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Just as human juveniles happen to lose their baby teeth to make way for much larger and stringer adult teeth, scientists now believe that dinosaurs may have followed a similar process as they matured.
When you think of dinosaur teeth, your mind likely jumps to the terrifying, bone-crushing daggers of a Tyrannosaurus rex. However, the title for the most peculiar dental arrangement belongs to a much ...
Fossilized dinosaur teeth are turning out to be much more than ancient leftovers — they’re helping scientists figure out what these massive animals ate, how they coexisted, and even how far they might ...
A dinosaur that resembled a penguin-goose mix with too many teeth has been discovered in the depths of the Gobi Desert. The near-complete skeleton was unearthed in 2008 from the Baruungoyot Formation, ...
Dinosaurs may have vanished millions of years ago, but their teeth still carry a message from Earth’s distant past. A team of scientists from the Universities of Göttingen, Mainz, and Bochum has shown ...
Scratches on dinosaur teeth could reveal what they really ate. Dental microwear texture analysis (DMTA) has now been used to infer the feeding habits of large theropods, including Allosaurus and T.
New research led by Michael D. D'Emic, an assistant professor of biology at Adelphi University, indicates that a 70-million-year-old dinosaur shed and replaced its teeth like a shark about every two ...
A collection of dinosaur teeth hailing back to the Cretaceous and Jurassic periods has given scientists a new window into the world's prehistoric climate. By studying an isotope of oxygen in the ...