SARASOTA, Fla. (WWSB) - Venice is known as the shark tooth capital of the world with people coming from near and far to look for teeth every day.
A detailed study published in The Anatomical Record explains how the 14-foot armored fish was indeed an “evolutionary oddball ...
If you ever come face-to-face with the wrong kind of shark, there's something you probably want to avoid. Just a hint: ...
CITES CoP20 has agreed new international trade protections for sharks and rays.Proposals up for consideration for Parties at ...
This mouth structure wasn’t an evolutionary relic, however. It was actually a specialized feature that allowed them to thrive. It now appears Dunkleosteus boasted a head and jaw more reminiscent of a ...
A new study found several species in the shark genus Carcharhinus are at risk of extinction. If so, ecosystems could fall ...
The critically endangered oceanic whitetip shark has become the first of more than 70 shark and ray species proposed for ...
After examining the fossils, scientists think the huge prehistoric predator would have measured up to eight metres in length ...
The iconic, armored, 14-foot-long Dunkleosteus was something of an "evolutionary oddball,” a new study has revealed.
About 360 million years ago, the shallow sea above present-day Cleveland was home to a fearsome apex predator: Dunkleosteus terrelli. This 14-foot armored fish ruled the Late Devonian seas with ...
VIRGINIA BEACH — One of the most fearsome predators to rule the seas millions of years ago may have left something behind at Virginia Beach’s North End. Terry Siviter and his 5-year-old grandson, ...
If current extinction trends continue, global shark populations will lose much of their variety, thereby threatening ecosystems where specialized species serve vital roles, researchers have found.
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