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Information on fossil sunglasses



Ancient Animal Treasures Found in Bahamas Sinkhole (LiveScience.com)
LiveScience.com - Fossil skeletons of an unusual land-roaming Cuban crocodile, a tortoise and 25 species of birds including a raptor known as a caracara are among the ancient treasures recently discovered in a sinkhole in the Bahamas. Expert diver Brian Kakuk and his colleagues retrieved these fossils, along with the bones of a lizard, snakes, humans and bats, along the floor and walls of Sawmill Sink, a saltwater cavern of a type called a blue hole on Abaco Island. ...

Ancient sea scorpion was bigger than a human (Reuters)

A handout image released in London November 21, 2007 shows a sea scorpion, a creature living before the age of dinosaurs. Scientists have found the fossilised claw of a 2.5-metre (8-foot) sea scorpion, a nightmarish creature living before the age of dinosaurs. The discovery of the 390-million-year-old specimen in a German quarry suggests that prehistoric spiders, insects, crabs and similar animals were much larger than previously thought, researchers at Britains Bristol University said on Wednesday. (Simon Powell/Handout/Reuters)Reuters - Scientists have found the fossilized claw of a 2.5-metre (8-foot) sea scorpion, a nightmarish creature living before the age of dinosaurs.




Over 50 New Designs at CTS Wholesale Sunglasses
CTS Wholesale Sunglasses has added a number of new designs to its array of sunglasses, so that you can find the exact pair of shades to suit your day. (PRWeb Nov 20, 2007) Post Comment:Trackback URL: http://www.prweb.com/pingpr.php/UHJvZi1GYWx1LVNxdWEtSG9yci1UaGlyLVplcm8=

New dinosaur species unveiled in Rio de Janeiro (AFP)

Argentine paleontologists Jorge Calvo (L) and Juan Porfiri unveil fossil remains of a new giant dinosaur species that lived 88 millions of years ago in the Patagonia region of Argentina, 15 October 2007 at the Brazilian Academy of Science in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Belonging to the Titanosaur family, and named Futalognkosaurus dukei, the newly discovered member of the Lognkosauria genus measured 32-34 meters (99-105 feet) and lived exclusively in Patagonia.(AFP/Antonio Scorza)AFP - Paleontologists from Argentina and Brazil on Monday unveiled a new giant dinosaur species that lived 88 millions of years ago in the Patagonia region of Argentina, where they found its fossils.




FramesDirect.com Releases New Version of FrameFinder Virtual Try-on
Patented software for trying on frames online now includes sunglasses. (PRWeb Oct 11, 2007) Post Comment:Trackback URL: http://www.prweb.com/pingpr.php/SG9yci1IYWxmLUxvdmUtVGhpci1UaGlyLVplcm8=

Paleontologist aims to preserve mountain (AP)
AP - The Robledo Mountains reputation as one of the worlds most important landscapes of pre-dinosaur fossil trackways likely will be enhanced by another discovery — petrified wood slowly emerging from the desert floor.

Fossil find pushes human-ape split back millions of years (AFP)

Fossils on display in Maropeng, South Africa, in 2005. Ten million-year-old fossils discovered in Ethiopia show that humans and apes probably split six or seven million years earlier than widely thought, according to a new landmark study.(AFP/File/Mujahid Safodien)AFP - Ten million-year-old fossils discovered in Ethiopia show that humans and apes probably split six or seven million years earlier than widely thought, according to landmark study released Wednesday.




Fossil hunter condemns Lucy tour of U.S. (AP)

Conservationist Richard Leakey speak to the Associated Press during an interview at his office, Friday, Aug. 10, 2007 in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi. Ethiopias decision to send the Lucy skeleton on a six-year-tour of the United States is akin to prostituting the fragile, 3.2 million year-old fossil, conservationist Richard Leakey said Friday. The Lucy skeleton, one of the worlds most famous fossils, was quietly flown out of Ethiopia earlier this week for the U.S. tour, which many experts say is a dangerous gamble with an irreplaceable relic. (AP Photo/Khaled Kazziha)AP - One of the worlds leading paleontologists denounced Ethiopias decision to send the Lucy skeleton on a six-year tour of the United States, warning Friday that the 3.2 million-year-old fossil will likely be damaged no matter how careful its handlers are.




 

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