New prehistoric monument dating back 4,500 years is discovered in English countryside 

A hole new ‘Stonehenge’! New prehistoric monument dating back 4,500 years made up of 15ft-deep shafts in a mile-wide circle is discovered in English countryside New prehistoric shafts have been discovered around Durrington Walls henge  Coring suggests the features are Neolithic, excavated over 4,500 years ago  It is thought the shafts served as a boundary … Read more

World’s biggest reptile egg laid by a prehistoric sea monster 66 million years ago

A soft egg belonging to a giant sea lizard discovered near Antarctica wasn’t the only major egg-related discovery. A team of researchers examining dinosaur remains claim soft eggs laid by dinosaurs may not be as unusual as scientists first thought – claiming that early dinosaurs laid these type of eggs. The study, led by the American … Read more

Dozens of prehistoric, Roman and medieval sites are discovered by lockdown archaeologists

Citizen scientists searching aerial images while on coronavirus lockdown have uncovered dozens of previously-hidden Roman, prehistoric and medieval sites.  Archaeological digs are currently on hold due to the pandemic but researchers have found roads, burial mounds and settlements – all while working from home. Researchers from the University of Exeter asked teams of volunteers to … Read more

Prehistoric ANCHOVIES evolved terrifying fangs and an enormous sabre-tooth 66million years ago

You wouldn’t fancy that on a pizza: Prehistoric ANCHOVIES evolved terrifying fangs and an enormous sabre-tooth 66million years ago Two prehistoric species of anchovy were found in Belgium and Pakistan  Analysis of the fossilised remains revealed the unusual dentition of the fish  They had sharp fangs on the bottom jaw and a lone sabre-tooth on the top … Read more

Deadly prehistoric crocodiles mimicked whales and dolphins

Deadly prehistoric crocodiles mimicked the anatomy of dolphins and whales to dominate Jurassic seas 170 million years ago, new research shows.  Scottish researchers say the extinct crocs, called thalattosuchians, evolved from their land-roaming ancestors to become fast swimming predators.  The 33-foot-long creatures adapted their limbs into flippers, streamlined their bodies and formed whale-like fluked tails … Read more