home.social

#tracefossils — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #tracefossils, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Cool.

    "Two hundred and ninety million years ago, in a mountain valley within the central region of the supercontinent Pangaea, an apex predator snapped up at least three other animals and sometime later puked up the bones."

    sciencenews.org/article/fossil

    #Fossils #TraceFossils #Palaeontology

  2. "Thousands of years ago in what is now the Dominican Republic, there was a cave full of bones. And those bones were full of bees.

    In a paleontological first, researchers have discovered that bees used the jawbones of now extinct mammals as burrows."

    scientificamerican.com/article

    #Bees #Fossils #Bones #TraceFossils #Burrows

  3. "Thousands of years ago in what is now the Dominican Republic, there was a cave full of bones. And those bones were full of bees.

    In a paleontological first, researchers have discovered that bees used the jawbones of now extinct mammals as burrows."

    scientificamerican.com/article

    #Bees #Fossils #Bones #TraceFossils #Burrows

  4. "Thousands of years ago in what is now the Dominican Republic, there was a cave full of bones. And those bones were full of bees.

    In a paleontological first, researchers have discovered that bees used the jawbones of now extinct mammals as burrows."

    scientificamerican.com/article

    #Bees #Fossils #Bones #TraceFossils #Burrows

  5. "Thousands of years ago in what is now the Dominican Republic, there was a cave full of bones. And those bones were full of bees.

    In a paleontological first, researchers have discovered that bees used the jawbones of now extinct mammals as burrows."

    scientificamerican.com/article

    #Bees #Fossils #Bones #TraceFossils #Burrows

  6. "Thousands of years ago in what is now the Dominican Republic, there was a cave full of bones. And those bones were full of bees.

    In a paleontological first, researchers have discovered that bees used the jawbones of now extinct mammals as burrows."

    scientificamerican.com/article

    #Bees #Fossils #Bones #TraceFossils #Burrows

  7. Burrinjuckia (Parasitology 🧬)

    Burrinjuckia is an ichnogenus of bioclaustrations. Burrinjuckia includes outgrowths of the brachiopod's secondary shell with a hollow interior in the mantle cavity of a brachiopod. Burrinjuckia was probably a parasite. They have a stratigraphic range from the Late Ordovician to the Devonian. The earliest Burrinjuckia species B. clitam...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burrinju

    #Burrinjuckia #Parasitism #Paleozoology #Parasitology #TraceFossils #DevonianAnimals

  8. This looks IgNobel worthy. 🙂

    "A recent study described something no one had ever found before: a 126,000-year-old fossilized butt-drag.
    [...]
    It’s funny, but it’s also profound. Because that drag line, etched into stone, tells a story about memory, behavior, and the way even the smallest creatures leave their mark on Earth."

    climateages.com/the-126000-yea

    #Fossils #TraceFossils #Hyrax #Behaviour

  9. This looks IgNobel worthy. 🙂

    "A recent study described something no one had ever found before: a 126,000-year-old fossilized butt-drag.
    [...]
    It’s funny, but it’s also profound. Because that drag line, etched into stone, tells a story about memory, behavior, and the way even the smallest creatures leave their mark on Earth."

    climateages.com/the-126000-yea

    #Fossils #TraceFossils #Hyrax #Behaviour

  10. This looks IgNobel worthy. 🙂

    "A recent study described something no one had ever found before: a 126,000-year-old fossilized butt-drag.
    [...]
    It’s funny, but it’s also profound. Because that drag line, etched into stone, tells a story about memory, behavior, and the way even the smallest creatures leave their mark on Earth."

    climateages.com/the-126000-yea

    #Fossils #TraceFossils #Hyrax #Behaviour

  11. This looks IgNobel worthy. 🙂

    "A recent study described something no one had ever found before: a 126,000-year-old fossilized butt-drag.
    [...]
    It’s funny, but it’s also profound. Because that drag line, etched into stone, tells a story about memory, behavior, and the way even the smallest creatures leave their mark on Earth."

    climateages.com/the-126000-yea

    #Fossils #TraceFossils #Hyrax #Behaviour

  12. This looks IgNobel worthy. 🙂

    "A recent study described something no one had ever found before: a 126,000-year-old fossilized butt-drag.
    [...]
    It’s funny, but it’s also profound. Because that drag line, etched into stone, tells a story about memory, behavior, and the way even the smallest creatures leave their mark on Earth."

    climateages.com/the-126000-yea

    #Fossils #TraceFossils #Hyrax #Behaviour

  13. Pretty pebble - the iron rich circular spots that run through this pebble may have been the spaces that small burrows or roots made back when this was a soft mud over 300 million years ago.
    County Clare, Ireland.

    Cormacscoast.com walking tours

    #wildatlanticway #walkingtours #discoverireland #keepdiscovering #fossil #tracefossils #burrenandcliffsofmohergeopark #atlanticgeoparks #Ireland

  14. "Our new discovery, published today in Nature, details ancient fossil footprints found in Australia that upend the early evolution timeline of all tetrapods. It also suggests major parts of the story could have played out in the southern supercontinent of Gondwana.

    This fossil trackway whispers that we have been looking for the origin of modern tetrapods in the wrong time, and perhaps the wrong place."

    theconversation.com/two-lizard

    #Fossils #TraceFossils #Footprints #Research

  15. For today's #fossilfriday , here's a trace fossil, Ophiomorpha! These are the traces of burrows originally made by crustaceans. The nodules on the outside are the fossilized remains of the crustacean's faeces, which are used to strengthen the side of the burrow. This behaviour can also be seen in modern-day ghost shrimp.

    These were found near the boundary of the Bearpaw / Horseshoe Canyon formations.

    #palaeontology #paleontology #drumheller #alberta #ab #ophiomorpha #tracefossils

  16. A former mine at a fossil-rich site is causing the BLM headaches - Enlarge / Blasting taking place at the fossil-rich site. (credit: Burea... - arstechnica.com/?p=2001901 #horseshoecrabs #landmanagement #sciencepolicy #publicsafety #tracefossils #archeology #jellyfish #science #blm

  17. The fossilized sand ripples of an ancient sea floor - crisscrossed with the tracks of creatures that moved across it over 300 million years ago.
    County Clare, Ireland.

    Cormacscoast.com Walking tours

    #wildatlanticway #walkingtours #discoverireland #keepdiscovering #fossils #irishfossils #tracefossils #Ireland

  18. #FossilSunday in one of the two fossiliferous localities of 🇳🇱. #Triassic #ichnofossils aka #TraceFossils in a marginal marine warm lagoon that once stretched here and hosted nothosaurs, sharks, bony fish and, hopefully, also #conodonts

  19. #FossilSunday in one of the two fossiliferous localities of 🇳🇱. #Triassic #ichnofossils aka #TraceFossils in a marginal marine warm lagoon that once stretched here and hosted nothosaurs, sharks, bony fish and, hopefully, also #conodonts

  20. #FossilSunday in one of the two fossiliferous localities of 🇳🇱. #Triassic #ichnofossils aka #TraceFossils in a marginal marine warm lagoon that once stretched here and hosted nothosaurs, sharks, bony fish and, hopefully, also #conodonts

  21. #FossilSunday in one of the two fossiliferous localities of 🇳🇱. #Triassic #ichnofossils aka #TraceFossils in a marginal marine warm lagoon that once stretched here and hosted nothosaurs, sharks, bony fish and, hopefully, also #conodonts

  22. #FossilSunday in one of the two fossiliferous localities of 🇳🇱. #Triassic #ichnofossils aka #TraceFossils in a marginal marine warm lagoon that once stretched here and hosted nothosaurs, sharks, bony fish and, hopefully, also #conodonts

  23. Symbiotic relationships of bioclaustration #tracefossils with corals, lingulids, stromatoporoids and bryozoans are reported for the first time from the Late Ordovician of Estonia.

    Authors: Olev Vinn, Mark Wilson, Lars Holmer, Andrej Ernst, Oive Tinn and Ursula Toom.

    Full paper: palaeo-electronica.org/content