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  2. Placoderm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Placoderm

    The largest member of this group, Dunkleosteus, was a true "superpredator" of the latest Devonian period, reaching 3 to as much as 8 metres in length. In contrast, the long-nosed Rolfosteus measured just 15 cm. Fossils of Incisoscutum have been found containing unborn fetuses, indicating that arthrodires gave birth to live young.

  3. Megarachne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megarachne

    Megarachne. Megarachne is a genus of eurypterid, an extinct group of aquatic arthropods. Fossils of Megarachne have been discovered in deposits of Late Carboniferous age, from the Gzhelian stage, in the Bajo de Véliz Formation of San Luis, Argentina. The fossils of the single and type species M. servinei have been recovered from deposits that ...

  4. Leedsichthys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leedsichthys

    Leedsichthys is an extinct genus of pachycormid fish that lived in the oceans of the Middle to Late Jurassic. [1] It is the largest ray-finned fish, and amongst the largest fish known to have ever existed. [2] The first remains of Leedsichthys were identified in the nineteenth century. Especially important were the finds by the British ...

  5. Riftia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riftia

    Riftia. Riftia pachyptila, commonly known as the giant tube worm and less commonly known as the giant beardworm, is a marine invertebrate in the phylum Annelida [1] (formerly grouped in phylum Pogonophora and Vestimentifera) related to tube worms commonly found in the intertidal and pelagic zones. R. pachyptila lives on the floor of the Pacific ...

  6. Paraceratherium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paraceratherium

    Paraceratherium is one of the largest known land mammals that have ever existed, but its precise size is unclear because of the lack of complete specimens. [4] Its total body length was estimated as 8.7 m (28.5 ft) from front to back by Granger and Gregory in 1936, and 7.4 m (24.3 ft) by the palaeontologist Vera Gromova in 1959, [ 33 ] but the ...

  7. Diprotodon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diprotodon

    Diprotodon is the largest-known marsupial to have ever lived; it greatly exceeds the size of its closest living relatives wombats and koalas. It is a member of the extinct family Diprotodontidae, which includes other large quadrupedal herbivores. It grew as large as 1.8 m (5 ft 11 in) at the shoulders, over 4 m (13 ft) from head to tail, and ...

  8. Researchers find massive seamount with flying spaghetti ...

    www.aol.com/news/researchers-massive-seamount...

    September 3, 2024 at 1:54 PM. Flying spaghetti monsters and ghostly octopuses can be found in the depths of a newly-discovered underwater mountain near South America's west coast, according to ...

  9. Woolly mammoth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woolly_mammoth

    The largest collection of portable mammoth art, consisting of 62 depictions on 47 plaques, was found in the 1960s at an excavated open-air camp near Gönnersdorf in Germany. A correlation between the number of mammoths depicted and the species that were most often hunted does not seem to exist, since reindeer bones are the most frequently found ...