T-Rex: Strongest Bite Ever on Land
T-Rex could bite with a force of up to 57,000 Newtons—like having a medium-sized elephant sit on you! This is the strongest bite force of any land animal that ever lived.
Discover the fascinating creatures that once roamed our planet
Paleogene
Pterosphenus was a remarkable marine snake that ruled the warm seas of the Eocene epoch, approximately 56 to 34 million years ago. Unlike any snake alive today, this ancient ...
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Cretaceous
Giganotosaurus, meaning "giant southern lizard," was one of the largest carnivorous dinosaurs ever discovered. This massive predator roamed what is now ...
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Cretaceous
Raptorex, meaning "robber king," is a fascinating small tyrannosaur that lived approximately 125 million years ago during the Early Cretaceous period. This pint-sized predator looked ...
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April 4, 2026
Proterozoic
Charnia is one of the most important fossils ever discovered! This mysterious frond-shaped organism lived during the Ediacaran period, approximately 575 to 555 million years ago, making it one of Earth's oldest known complex life forms. Charnia was the...
April 4, 2026
Proterozoic
Tribrachidium is one of the strangest creatures to ever exist! Living during the Ediacaran period about 558-555 million years ago, this bizarre disc-shaped organism had three-fold symmetry — a body plan found in no living animal today. It...
April 4, 2026
Proterozoic
Spriggina is one of the most intriguing fossils from the Ediacaran period, living approximately 550-560 million years ago. With its distinctive horseshoe-shaped head and segmented body, it has sparked decades of debate about whether it represents...
April 4, 2026
Cambrian
Wiwaxia is one of the strangest creatures from the Cambrian Explosion, living approximately 508 million years ago. This bizarre armored slug-like animal was covered in overlapping scales and tall defensive spines, making...
April 4, 2026
Cambrian
Pikaia is one of the most important fossils ever discovered—it may be one of our earliest ancestors! This small, leaf-shaped swimmer lived approximately 508 million years ago during the Middle Cambrian period....
April 4, 2026
Cambrian
Olenoides serratus is one of the most famous and scientifically important trilobites ever discovered! Living approximately 508 million years ago during the Middle Cambrian, this trilobite is celebrated for its exceptional...
April 4, 2026
Cambrian
Ottoia was a fearsome predatory worm that terrorized the Cambrian seafloor approximately 508 million years ago. As the most abundant worm in the famous Burgess Shale, this priapulid (penis worm) used its...
February 2, 2026
Proterozoic
Dickinsonia is one of the most mysterious and ancient creatures ever found! Living during the Ediacaran period about 558-555 million years ago, it was one of Earth's earliest complex life forms. This bizarre oval-shaped organism lived...
February 2, 2026
Ordovician
Orthoceras was an ancient straight-shelled nautiloid—an early relative of today's squids and octopuses! Living from the Ordovician to Triassic periods (around 485-200 million years ago), these jet-propelled hunters had long, cone-shaped shells and were among the...
February 2, 2026
Silurian
Birkenia was a tiny jawless fish that swam in ancient Silurian seas about 430 million years ago! At only 10 cm (4 inches) long, this small but important fish was an anaspid—one of the early vertebrates that...
February 2, 2026
Devonian
Tiktaalik is one of the most important fossils ever discovered—a 375-million-year-old "fishapod" that shows the transition from fish to land animals! Found in the Canadian Arctic in 2004,...
February 2, 2026
Neogene
Phorusrhacos was one of the most terrifying "terror birds"—giant flightless predatory birds that ruled South America for millions of years! Standing 2.5 meters (8 feet) tall with a massive hooked beak, this apex...
February 2, 2026
Quaternary
Smilodon, the famous "saber-toothed cat," was one of the most iconic predators of the Ice Age! Living from about 2.5 million to 10,000 years ago, this powerful cat had enormous canine teeth that could...
February 2, 2026
Quaternary
The Woolly Rhinoceros was a massive, shaggy beast that roamed the frozen steppes of Ice Age Europe and Asia! Living from about 350,000 to 10,000 years ago, this incredible animal was perfectly...
February 2, 2026
Permian
Gorgonops was one of the most fearsome predators of the Late Permian period, approximately 260-252 million years ago! Named after the Gorgons of Greek mythology (monsters with snakes for hair), this...
T-Rex could bite with a force of up to 57,000 Newtons—like having a medium-sized elephant sit on you! This is the strongest bite force of any land animal that ever lived.
The Chicxulub crater in Mexico is 200 km (124 miles) wide—created by an asteroid 10-15 km across traveling at 20 km/second. The impact released energy equal to 4.5 billion atomic bombs!
Supersaurus may be the longest dinosaur ever at up to 42 meters (138 feet)—longer than three school buses! Its neck alone was over 15 meters, and its tail stretched 18+ meters.
About 335 million years ago, all continents were joined into one supercontinent called Pangaea. You could have walked from Antarctica to the Arctic!
Tiktaalik, living 375 million years ago, was one of the first vertebrates to venture onto land, with primitive lungs and leg-like fins.
Ankylosaurus had a tail club that could swing with 7,000-8,000 Newtons of force—enough to shatter bones, even a T-Rex's! The club was made of fused bone and could weigh over 20 kg.
The first horses (Eohippus) were only 30 cm tall—about the size of a fox! They had four toes and lived 55 million years ago. Horse evolution is one of the best-documented in paleontology.
During their teenage growth spurt, T-Rex gained 35-45 pounds PER WEEK until reaching adult size around age 20! Growth rings in SUE's bones revealed this incredible growth rate.
Fossils show dinosaurs brooding their eggs like birds! A 70-million-year-old Oviraptor was found sitting on a nest of 24 eggs, proving dinosaurs were devoted parents who cared for their young.
Horseshoe crabs have remained virtually unchanged for 450 million years—they existed before dinosaurs, survived all mass extinctions, and still live today! They're older than trees and sharks.
The oldest creatures preserved in amber are 230 million years old! These tiny mites from Italy are 100 million years older than any other amber fossils, perfectly frozen in tree resin.
Hadrosaurs had the most complex teeth ever—up to 300 teeth per jaw arranged in "dental batteries." These constantly replaced themselves and could grind the toughest plants.
The first flowering plants appeared around 130 million years ago, during the Cretaceous period, revolutionizing plant evolution.
The evolution of eyes triggered an "arms race" of evolution. Trilobites were among the first creatures with complex eyes, with some having over 15,000 lenses!
Ornithomimus and Gallimimus were the speed champions, reaching up to 70 km/h (43 mph)—faster than a horse! Their ostrich-like build was perfect for running.
The coelacanth was thought extinct for 65 million years—until one was caught in 1938! Called a "living fossil," it has barely changed in 400 million years and was like finding a living dinosaur.
In 2005, scientist Mary Schweitzer discovered soft tissue, including flexible blood vessels, inside a 68-million-year-old T-Rex bone—a discovery that shocked the scientific world.
The Ordovician-Silurian extinction, around 445 million years ago, was caused by a rapid ice age and fluctuating sea levels, eliminating nearly 85% of marine species.
Megalosaurus was the first dinosaur ever scientifically named, by William Buckland in 1824. The word "dinosaur" itself wasn't invented until 1842 by Richard Owen!
The K-Pg extinction, caused by an asteroid impact 66 million years ago, wiped out 75% of species, including non-avian dinosaurs, due to climate shifts, wildfires, and tsunamis.
While many famous dinosaurs were enormous, the smallest known dinosaur was the Compsognathus, only about the size of a chicken!
The blue whale is the largest animal EVER—bigger than any dinosaur! At 200 tons, it weighs twice as much as the largest dinosaurs. Some dinosaurs were longer, but none were heavier.
Around 700 million years ago, Earth was almost completely covered in ice during the "Snowball Earth" period, with temperatures as low as -50°C.
Sharks have been swimming in Earth's oceans for about 450 million years—that's 100 million years before the first trees appeared! They survived all five mass extinctions.