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Lets head back to the beginning of life on land in the Silurian over 400 million years ago, before visiting the amazing sea creatures of the Cambrian 510 Million years ago. Species that appeared in this episode include: Cooksonia, Prototaxites, Vauxia gracilenta, Pirania muricata, Eiffelia globose, Thaumaptilon walcotti, Anomalocaris, Opabinia, Hallucigenia, Olenoides serratus, and Wiwaxia […]
One of the more whimsical names for a fossil site, come visit the Gogo formation of Western Australia as we go back 380 million years to visit a Devonian reef. Organisms that make an appearance include: stromataporoids, stromatolites, ammonites, Montecaris gogoensis, Conulariida, canthodians, tabulate coral, zooxanthellae, eurypterids, rugose coral, placoderms, and McNamaranspis kaprios.
Want to know more about the Tully Monster from Mazon Creek? Listen in to hear the story of this strange creature.
The movie Ice Age came out in 2002 and was a large part of the childhood of kids who were born in the 1990s. Set 20,000 years ago it gets some stuff right and some stuff wrong, so tune in for a bite sized breakdown of just what we see in the Ice Age movie.
This episode we head to the Permian which lasted from 299 Million years ago to 252 Million years ago, and has been excellently preserved in the red beds of Texas, USA. Listen in as we discover the unique plants and animals of the Permian.
There are a surprising amount of laws regarding fossils, so tune in as we go over a few of them.
Continuing our trek back in time, we head to northern Argentina to visit the Ischigualasto Formation as it was in the Triassic 230 million years ago.
The Balabansai formation located in western Asia preserves fossils from the middle Jurassic 168-161 million years ago. So take a trip back in time to visit our world when it looked much different.
Politics can play a surprising large role in paleontology, and one of the easiest to track of these is in China. So tune in for a look at how politics has affected Chinese paleontology.
Hell Creek in Montana has fossils from the end Cretaceous around 66 million years old including some of the most iconic dinosaurs in the US as well as plants, mammals, reptiles, and aquatic invertebrates.
Let’s talk about a giant fossil guinea pig.
Seymour Island, Antarctica has fossils from the late Cretaceous through the Eocene which gives a unique perspective of what the southernmost continent may have been like.
The age of the earliest flowering plant is still a huge topic of debate. Let’s talk about some of the possible oldest fossil flowering plants.
Time to head back to the Miocene while visiting the Calvert Cliffs located in Maryland, USA.
On this Fossil Friday Bite, chew on a fossil of a pregnant giant marine reptile from millions of years ago.
Travel across the equator with me as we visit the Eocene fossil site Laguna del Hunco. This fossil site is very important to me as I work on fossils from here, and I hope you enjoy it as much as I do. Also, fair warning that my pronunciation is terrible, I’m working on it.
Ever wondered how fossils are named? Check out this bite-sized episode to learn more.
This episode we are headed back 11 million years to the Hammerschmiede clay pit in Bavaria, Germany.
For our first episode of Fossil Friday Bites, short episodes that deep dive into a specific topic, we are taking a look at what are fossils, how are they made, and why the fossil record is important.
This episode we head to the Gray Fossil Site in Northeast Tennessee stepping back 4.5 million years to explore the Pliocene forest.
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