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Fossil and Archaeology News - September 2007 Archives
 | Until this year, digging for dinosaurs along the North Slope's Colville River in Alaska meant working on a narrow beach, with steep bluffs on one side and the river's swift, cold waters on the other. ...> Full Article |
 | An international team of researchers has cutting-edge, three-dimensional imaging technology to help crack the mystery of Homo floresiensis, a 3-foot-tall, 18,000-year-old skeleton nicknamed "The Hobbit." ...> Full Article |
 | Study uncovers evidence from 10 millions years ago ...> Full Article |
 | A dinosaur skeleton found 24 years ago near Choteau has finally been identified as a new species that links North American dinosaurs with Asian dinosaurs. The dinosaur would have weighed 30 to 40 pounds, walked on two feet and stood about three feet tall. The fossil came from sediment that's about 80 million years old. ...> Full Article |
 | A new look at some old bones have shown that velociraptor, the dinosaur made famous in the movie Jurassic Park, had feathers. The discovery was made by paleontologists at the American Museum of Natural History and the Field Museum of Natural History. ...> Full Article |
A team of researchers have determined through analysis of the earliest known hominid fossils outside of Africa, recently discovered in Dmanisi, Georgia, the former Soviet republic, that the first human ancestors to inhabit Eurasia were more primitive than previously thought.
...> Full Article
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