News

Scientists at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science discovered a 67 million-year-old dinosaur fossil hidden under their ...
Researchers from the Denver Museum of Nature and Science did not have to look far to acquire a new artifact after they ...
A drilling project at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science has unearthed a dinosaur fossil dating back 70 million years.
Proteins from an ancient rhino tooth unearthed in the Canadian Arctic have allowed scientists to look much deeper into the ...
While drilling for a geothermal tap, museum scientists took the opportunity to study what lay below the surface. To their surprise, they hit something unexpected: a dinosaur bone -- the oldest and ...
Finding a dinosaur bone in a core is like hitting a hole in one from the Moon,” James Hagadorn, the museum’s curator of ...
A team of paleontologists led by National Geographic Explorer Paul Sereno uncovered a trove of dinosaur fossils in the Sahara ...
What did long-necked dinosaurs eat—and where did they roam to satisfy their hunger? A team of researchers has reconstructed ...
We won the dinosaur lottery,” says curator James Hagadorn, who helped ID the 67.5-million-year-old bit of bone.
What are the odds of drilling a two-inch hole and hitting a 67.5-million-year-old dinosaur bone over 760 feet below a museum parking lot? Statistically speaking, it’s nearly impossible. As Denver ...
A common scanning method used to create ‘virtual copies’ of precious fossils could be erasing some of the crucial information ...
Can it be that the most elusive dinosaur finds today arise not from windswept badlands but from the engineered depths of beneath a city parking lot? At the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, a ...