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skeleton: search

16th-century skeleton identified as astronomer Copernicus

This article was first published on guardian.co.uk on Friday November 21 2008. It was last updated at 12.37 on November 21 2008.

Poachers find thriving market for fossils

A dinosaur skeleton that vanished from Mongolia likely was sold on the black market, says a fossil hunter from the Cleveland Museum of Natural History.

Poachers find thriving market for fossils

A dinosaur skeleton that vanished from Mongolia likely was sold on the black market, says a fossil hunter from the Cleveland Museum of Natural History.

Exhibition traces Darwin's evolution revolution

AFP – The vestigial legs on the skeleton of a reticulated python are shown through a magnifying glass at the …

Poachers find thriving market for fossils

CLEVELAND, Nov. 30 (UPI) -- A dinosaur skeleton that vanished from Mongolia likely was sold on the black market, says a fossil hunter from the Cleveland Museum of Natural History.

Swedish DNA tests confirm remains of Copernicus

Strands of hair found in a book at Uppsala University have been used to confirm that a skeleton discovered in Poland is that of 16th century astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus.

Mariah sets New York alight with barely-there Halloween costume

For most people Halloween dressing calls for a scary witch outfit or perhaps some ghoulish make-up and a skeleton-print costume. Mariah Carey, though, has always bucked the trend when it comes to her wardrobe.

'Fishapod' Reveals Origins of Head and Neck Structures of First Land Animals

Newly exposed parts of Tiktaalik roseae, the intermediate fossil between fish and the first animals to walk out of water onto land, are revealing how this evolutionary event happened. The first detailed look at the internal head skeleton of Tiktaalik shows how it was gaining structures that allowed it to support itself on solid ground and breathe air. Full Story


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