A Florida man recently found a prehistoric jackpot while diving off the Sunshine State’s coast. Lundberg, who studied marine biology at the University of South Florida, told Fox News Digital that he ...
As a teen, road trips to Dorset meant three things: Moores biscuits, swimming at the Durdle Door arch, and fossil hunting. We visited the seaside towns of Lyme Regis and Charmouth for exquisite fish ...
A lucky Florida family found a once-in-a-lifetime fossil that belonged to one of the biggest predators that ever roamed the ocean. Bricen Columbia, 19, found a 6.5-inch megalodon tooth in South ...
CINCINNATI -- Brenda Hunda wanted to be a paleontologist at 3 years old. As a teen growing up in Alberta, Canada, she hunted dinosaur fossils for fun, eventually donating three Tyrannosaurus rex teeth ...
Amateur fossil hunters have been digging at a spot near Mitchell, Oregon for years. They’ve found plenty of ammonites, and one dinosaur toe bone. A few years ago, the Bureau of Land Management granted ...
The Denver-based U.S. Geological Survey scientists who this month confirmed the oldest known human footprints in the Americas at White Sands National Park say their findings open the door for fossil ...
"The mammoth itself would have looked like a much bigger version of a modern-day elephant — up to 13 feet tall, and weighing 14 tons," noted the Peterborough Telegraph. Jordan, who reportedly found ...
GOOSE CREEK — Waist-deep in a Charleston-area river, a pair of goggles atop his head and inflatable tubes floating around him, fossil and treasure hunter Matthew Mitchell held up a mastodon tooth — a ...
The Dinosaur Artist chronicles the case of a poached dinosaur, and the politics that turned the dinosaur into a pawn The Dinosaur Artist chronicles the case of a poached dinosaur, and the politics ...
INDIANA JONES was no mere grubby excavator. An esteemed professor, he was also a looker who wore fedoras with élan. Among Americans looking to expend pent-up wanderlust and perhaps brag a little, the ...
Shipped the remains of an "extinct monster" from Kansas in the late 1860s, the young paleontologist Edward D. Cope excitedly identified the fossilized bones as belonging to a new family of plesiosaur, ...