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Up until the 21st Century, dinosaur fossils were extremely rare to find in Australia, according to Matt Hearne, curator at the Australian Age of Dinosaurs Museum. The massive island continent was ...
He set up his own museum in a shed, which would later become a nonprofit called the Australian Age of Dinosaurs. Locals who knew and trusted him started coming to him with their own findings.
As for Elliott, he uncovered so many dinosaur bones that he set up his own museum called the Australian Age of Dinosaurs, which attracted 60,000 visitors in 2021, according to the NYT.
The first reported fossilised stomach contents from a sauropod, belonging to a Diamantinasaurus that lived 95 million years ago, has confirmed a long-held theory of herbivorous behaviour.
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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNFirst Fossil Evidence That Sauropods Were Herbivores Supports a Widespread Assumption About the Long-Necked DinosaursSince the late 1800s, experts have thought that the long-necked dinosaurs known as sauropods were herbivores. Given the flat shape of their small teeth and the giant size of their bodies—which were ...
An artist’s illustration of Diamantinasaurus matildae’s head. This sauropod lived in Australia 100 million years ago. Elena Marian/Australian Age of Dinosaurs Museum of Natural History ...
Australian Age of Dinosaurs collection manager Mackenzie Enchelmaier holds up sauropod gut content fossil. (Stephen Poropat/Curtin University) For that matter, the plants in Judy’s guts were severed, ...
The first ever discovery of sauropod stomach contents has revealed new insights into the dietary habits of these enormous dinosaurs, including support for the long-held idea that they were herbivores.
This animal, from before the age of the dinosaurs, was a dog-like creature that was ... No Bones About It: 100-Million-Year-Old Bones Reveal New Species of Pterosaur ...
This well-preserved track from Australia clearly shows the four toes of an ancient bird. Melissa Lowery. The Age of Dinosaurs wasn’t just a heyday of spiky and toothy giants.
Staff and volunteers at the Australian Age of Dinosaurs Museum of Natural History were excavating a relatively complete subadult sauropod skeleton.
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