Teeth are composites of mineral and protein, with a bulk of bony dentin that is highly porous. This structure allows teeth to ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Dinosaur eggs the size of cannonballs were discovered packed with massive crystals instead of fossilized bones
Two nearly spherical dinosaur eggs recovered from eastern China have drawn international attention not because of what they ...
Forensic examination of three bone fragments located by a member of the public in the Yatina area, 220 km north of Adelaide, has determined they are ...
Indian Defence Review on MSN
Scientists Unearth Tiny Dinosaur in Brazil That Holds Big Secrets About Growth
A small dinosaur fossil uncovered in Brazil is shaking up theories about how sauropodomorphs grew. The specimen, a juvenile from the Late Triassic, shows signs of growth interruption, providing surpri ...
Scientists from several countries have identified a new dinosaur species called Foskeia pelendonum, a very small plant-eating ...
Study Finds on MSN
Chicken-Sized Dinosaur From Spain Rewrites 70 Million Years Of Evolution
Tiny Plant-Eater Has A Brain Case Like Nothing Scientists Have Seen In A Nutshell Advanced brain in a tiny body: Despite being only 18 inches long, Foskeia pelendonum had a surprisingly sophisticated ...
MIT.nano has added a new X-ray diffraction (XRD) instrument to its characterization toolset, enhancing facility users' ability to analyze materials at ...
A tiny structure hidden beneath the skin may hold clues to smoother skin and better healing. New research shows this feature forms after birth, not before, and scientists now know what controls it.
Tiny folds anchoring human skin, called 'rete ridges,' form soon after birth. They show an early-life window that could reshape aging.
The secret to youthful appearance and repairing scars may lie in a microscopic skin structure humans share with pigs and grizzly bears—but, surprisingly, not monkeys.
Pets Fanatic on MSN
Scientists identify chicken-sized dinosaur that rewrites the dinosaur family tree, filling a 70-million-year evolutionary gap
Scientists Identify Chicken-Sized Dinosaur That Rewrites the Dinosaur Family Tree, Filling a 70-Million-Year Evolutionary Gap ...
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