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A report in the journal Nature estimates that the amniote tracks date to between 350 million and 359 million years ago.
According to Professor John Long from Flinders University, these imprints challenge the traditional view of reptile evolution. According to the experts, the tracks suggest that these animals may have ...
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Scientists in Australia have identified the oldest known fossil footprints of a reptile-like animal on a slab of sandstone ...
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Agence France-Presse on MSNAncient reptile tracks rewrite when animals conquered landAfter a brief rain in part of the ancient supercontinent of Gondwana 350 million years ago, a reptile pressed its small claws ...
Rozonewski and Lam run JnW Rescue, a reptile rescue and rehabilitation center based in Vallejo. For years they have been ...
Fossilized claw tracks discovered in Australia show that the animal group that includes reptiles, mammals and birds formed ...
Fossil tracks found in Australia push the origin of reptiles back by 40 million years, altering the timeline of tetrapod ...
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New Scientist on MSNFossil tracks rewrite history of animals leaving water to live on landThe footprints of a reptile-like creature appear to have been laid down around 356 million years ago, pushing back the ...
How Ancient Reptile Footprints Are Rewriting the History of When Animals Evolved to Live on Land WASHINGTON (AP) — Scientists in Australia have identified the oldest known fossil footprints of a ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — Scientists in Australia have identified the oldest known fossil footprints of a reptile-like animal, dated to around 350 million years ago. The discovery suggests that after ...
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