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A well-preserved dinosaur footprint has been discovered by a four-year-old girl on a beach.
Lily Wilder spotted it at Bendricks Bay, Barry, in the Vale of Glamorgan - and scientists believe it could help establish how they walked.
The footprint, spotted in January, is 220 million years old and had been preserved in mud.
While it is impossible to tell what type left it, the print is 10cm long and likely from a 75cm tall dinosaur.
National Museum Wales palaeontology curator Cindy Howells described it as "the best specimen ever found on this beach".
Easy Podcast: La fascinante historia del "Chupacabras" - Easy EspaƱol The Chupacabras: mythical creature, wild animal or urban legend? Listen to our podcast on this terrifying beast & decide for yourself! |
Trail Cam Photo Leads Experts to Question Mystery Animal in Maine What is THAT? A recent trail cam photo really raised eyebrows on whether Lowell, Maine has its own version of the Chupacabra. The photo posted by ... |
'Evil' blood-sucking creature drains 50 livestock dry and vanishes without trace According to Mr Choque, the Chupacabra is a zombie-like mythological entity that feeds off of the blood of cattle. He said: "At first when two or three ...
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Chupacabra Blamed for 50 Mysterious Young Animal Deaths in Chile
They say that if trees produced Wi-Fi we’d be planting millions.
Instead, they ‘only’ help us breathe.
And for mangroves that is barely the beginning.
These quite extraordinary life forms are responsible for defending coastlines, harbouring monkeys, protecting reefs, providing nurseries (for sharks, that is), supporting communities and averting human-induced climate chaos at a rate better than pretty much any other tree.
They are the silent superheroes of the natural world.
They store carbon ten times more efficiently than any other forest - gargantuan storage equal to the annual emissions of China and the US combined. Put plainly, a lot.
But all that carbon is being released, all those communities are losing their livelihoods, all those sharks and reefs and monkeys are losing their lives.
Humanity’s disregard for the things that help us survive has meant mangroves are being pushed to breaking point. They are, quite literally, snapping under the pressure for our commercial benefit.
Their roots are being ripped from the ground and their trunks hacked apart for timber.
The havens for marine life are being obliterated and replaced with thick black excess from charcoal production and oil extraction.
Their habitat is being battered by roadbuilding, port construction and tourist infrastructure, because these mangrove trees are deemed to be dispensable.
It is nothing short of a massacre.
Less than half of the original expanse of these carbon-capturing wonders remains.
If this continues, the consequences could not be more serious. Whether mangroves survive or not will play a monumental part in the future of billions of people, billions of animals - and of our planet.
Our survival depends on them.
And their survival depends on people like you.
To turn this around we need support to increase our mangrove protection work across the globe - right now. Through your donations we are purchasing land dedicated to the protection, and restoration, of mangrove trees.
In the battle against climate change, we must not take our strongest allies for granted. The losses can’t go on - we must ensure there are enough of them to keep our planet thriving for generations to come. And with your support, we’ll do just that.
Please help save them. We must protect these trees in order to protect our planet - and if everyone reading this donates just £3 - you could help fund these projects and restore our natural regulators. Thank you.
It's amazing what treasures are tucked away in the collections of London's Natural History Museum - some not fully recognised yet even by the curators.
Take the example of two beetles wedged in the grooves of a piece of oak that was dug from a peat bog in the 1970s.
The insects were donated to the London institution by a farmer concerned they might be an invasive species. They weren't, and so were put in a drawer.
Only now have they been examined and shown to be nearly 4,000 years old.
The beetles are Oak Capricorns (Cerambyx), a species not previously known to have ever existed in Britain.
About the size of your thumb, they have wonderful long antennae. And if alive today and resident in the UK, they would certainly be among the country's largest beetles.
The UK government has given its support to a project to use oral contraceptives to control grey squirrel populations.
Environment minister Lord Goldsmith says the damage they and other invasive species do to the UK's woodlands costs the UK economy £1.8 billion a year.
The bizarre-sounding plan is to lure grey squirrels into feeding boxes only they can access with little pots containing hazelnut spread.
These would be spiked with an oral contraceptive.
Lord Goldsmith says the damage from squirrels also threatens the effectiveness of government efforts to tackle climate change by planting tens of thousands of acres of new woodlands.
On Tuesday, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) told BBC News: "We hope advances in science can safely help our nature to thrive, including through the humane control of invasive species."
A partnership of conservation and forestry organisations called the UK Squirrel Accord (UKSA) is behind the proposal.
Grizzly bear captured in Yellowstone confirmed as the region's oldest FACES BACKLASH FOR BIGFOOT 'HUNTING SEASON,' SAYS HE'S BEEN CALLED AN IDIOT. The grizzly bear was identified as Grizzly 168, the |
A seal which was trapped in a fishing net has been saved by a member of the public who managed to cut the netting.
The mammal was seen struggling on the shore in Felixstowe, Suffolk, on Saturday morning.
Jo Collins from the British Divers Marine Life Rescue said someone spotted the seal and managed to set it free on Sunday afternoon.
(CNN)A New York zoo has welcomed a baby red kangaroo with a rare condition that left park employees shocked.
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River monster! Moment huge catfish dubbed the 'Loch Ness of La Seine' by watching crowds is ... The massive catfish, which was nicknamed an 'ancient dinosaur' and 'monster', was released back into the river afterwards. Locals shocked as 'Loch ... |
A scientist has shed new light on the origins of Charles Darwin's "abominable mystery".
The famous naturalist was haunted by the question of how the first flowering plants evolved.
Darwin feared this inexplicable puzzle would undermine his theories of evolution, says Prof Richard Buggs.
Forgotten historical documents show a rival scientist was arguing for divine intervention in the rise of the flowering plants.
This greatly vexed Darwin in his final months, says the evolutionary biologist at Queen Mary, University of London.
Calgary Zoo takes extra COVID-19 precautions with pregnant gorilla by limiting human contact "We actually had based our precautions based on the big cat experiences, the fact that a number of big cat species — lions, tigers, snow leopards ... |