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Spring in the Arctic brings forth a plethora of peeps and downy hatchlings as millions of birds gather to raise their young.
The researchers analyzed rare fossils of hatchling birds found in northern Alaska, which offered the earliest evidence of the creatures reproducing in a polar region ...
An international study reveals surprising bird nesting activity in the Arctic during the Late Cretaceous period. Fossils from ...
Ancient fossils from Alaska reveal birds nested in the Arctic 73 million years ago, challenging previous assumptions about ...
and several kinds of birds similar to modern ducks and geese -- that were breeding in the Arctic while dinosaurs roamed the same lands. Prior to this study, the earliest known evidence of birds ...
A new study has found that birds were raising their young in the Arctic seventy-three million years ago, much earlier than previously thought.
A major collection of more than 50 bird fossils found in northern Alaska suggest some ancient ancestors of modern birds learned to either adapt to the harsh Arctic winter, or migrate south during the ...
Alamy The Liscomb bone beds, found in outcrops along the Colville River, have yielded more Arctic dinosaurs than anywhere else in the world (Credit: Alamy) Then one day, in 1984, there was an ...
“It was a polar forest teeming with dinosaurs, small mammals and birds ... (Credit: Adrian Gestos/MIMIC) “Our team's research is revealing a ‘Lost world’ of Arctic-adapted animals,” said Gregory ...
The researchers also determined the Junggar basin was located above the Arctic circle, meaning it was extremely cold there, particularly in the winter. "The whole picture of dinosaurs is backward.
There's mounting evidence that some dinosaurs lived among snow and ice. How did they do it?