A remarkable fossil forest reveals dinosaurs may have helped spread fruit-bearing plants tens of millions of years earlier ...
According to fossils preserved by volcanic ash, the plants, known as angiosperms, began producing relatively large, blueberry ...
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Dinosaurs may have been nature's first fruit lovers
New fossil evidence suggests flowering plants developed larger fruits millions of years earlier than previously believed, ...
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How dinosaur extinctions created an environment that contributed to our fruit-eating primate ancestors
Following the extinction of dinosaurs, the forests grew back thicker, blocking the sun from reaching the ground layer, which, many generations later, led to the growth of large seeds and fruit. In ...
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