Paleontology

A unique record of the American past may soon be open to mining.
“My heart was racing," paleontologist Joe Sertich said. "I realized it was a pretty important dinosaur find."
A natural history museum employee even chimed in with support.
The amber-encased hatchling, found in Myanmar, features feathers, skin, and other tissue.
“We don’t just have a skeleton. We have a dinosaur as it would have been.”
The print, found in Western Australia, is about 27 inches longer than the last suspected record-holder.
She turned heads, even though she could barely turn hers in the outfit.
"I just scooped it up before another wave came in.”
It's "essentially a prehistoric turducken," Discover magazine wrote.