A 66-million-year-old fossilized vomit discovery in Denmark offers a rare glimpse into the prehistoric Cretaceous food chain.
An amateur fossil hunter has uncovered a piece of animal vomit which dates back 66 million years on a beach in Denmark.
A fossil hunter found a lump of prehistoric vomit roughly dated to the time of the mass extinction that wiped out the ...
The lump of vomit —more scientifically referred to as ‘regurgitate’—was discovered by Peter Bennicke as he walked along the ...
The fish is thought to have chewed up and spit out some unlucky sea creatures, resulting in this unique fossil.
Peter Bennicke stumbled across a real treasure while walking on the Stevns cliffs (Stevns Klint), a natural site south of Copenhagen. The Danish hiker came across some strange fragments of a piece of ...
Sixty-six million years ago, a marine creature, minding its own business at the bottom of a Cretaceous sea, munched on some ...
A cluster of 66-million-year-old fish vomit is a natural, national treasure in Denmark. The rare find shines a light on the ...
Paleontologists in Denmark found a once-gloopy, now-hardened mess that they believe was spat up by a Cretaceous-era fish.
A SCIENTIST made a bizarre discovery after breaking open a piece of chalk and finding 66 million-year-old fish vomit. The ...
The fossil was found at a cliff in Denmark. Fossilized vomit is called regurgitalite, and it's a type of trace fossil, which ...
A fragment of fossilized vomit has been discovered in the white limestone cliffs of Stevns Klint on the Danish island of ...