More than 20,000 years ago in what’s now Argentina, some of the earliest people in the Americas encountered and butchered a giant armadillo-like creature with stone tools, according to a new study.
Recently archaeologists unearthed the remains of an ancient armadillo, but that’s not the big archeological discovery. Instead the marks made in the bones are of scientific significance as they are ...
When did people first arrive in South America? It's a matter of some debate, but curious marks cut into an ancient shelled mammal suggest that humans may have been roaming the continent thousands of ...
Since 2010, the Giant Armadillo Project has been dedicated to researching the world’s largest armadillo, an animal that, despite its size and range across almost every country in South America, is one ...
Tomorrow, Wednesday, Nov. 14th, you can take part in a special evening at the Reid Park Zoo, the “Conservation Connection.” Jed Dodds explains in today’s Zoo 4 You. Two formidable giants from another ...
A giant armadillo mural has appeared in Manchester’s Northern Quarter today to celebrate the release of a quirky new ...
Birds, unlike their dinosaur ancestors, lack teeth, relying on beaks and gizzards for eating. Some birds have evolved ...
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