240-million-year-old ‘Chinese dragon’ fossil reveals 32 separate neck vertebrae By Laura Baisas / Feb 23, 2024
This ‘blue dragon’ sliced through the ancient Pacific with paddle-like fins By Laura Baisas / Dec 15, 2023
When a Jurassic giant died, predatory dinos probably feasted on the carcass By Laura Baisas / Nov 1, 2023
A boiling hot supercontinent could kill all mammals in 250 million years By Laura Baisas / Sep 28, 2023
This ‘gnarly-looking beast’ terrorized Brazil 265 million years ago By Sara Kiley Watson / Sep 14, 2023
Leggy dinosaur species could be the latest feathery clue to bird evolution By Laura Baisas / Sep 6, 2023
These toothy vegetarian dinosaurs have eluded paleontologists in Europe for decades By Laura Baisas / Sep 4, 2023
T. rex cousins with shorter arms were thriving right up until the asteroid hit By Laura Baisas / Aug 24, 2023
June was probably a terrible month to be a dinosaur. Here’s how we know. By Michael J. Benton / The Conversation
Archaeology Europe’s oldest human-made megastructure may be at the bottom of the Baltic Sea By Laura Baisas
Ask Us Anything Viagra and the abortion pill can treat multiple illnesses. But how? By Jocelyn Solis-Moreira
Science Fiction Vernor Vinge, influential sci-fi author who warned of AI ‘Singularity,’ has died By Andrew Paul
Science Fiction Reading sci-fi novels can help kids understand real science By Emily Midkiff/The Conversation
Science Fiction Giganotosaurus vs. T. rex: Who would win in a battle of the big dinosaurs? By Eva Botkin-Kowacki
Science Fiction What happens if AI grows smarter than humans? The answer worries scientists. By Rahul Rao
Space Carl Sagan in 1986: ‘Voyager has become a new kind of intelligent being—part robot, part human’ By Bill Gourgey