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
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