Previously believed to be plant or fungi, these giant organisms may have been a now-extinct fourth type of life.
International scientists have uncovered the oldest known phosphatic stromatoporoid sponge, dating back approximately 480 million years to the Early Ordovician, in South China.
Could supernovas have triggered ancient mass extinctions on Earth? New research explores how cosmic explosions may have ...
How did Earth's earliest seed plants capture pollen to reproduce? A team of scientists has uncovered new clues by ...
A research team linked nearby stellar explosions to at least one, possibly two, mass die-offs after calculating the supernova ...
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At least two mass extinction events in Earth's history were likely caused by the 'devastating' effects of nearby supernova explosions, a new study suggests. Researchers say these super-powerful blasts ...
Deaths of nearby massive stars may have played a significant role in triggering at least two mass extinction events in ...
Five 'mass extinctions' have decimated our planet since it was formed - now scientists claim the answers to two could be ...
Two of Earth’s five confirmed mass extinction events could have been caused by nearby supernova explosions stripping the planet’s ozone layer, a new study argues. Although the explanation has been ...
SEE ALSO: Hubble sees mini galaxies surrounding Andromeda are pretty wild A fossil of a type of brachiopod, Floweria chemungensis, went extinct in the late Devonian period. Credit: Andrew Bush ...