Vomit normally isn't celebrated or something people ogle over, but exceptions can seemingly be made when it's 66 million years old. Peter Bennicke, a local fossil hunter, discovered the blob at the ...
In the Cretaceous period, a shark or another kind of fish found sea lilies less than digestible. What you might expect followed. By Victor Mather Let’s be candid here. Vomit is something you want to ...
A piece of fossilized vomit, dating back to when dinosaurs roamed the earth, was discovered in Denmark, the Museum of East Zealand said on Monday. A local amateur fossil hunter made the find on the ...
Something smells rotten in the state of Denmark. Or, rather, it did 66 million years ago, Danish scientists say, announcing the recent discovery of very old shark vomit on the country’s Cliffs of ...
About 66 million years ago, just before the mass extinction that wiped out the dinosaurs, a fish chewed up and spit out some sea creatures. Unbeknownst to that fish, its rejected meal was preserved in ...
Sixty-six million years ago, a marine creature, minding its own business at the bottom of a Cretaceous sea, munched on some sea lilies—then didn’t feel too great. Now, a fossil hunter in Denmark named ...