Dinosaurs weren’t dying out before the asteroid hit—they were thriving in vibrant, diverse habitats across North America.
A groundbreaking study has revealed that dinosaurs in New Mexico were thriving right up until the asteroid impact that led to ...
Newly dated fossils from New Mexico challenge the idea that dinosaurs were in decline—and suggest instead they had formed flourishing communities.
A new study is challenging a long-standing view of the final days of the dinosaurs. For decades, many palaeontologists ...
A new study of dinosaur biodiversity challenges the belief that the megafauna were on their way out 66 million years ago ...
Of all the mysteries surrounding dinosaurs, none has sparked more debate than how their era ended—was it a gradual decline or a sudden catastrophe? A new study led by Andrew Flynn of New Mexico State ...
Fossil evidence from New Mexico shows dinosaurs were still strong, diverse, and thriving before their sudden extinction 66 ...
New findings indicate dinosaurs were flourishing just before the asteroid strike. Fossils from New Mexico show diverse and healthy dinosaur populations. This evidence supports the theory that the ...
Study challenges long-held assumptions, finding late-surviving dinosaurs lived in vibrant, regionally distinct communities ...
Fossils found in New Mexico’s San Juan Basin are reshaping what scientists know about the final days of the dinosaurs. A research team led by New Mexico State University’s Dr. Andrew Flynn discovered ...
New evidence has emerged that dinosaurs in North America were thriving, and not in decline, before the asteroid hit.
New research indicates that dinosaur populations in North America were thriving just before the asteroid impact 66 million years ago, which triggered their mass extinction.