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New Dinosaur Finds In Antarctica Paint Fuller Picture Of Past Ecosystem
February 9, 1998 A team of Argentinean and U.S. scientists has found fossils of a duck-billed dinosaur, along with remains of Antarctica's most ancient bird and an array of giant marine reptiles, on Vega Island ... > full story -
Archaeological CD-ROM Breaks New Ground
January 28, 1998 A unique new CD-ROM full of scholarly detail and general information about North Carolina's Occaneechi Indians could change academic publications in archaeology ... > full story -
Yaba-Daba-Glue! Stone-Age Use Of Collagen Discovered
October 16, 1997 Weizman Institute scientists have discovered that stone-age cavemen had mastered advanced technology for producing collagen glue from animal skins, several thousands years earlier than ancient ... > full story -
Colorado State Anthropologist Finds Fossil Treasures In Africa
October 15, 1997 Colorado State University anthropologist Diane Waddle has uncovered a fossil find that could fill important gaps in the fossil record of Botswana, Africa. Her excavations in Bone Cave has uncovered a ... > full story -
Notre Dame Paleontologist Finds Damage Done To T. Rex Skull
September 30, 1997 The skull of what is believed to be the largest Tyrannosaur on record has been seriously damaged by poachers on the northeastern Montana cattle ranch where the fossilized dinosaur skeleton was found, ... > full story -
University Of Cincinnati Archaeologists Uncover Statue Of Roman Emperor Augustus
September 22, 1997 A birthday "surprise" of sorts for Augustus, the first emperor of Rome -- known for his defeat of Egyptian queen Cleopatra and her lover, Marc Antony has been uncovered at Troy by an ... > full story -
Speedy Land Travelers Or Seagoing Sailors? Temple Archaeologist Investigates Earliest Americans
June 12, 1997 Were the first Americans coastal sailors or speedy bands of land-bound hunters? Once, most archaeologists agreed that ancient hunters raced southward over the Bering Land Bridge to the tip of South ... > full story
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