India Today on MSN
Lost world that existed before humans found in Jharkhand coal mine
The findings offer rare insights into how ancient continental environments responded to periodic marine incursions during the Permian period.
Researchers investigated the Ashoka Coal Mine in the North Karanpura Basin of Jharkhand, where layers of coal and shale preserved a rich archive of ancient plant fossils and chemical signatures.
Indian Defence Review on MSN
A 307-Million-Year-Old Creature Found in a Fossilized Tree Is Turning Early Animal History on Its Head
A 307-million-year-old skull from Nova Scotia is overturning a core assumption about when animals first began eating plants.
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Scientists have uncovered embryos older than most dinosaur fossils, did they give birth to live young?
An international team of paleontologists has uncovered the oldest known fossil reptile embryos, dating back approximately 280 ...
Oil Price US on MSN
Trump's Energy Dominance Clashes with Soaring Bills at Home
Higher gas prices could become a political risk, as export growth may raise domestic costs ahead of midterms.
In its 3Q25 release, Cheniere reported revenue of $4.4 billion, a figure that was up 18% year-over-year – although it missed expectations by $43 million. The company’s bottom line, reported as a GAAP ...
The Trump administration has taken a major step in dismantling American climate policy, while global temperatures continue to rise and extreme weather events become more frequent, leading to a call ...
DecorHint on MSN
These Prehistoric Caves In California Were Once A Route 66 Attraction (Now Only 30 People Can Visit Per Day)
Deep in the Mojave Desert, far from crowded highways and neon city lights, hides a cave system most travelers don’t even know exists. Mitchell Caverns once lured Route 66 road-trippers looking for ...
The 300 million-year-old Tyrannoroter heberti had teeth specialized for eating plants, making it one of the oldest species to ...
A new study suggests features in the prehistoric creature's mouth helped it eat more efficiently, giving the species the energy needed to go airborne ...
Could Spinosaurus swim? A new fossil with a scimitar-like head crest provides new evidence on the unsettled question.
The juvenile dinosaur is so well preserved that its individual cells can still be identified under a microscope.
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