- Paleopathology, also
spelled palaeopathology, is the
study of
ancient diseases and
injuries in
organisms through the
examination of fossils, mummified...
-
Neovenator (nee-o-ven-a-tor
meaning "new hunter") is a
genus of
carcharodontosaurian theropod dinosaur. It is
known from
several skeletons found in the...
- The
woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) is an
extinct species of
mammoth that
lived from the
Middle Pleistocene until its
extinction in the Holocene...
-
Spinosaurus (/ˌspaɪnəˈsɔːrəs/; lit. 'spine lizard') is a
genus of
spinosaurid dinosaur that
lived in what now is
North Africa during the
Cenomanian stage...
-
Notiomastodon is an
extinct genus of
gomphothere proboscidean (related to
modern elephants),
endemic to
South America from the
Pleistocene to the beginning...
-
Ornithomimosauria ("bird-mimic lizards") are
theropod dinosaurs which bore a
superficial resemblance to the modern-day ostrich. They were fast, omnivorous...
-
decrease the
resistance of water. Osmólska and
Roniewicz reported palaeopathologies in the
holotype specimen such as
abnormal pits,
grooves and tubercles...
-
Gorgonopsia (from the Gr**** Gorgon, a
mythological beast, and óps 'aspect') is an
extinct clade of sabre-toothed
therapsids from the
Middle to the Upper...
- to have been some of the
earliest instances of
palaeoneurology and
palaeopathology.
Anoplotherium was a
significant find in
palaeontological history and...
-
Darwinius is a
genus within the
infraorder Adapiformes, a
group of
basal strepsirrhine primates from the
middle Eocene epoch. Its only
known species, Darwinius...