A camera trap, lowered to the bottom of the Loch more than 50 years ago, has been discovered by scientists. An engineer was able to develop the film, which was still in a good condition.
The National Oceanography Centre revealed the more than half a century old camera became caught in Boaty McBoatface's ...
The Rockies, Shen Yun, Disney on Ice, Harlem Globetrotters, Rocky Mountain Train Show are back in Denver and the first ...
Engineers from the UK's National Oceanography Centre (NOC) were testing the deep sea worthiness of the autonomous vehicle, ...
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The Points Guy on MSNDinosaurs descend on US airportsBucky the T. rex is scheduled to leave IND around April 11, but air travelers can also encounter fossils of dinosaurs and ...
A camera trap deployed by a Loch Ness researcher in 1970 was recently recovered by an autonomous robot. Not only was it still intact—it still had film that could be developed, and the photos show a ...
The nearly complete specimen of a known plesiosaur species is opening scientists’ eyes to the diversification of these ...
A newly described plesiosaur fossil from southern Germany is providing crucial evidence about the diversification of these ancient marine reptiles during the Early Jurassic. Unearthed from the ...
(Image Credit: Klaus Nilkens/Urwelt-Museum Hauff/Marx et al.) After making a splash in early 2025 with the identification of its 183-million-year-old fossilized skin, the plesiosaur fossil MH7 ...
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