December 8th, 2016 | by David Marshall
Researchers from China, Canada, and the University of Bristol have discovered a dinosaur tail complete with its feathers trapped in [&hellip
November 16th, 2016 | by Caitlin Colleary
This year, the 76th Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology was held in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. [&hellip
October 15th, 2016 | by Laura Soul
Graptolites are small colonial organisms, each made up of many tiny, genetically identical zooids joined together by tubes. They’ve been [&hellip
October 1st, 2016 | by Liz Martin-Silverstone
The last 10 years has shown a large increase in the number of new species and new discoveries of dinosaurs, as [&hellip
September 28th, 2016 | by David Marshall
Research carried out by Liverpool John Moores University (LJMU) has found that an African lungfish can leave trackways on sand [&hellip
September 16th, 2016 | by David Marshall
We sat down in the Senckenberg Museum, Frankfurt, with Dr Jakob Vinther, University of Bristol, to examine the colour patterns [&hellip
September 1st, 2016 | by David Marshall
Happy birthday Palaeocast! Who can believe that it’s already four years since we launched? We’ve done so much in that [&hellip
August 15th, 2016 | by David Marshall
Plants, Animals and fungi; these are all three of the Kingdoms of life we’re all most familiar with, but what [&hellip
August 1st, 2016 | by David Marshall
We’re into the third year of our art competition and the event just keeps getting bigger and bigger. We again [&hellip
August 1st, 2016 | by Laura Soul
The Bighorn Basin in Wyoming has been an important area for research into terrestrial ecosystems for decades. The basin formed [&hellip