This ancient, armored sea monster snatched its marine prey with a formidable bite more than 300 million years ago. Belonging to the fierce Dunkleosteus genus, it was among the planet’s first apex ...
Megalodon usually gets all the attention when it comes to sea monsters, but ancient oceans were full of predators just as strange and scary. Fossils tell us that long before modern sharks ruled the ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Newly described muscle anatomy (right) and overall jaw anatomy of Dunkleosteus terrelli (center), compared to a more typical ...
Nautilus: Russell Engelman, graduate student and research assistant in biology at the College of Arts and Sciences, discussed his recent research on Dunkleosteus, Cleveland's prehistoric sea monster. ...
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Fossil hints sea monster roamed beyond the ocean
New fossil discoveries are forcing scientists to redraw the boundaries of ancient oceans, suggesting that some of the most formidable marine predators did not always stay at sea. From gigantic ...
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Popular Science: Russell Engelman, graduate student in biology at the College of Arts and Sciences, collaborated with an international team of researchers from Australia, the United Kingdom and Russia ...
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