Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 6 days 20 hours 31 minutes
Giant wombat sinuses, eating poo, dwarf crocodiles, deserts, speedos, sauropods in marine sediments. It's IPC4 day 2!
Welcome to our coverage of the 4th International Palaeontological Congress (IPC4) from Mendoza, Argentina.
Second part of our interview with Dr Tracy Aze from the University of Leeds about her research using planktonic forams to understand macroevolutionary change, as well as decoding their record to map major climate events and temperatures throughout geologi
In this episode we talk to Dr Tracy Aze from the University of Leeds about her research using planktonic forams to understand macroevolutionary change, as well as decoding their record to map major climate events and temperatures throughout geological his
We now find ourselves embarking upon our third year, but before we do so, we're going to take a look back at last year and see what we've all been up to.
The second part of our look at the canids with Dr Xiaoming Wang of the Natural History Museum, Los Angeles.
We're all familiar with canines, but these are just one of three subfamilies of Canidae. What were the other canids like? We're joined by Dr Xiaoming Wang of the Natural History Museum, Los Angeles.
Dr. Allison Daley on anomalocaridids and piecing together enigmatic Cambrian fossils
We speak to Julius Csotonyi about palaeoart and run our first ever competition
Graham Young discusses the medusozoan fossi record in this, the second part of a two-part episode.