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Steve Brusatte

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New Scientist recommends a brilliant take on the evolution of birds

The Story of Birds Steve Brusatte, Picador (UK); Mariner Books (US) Steve Brusatte is three for three. His debut book for general audiences, The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs, was a big hit, and he followed it with The Rise and Reign of the Mammals, which I enjoyed very much. Now comes his third palaeontological tale, The Story of Birds and, once again, he manages to combine a rigorous account of the science with a readable narrative.

New Scientist 1d ago

A chromosome from a frozen rat has been resurrected inside mice

The de-extinction company Colossal Biosciences could be about to get leapfrogged. It might be possible to resurrect mammoth chromosomes in living cells after scientists transferred a chromosome from a rat that has been deep-frozen for more than a year into living mouse cells. They then generated entire mice in which some of their cells contain an added rat chromosome.

New Scientist 6d ago

New Velociraptor cousin was a '4-winged' dragon that hunted prey from the trees of ancient China, fossil find hints

New Velociraptor cousin was a '4-winged' dragon that hunted prey from the trees of ancient China, fossil find hints A new microraptor from Cretaceous China likely preyed on ancient birds. A newly discovered feathered dinosaur with four wing-like limbs may have prowled the lakeside forests of what is now northwestern China, gliding between trees like a flying squirrel and snatching some of the earliest birds out of the Cretaceous sky. The predator, named Jian changmaensis, was a close cousin...

Live Science 7d ago

Millions of fossil whale bones found in deep-ocean ‘necropolis’

The world’s deepest known whale graveyard has been discovered in the southern Indian Ocean at a depth of 7 kilometres. The remains found there include a new species of extinct beaked whale and other fossils that are over 5 million years old. In early 2023, Peng Zhou at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and his colleagues undertook 32 dives in a crewed submersible along 1200 kilometres of the seafloor, in an area known as the Diamantina Zone.

New Scientist 1d ago