Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The church publishes the ...
A team of Pakistani researchers claims to have unearthed a 1.1 million-year-old stegodon tusk in the central province of Punjab, potentially shedding new light on the mammal's evolutionary journey.
Archeologists have discovered the fossilized remains of a prehistoric relative of modern elephants in southwest China's Yunnan Province, they announced on Tuesday. The fossil of the stegodon, which ...
THE first-ever fossil skull of a Stegodon — an extinct relative of modern elephants — was discovered by a local in Solana, Cagayan (northern Luzon), revealing how ancient elephants dispersed and moved ...
Make this your preferred source to get more updates from this publisher on Google. The first-ever skull of a Stegodon—an extinct relative of modern elephants—was discovered in Solana, Cagayan, with ...
The presence of Stegodon’s fossil has indicated the existence of lots of river channels and dense forests in the area at that time. Other fossils that existed with Stegodon’s were those of ...
KHARIAN, Pakistan, Feb. 16 (UPI) --A team of paleontologists from Punjab University have unearthed a 1.1 million-year-old stegodon tusk. The tusk stretches 8-feet in length and measures 8-inches ...
Tham Le Stegodon is an unfamiliar name. It is a river cave located between Satun and Trang provinces in the South, about 900km from Bangkok. The cave has been promoted as a new tourist destination by ...
Tusk measures some eight feet in length and is around eight inches in diameter, making it the largest ever discovered in the country LAHORE, Pakistan: A team of Pakistani researchers claims to have ...
The first-ever skull of a Stegodon—an extinct relative of modern elephants—was discovered in Solana, Cagayan, with experts believing that the fossil could be from the "teenage" creature that could be ...
A joint team of forest officials and wildlife organisation World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) has claimed to have discovered fossil of a stegodon — a now-extinct elephant species known as Proboscideans ...