#fossilfridays search results
Fossil Fridays never disappoint — all kinds of incredible finds unearthed! @boneyardak 👀 #fossils #fossilfridays
On #FossilFridays 20 million years ago, two-horned rhinos grazed western Nebraska. 🦏 Their fossil bones are still found by the ton.
Happy #WorldCamelDay! Head to the site to celebrate with the Western Camel fossils and scroll through this month's #FossilFridays to learn more about the ancient Camelops hesternus. #FindYourPark
#TFUI rid of #FinleyFridays! Instead, #FossilFridays we will talk about prehistoric + ancient elasmobranchs. 1st fact about #Cladoselache, "1st true shark." Lived 380 million years ago, fish-like head, seven gills, + NO scales/denticle armour! Credit: Christian Darkin
Some #FossilFridays you're the Tyrannosaurus rex, and some you're the Triceratops horridus. 66-68 million years ago, Tyrannosaurus was the largest meat eater in western North America. It feasted on dinosaurs large and small, including plant eaters like this Triceratops.
During February, on #FossilFridays, we'll highlight the different modes of preservation. Starting with the most common, molds and casts. A mold is a space in a rock where a body part used to be. A cast is made when sediment fills a mold, making a copy of the original body part!
This South Island giant moa (Dinornis robustus) definitely didn't skip leg day, even on #FossilFridays. Native to New Zealand, these birds went extinct around 600 years ago and may have been the tallest birds to ever live, with females being about six feet tall at the back.
Discovering all of the unique colours and shell patterns can keep one busy for hours! #AmmoniteFossil #FossilFridays #AuroraAmmolite
The previous #FossilFridays have introduced you to the Philippines’ prehistoric elephants, rhinoceros, giant tortoises, and megalodons. Today, let us learn about another giant that roamed the country in the distant past,… 📸 instagram.com/p/CJIk9VOHL9o/ via tweet.photo
Fossil Fridays never disappoint — all kinds of incredible finds unearthed! @boneyardak 👀 #fossils #fossilfridays
Fossil Fridays hit different. Woolly mammoth tusks can be over 10 feet long and 40,000+ years old. 🦣🩵 Every fossil discovered @boneyardak holds a piece of history — and I get to turn it into something new. ✨🏴☠️ #FossilFridays #treasures #summer #bones #friday
#FossilFridays: Fossils expose unique lands that rebounded quickly after Earth's worst ever extinction, why? 🌍 @ClarissaWrights shares more👇 yourweather.co.uk/news/science/f…
yourweather.co.uk
Fossils expose unique lands that rebounded quickly after Earth's worst ever extinction, why?
It was previously thought that lands took a very long time to recover from mass extinctions. Some land based ecosystems actually recovered quite fast
#FossilFridays The small star shaped object in the middle of this specimen is a crinoid ossicle. Many crinoid species anchor themselves to the seabed with long flexible stems. #Fossil #Fossils #Collection #Museum #Crinoid #Specimen #Ossicles
🙏 A big thank you to everyone for following and supporting my journey in research! I’m so grateful for all the feedback on my work and especially the engagement with my #FossilFridays posts. Your interest and insights make this all the more rewarding! 🌟 #ResearchCommunity
#FossilFridays This is an extinct type of predatory fish called Palaeoniscum freieslebeni. It is fossilised in slate and was found in Crime Rigg Quarry, near Durham. It dates to the upper Permian, between approximately 259 and 251 million years ago. #Fossil #Fossils #museum
🗞️The higher salt concentration of the Mediterranean causes objects to sink, while the water of the Atlantic, less rich in salt, makes them float higher. This vital exchange was cut off 6 million years ago, causing the near total death of its marine life english.elpais.com/climate/2024-0…
Some #FossilFridays you're the Tyrannosaurus rex, and some you're the Triceratops horridus. 66-68 million years ago, Tyrannosaurus was the largest meat eater in western North America. It feasted on dinosaurs large and small, including plant eaters like this Triceratops.
Checking in on #MuseumMonday you see all our Triassic #FossilFridays?? The #Triassic comes and it goes🎶 Tell us all the #fossils you see 👀 They weren’t here for long 🐊 Catch them or they go #Houdini 🦴 #NAPC2024 #paleontology #paleoplaylist #paleo @UMMNH @UMichPaleo
This South Island giant moa (Dinornis robustus) definitely didn't skip leg day, even on #FossilFridays. Native to New Zealand, these birds went extinct around 600 years ago and may have been the tallest birds to ever live, with females being about six feet tall at the back.
Happy #WorldCamelDay! Head to the site to celebrate with the Western Camel fossils and scroll through this month's #FossilFridays to learn more about the ancient Camelops hesternus. #FindYourPark
Looking for fun ways to celebrate #FossilFridays? Check out this #virtual #fieldtrip where #experts @aahom give #students #upclose views of actual #fossils to discover more about what #paleontologists look for to learn about the past! Learn more here: bit.ly/2KjlIgR
During February, on #FossilFridays, we'll highlight the different modes of preservation. Starting with the most common, molds and casts. A mold is a space in a rock where a body part used to be. A cast is made when sediment fills a mold, making a copy of the original body part!
Primate Skull, Rooneyia viejaensis, printed on silk chiffon, at @alcova.milano. I've been working on a long-term photo series ignited by my paleontologist grandfather in the years after his passing. I've got a book coming out. yoffypress.com/dig. #fossilfridays
#FossilFridays I think of other lives I could have lived. As a writer I get to explore them all, but wish I could have gotten my hands dirty in #paleontology. #ScientistEnvy
#FossilFridays are our favorite day of the week!
385 million year old arthropods? How cool is that! Can't wait to see some of your fossil haul on #FossilFridays this summer @TannerPaleo!
I’m excited to break down some of the rocks in hydrofluoric acid when I’m back in Berkeley, and see what 385 million year old arthropods remains may be hiding inside (the photo is from last year’s samples).
This #FossilFriday, go behind-the-collections with Terrestrial Vertebrates Collections Manager, Jofred Opperman, and learn about Iziko's Ornithology Collection! Take the tour here: bit.ly/OrnithologyCol…! 🐦🐦🐦 #FossilFridays #OrnithologyCollection
youtube.com
YouTube
Go behind-the-scenes of Iziko's Ornithology Collection!
My dad (@wayneitano) has been positing #FossilFridays on fb and I thought it might help you all appreciate how my obsession with including objects and bars for scale started at an early age: 🪨🔬⚒️
The Isle of Wight’s dinosaur hunter: we’re going to need a bigger museum theguardian.com/science/2022/j… #paleontology #museums #FossilFridays #IsleofWight
On #FossilFridays 20 million years ago, two-horned rhinos grazed western Nebraska. 🦏 Their fossil bones are still found by the ton.
Discovering all of the unique colours and shell patterns can keep one busy for hours! #AmmoniteFossil #FossilFridays #AuroraAmmolite
Some #FossilFridays you're the Tyrannosaurus rex, and some you're the Triceratops horridus. 66-68 million years ago, Tyrannosaurus was the largest meat eater in western North America. It feasted on dinosaurs large and small, including plant eaters like this Triceratops.
The previous #FossilFridays have introduced you to the Philippines’ prehistoric elephants, rhinoceros, giant tortoises, and megalodons. Today, let us learn about another giant that roamed the country in the distant past,… 📸 instagram.com/p/CJIk9VOHL9o/ via tweet.photo
#FossilFridays #LangebaanwegFossils #CenozoicCollections #MuseumFromHome #LockdownLearning #fossilcanids #fossilmammals
#TFUI rid of #FinleyFridays! Instead, #FossilFridays we will talk about prehistoric + ancient elasmobranchs. 1st fact about #Cladoselache, "1st true shark." Lived 380 million years ago, fish-like head, seven gills, + NO scales/denticle armour! Credit: Christian Darkin
This #FossilFriday, we look at the internal effects of pathologies on the bones of seals! #FossilFridays #LangebaanwegFossils #CenozoicCollections #MuseumFromHome #LockdownLearning #FossilMarineMammals
This South Island giant moa (Dinornis robustus) definitely didn't skip leg day, even on #FossilFridays. Native to New Zealand, these birds went extinct around 600 years ago and may have been the tallest birds to ever live, with females being about six feet tall at the back.
Zamites from the Lower Jurassic Kayenta Formation. Ws538 produced nearly 3000 specimens during highway construction near St. George, Utah. Also collected a variety of tracks, fishes, teeth, and plants. New exhibits @SGDinoDiscovery and artwork by @BrianEngh_Art #FossilFridays
Happy #WorldCamelDay! Head to the site to celebrate with the Western Camel fossils and scroll through this month's #FossilFridays to learn more about the ancient Camelops hesternus. #FindYourPark
Happy #FossilFridays and Happy #DarwinDay! Here is my first articulated trilobite of Isotelus maximus from the Upper Ordovician (Katian) rocks of the Arnheim Formation of the Cincinnatian Series of Ohio.
Happy #FossilFriday! #TheFinsUnitedInitiative brings you Helicoprion, a 270 million-year-old cartilaginous fish with one heck of an elaborate whorl of teeth set in the middle of its mouth-- and NO teeth on their upper jaw! More here: buff.ly/2DiN3ZO #FossilFridays
During the Jurassic period 144 million years ago, a tropical forest grew off the coast of Dorset only to quickly be flooded by a lagoon. Today the remnants are beautiful, and provide one of the best fossiled records of Jurassic forests in the world. #FossilFridays
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