Tyrannoroter heberti fossil shows one of the earliest land animals to eat plants, changing what we know about how ...
Life on Earth started in the oceans. Sometime around 475 million years ago, plants began making their way from the water onto the land, and it took another 100 million years for the first animals with ...
“ Tyrannoroter is the earliest and most complete vertebrate land herbivore to show adaptations that could process high-fiber ...
Life began in the sea, and it took a long time to move onto land. Plants started creeping ashore about 475 million years ago.
This football-sized creature could grind its teeth like a hard-core plant-eater, back before that was really a thing — and it ...
Hundreds of millions of years ago, the first animals to crawl onto land were strict meat-eaters, even as plants had already taken over the landscape. Now scientists have uncovered a ...
More than 300 million years ago, long before the first dinosaur let out a roar, a small, four-legged creature was busy ...
While most often its animals that consume plants, the opposite is true in a unique group of plants classified as carnivorous. Reference to the latter often conjures up images from movies of some ...