A record-breaking dinosaur print found on Yorkshire's coast may have been left by a predator stopping for a rest 166 million years ago, researchers believe.
The saddle was made between 727 and 396 BCE – making it at least as old as the previous record-breaking saddles, and potentially much older.
The creature is believed to be a type of pliosaur — fearsome predators that had huge skulls, giant teeth and a bite force more powerful than that of a Tyrannosaurus Rex.
The discovery of an "ocean" beneath the Earth's surface is a fascinating revelation that has the potential to change our understanding of the planet's composition. This brings us one step closer to Jules Verne's idea of an ocean inside the Earth.
Enigma of origins of Bronze Age Levant's tin supply solved through isotope and chemical composition analysis that shows 13th–12th century BCE tin bars likely came from Cornwall
Researchers say they've discovered the ruins of the long-lost Temple of Hercules in a shallow channel in the Bay of Cádiz.
Archaeologists using genetic testing have proven that Caucasians roamed China's Tarim Basin thousands of years before East Asian people arrived.
Researchers describe genomes from ten individuals up to 7,500 years old that help to show gene flow from people moving in the opposite direction from North America to North Asia.
The famed lost city of Atlantis may have been found in a rather unlikely place — the Sahara Desert.
In addition, the space probe identified at least eight "strange brilliant spots" in a 55-mile-wide crater, which are considered to be made of a highly reflecting substance.