Now, a new study estimates that the first warm-blooded dinosaurs may have roamed the Earth about 180 million years ago, about halfway through the creatures’ time on the planet. Warm-blooded ...
How do they do it? Chemistry helps! The most important adaptation is how animals regulate their body temperature. Animals can be either warm-blooded or cold-blooded. Warm-blooded animals, which are ...
What the researchers found is that the large, warm-blooded shark had fallen prey to another warm-blooded predator − likely another shark. Sulikowski said the team put two different tags on ...
Scientists from three states had been tracking the pregnant porbeagle shark for five months and hundreds of miles as it traveled from New England to Bermuda — until something ate it.
Now new research finds that the largest marine predator to ever terrorize the seas wasn’t so cold-blooded after all. For the record, it was still a killing machine, just a warm blooded one.