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Two centuries later, less than 50 miles away, an 11-year-old girl named Ruby Reynolds found a fossil from another ichthyosaur. It appears to be the largest marine reptile known to science.
On a spring day in May 2020, 11-year-old Ruby Reynolds set out for the shores of the River Severn near the village of Blue Anchor so that she and her father, Justin, could go fossil hunting.
The fossil teeth belonged to an 11-year-old individual from the genus Homo. Researchers discovered that during the early ...
Today, we look into how a chance discovery by a father-daughter duo of fossil hunters furthered paleontologist's understanding of the "giant fish lizard of the Severn sea." Currently, it is the ...
Dr. Dean Lomax, (from left) Ruby Reynolds, Justin Reynolds and Paul de la Salle are shown with the fossil discovery in 2020. - Dean Lomax In May 2020, Ruby Reynolds, then 11, and her father ...
An 11-year-old girl on a fossil hunt with her father uncovered a chunk of jawbone, leading paleontologists to later identify the bones as belonging to a previously unknown titan of the prehistoric ...
They found that the fossil teeth of the 11-year-old individual, belonging to our genus, Homo, experienced delayed development like those of modern human children during the first several years of ...
In May 2020, Ruby Reynolds, then 11, and her father ... Separately, two 5,500-year-old skeletons recovered at an archaeological site in southwest France belonged to women who were likely buried ...