. It has hosted BLM Wild Horse adoptions in the past and has proven to be a biog draw for interested people from Michigan, Indiana, and Illinois.

Fossils may prove T-rex lived in packs

Fossils may prove T-rex lived in packs AP, SALT LAKE CITY Tyrannosaur dinosaurs might not have been solitary predators as long envisioned, but more like social carnivores such as wolves, new research unveiled on Monday found. Paleontologists developed the theory while studying a mass tyrannosaur death site found seven years ago in the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in southern Utah, one of two monuments that the administration of US President Joe Biden is considering restoring to their full size. Using geochemical analysis of the bones and rock, a team of researchers with the University of Arkansas determined that the dinosaurs died and were buried in the same place and were not the result of fossils washing in from multiple areas.

Fearsome tyrannosaurs were social animals, study suggests

 E-Mail IMAGE:  Hollywood specimen, same species as Teratophoneus, discovered approximately two miles north of the Rainbows and Unicorns Quarry on Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. view more  Credit: U.S. Bureau of Land Management FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - The fearsome tyrannosaur dinosaurs that ruled the northern hemisphere during the Late Cretaceous period (66-100 million years ago) may not have been solitary predators as popularly envisioned, but social carnivores similar to wolves, according to a new study. The finding, based on research at a unique fossil bone site inside Utah s Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument containing the remains of several dinosaurs of the same species, was made by a team of scientists including Celina Suarez, University of Arkansas associate professor of geosciences.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.