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Dino Dive

Paleontologists find tiny, flamboyant dinosaur in ground-breaking discovery

This dinosaur has a distinct display.

ByTara Yarlagadda
Eat your carbs!

Science debunks a misleading myth about the paleo diet

Our ancestors enjoyed carbs as part of varied diets.

ByKnowable Magazine and Diana Kwon
Science

The real Paleo diet: Scientists debunk ancient food myths

“Archaeology is just like everything else. Women tend to get kind of left on the sidelines.”

ByCarolyn Wilke and Knowable Magazine
Science

Oldest cooked food ever found upends the "Paleo" theory of ancient human diets

Could jazzing up dinner be a human trait that is tens of thousands of years old?

ByThe Conversation and Ceren Kabukcu
Death orgy

45 million years later, a paleontologist realizes fossil frogs died having sex

Hopefully they had a good time.

ByElana Spivack
check please

Neanderthal gut microbiome debunks 1 big myth about paleo diets

Researchers studied ancient fecal samples to better understand what the Neanderthal gut microbiome might have looked like.

BySarah Wells
Always a critic

10 incredible pieces of dinosaur art, ranked by a paleontologist

Did Tyrannosaurus rexes really look like that?

ByJennifer Walter
Clever girl

Paleontology innovation reveals strange truth about how dinosaurs walked

One step closer to Jurassic Park.

BySarah Wells
Clingy

Paleontologists uncover fossils of Earth's earliest parasites

More than 500 million years ago, parasites were already stealing from their hosts.

ByNina Pullano
Chomp

Paleontologists discover rare signs of dinosaur cannibalism in Colorado

Theropod dinosaurs like Allosaurus likely resorted to scavenging and cannibalism to make it through the toughest times finds new research.

ByNina Pullano
Jurassic Life

Paleontologists unearth a "real Jurassic Park" in Scotland

“It was... a haven for dinosaurs of all kinds: big ones, small ones, meat-eaters, plant-eaters, long-necked giants, sharp-toothed T. rex relatives, plate-backed stegosaurs…”

ByNina Pullano
Science

Trump's Cuts to Grand Staircase Monument Threaten Key Paleontology Sites 

We've only revealed a fragment of its story.

ByP. David Polly
Science

Why Museums Need to Digitize Fossils to Understand Past Mysteries 

Lost treasures are waiting to be found.

ByCharles Marshall
Science

Auction of $2.3 Million Dinosaur Skeleton in France Angers Paleontologists

These scientists are not having it.

ByPeter Hess
Science

Paleoartist Gives Toronto Raptors Logo a Strange Yet Accurate Redesign

"Dinosaurs were a lot chubbier and fluffier than most people think."

ByDanny Paez
Science

Having Big Genitals Sometimes Leads to Extinction, Say Paleobiologists

Bigger isn't always better, at least for some species.

BySarah Sloat
Science

The Great Dinosaur Hand-Off

Paleontologist Jordan Mallon builds on generations of work to answer new questions about how dinosaurs lived.

ByJacqueline Ronson
Science

Ancient Tooth Decay Reveals Carb-Filled Truth About Paleo Diet

ByYasmin Tayag
Science

Paleontology's Artistic Renaissance Will Be Violent AF

Paleontologist Donald Henderson makes the case for illustration as science one blood-soaked image at a time.

ByJacqueline Ronson
Science

Paleontologist Says Depressed T. Rex in Audi Ad Is Kinda Accurate

ByJames Grebey
Science

Paleoart Shows Dinosaurs Weren't the Terrible Lizards of Your Fantasies

Paleoartist John Conway believes art can beat science to the truth. 

ByJacqueline Ronson
Science

Play Paleontologist at These 5 Fossil-Filled Civilian Dinosaur Dig Sites

Because we all wanted to be Dr. Alan Grant.

ByJacqueline Ronson
Science

Paleontologists Explain Why Sauropod Dinosaurs Like the Brontosaurus Didn't Collapse

It takes a strong foundation to support a 100-ton beast.

ByJacqueline Ronson
Science

Machimosaurus Rex: Paleontologists Find Largest Marine Crocodile Ever

As big as a bus, this prehistoric croc was likely the top of its food chain.

ByIan Stark
Science

Dinosaurs Evolved From Dinosauromorphs Faster Than Paleontologists Thought

Yet early dinosaurs may have still shared the world with their predecessors for millions of years.

ByIan Stark