With spring in full force and average temperatures on an uphill climb, Canada's great outdoors is now bustling with wildlife. Many of the animals are now on the move, leaving behind tracks, markings ...
About 50 million years ago, a small bird waded along a lakeshore in what today is central Oregon. A worm wriggled at its feet. The bird appeared to probe the silty earth with its beak, once, twice, ...
Rock faces in Namibia are decorated with hundreds of stone-age images not only of animals and human footprints, but also of animal tracks. These have been largely neglected to date as researchers ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
115,000-year-old footprints found in a place where humans weren’t supposed to be
Across a wind-swept basin in Saudi Arabia’s Nefud Desert, a now-vanished lake once attracted wildlife during a brief climatic ...
Did you know that every animal has its own unique footprint? Just like people have fingerprints, animals leave footprints behind that make it easy to identify what type of animal has been around even ...
Animal sanctuary in Agua Dulce that rescues exotic animals is back open for public and private tours
AGUA DULCE, Calif. (KABC) -- At Animal Tracks in Agua Dulce, you'll find over 70 different types of exotic animals - most rescued from wildlife or the exotic pet trade. "We had a friend that started ...
Fossilized footprints and tracks dating back 50 million years ago discovered at the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument could provide new insight into how prehistoric animals lived in Oregon. The ...
People must be the easiest creatures in the world to track, if the dirt paths at the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum are any indication. They are filled with "people tracks" from sneakers and hiking ...
Earlier this year, a new study was published with a groundbreaking discovery from the John Day Fossil Beds Monument in central and eastern Oregon. While the park is mostly known for what are commonly ...
PETBOOK magazine on MSN
Tracks in the snow: Can you identify all 11 native wild animals?
Between trees, on paths, and at forest edges, animal tracks tell of a lively, mostly unseen nightlife. Mud and fresh snow act like nature’s notepad–each animal leaves its own unique signature. For our ...
Three-toed fossil footprints that date back more than 210 million years were pressed into soft mud by bipedal reptiles with feet like a bird’s, a new analysis of the tracks has revealed. The ...
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