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A fascinating and rare discovery has shed light on the dietary habits of ancient predators: a 66-million-year-old fossilized vomit, found at Stevns Klint in eastern Denmark. The fossil was unearthed ...
Peter Bennicke stumbled across a real treasure while walking on the Stevns cliffs (Stevns Klint), a natural site south of Copenhagen. The Danish hiker came across some strange fragments of a piece ...
The rare find, which was discovered at Stevns Klint, a coastal region off the Baltic Sea, reveals ancient predator-prey dynamics. IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site ...
Stevns Klint is renowned for its geological and paleontological significance, particularly because of its well-preserved layers that mark the boundary between the Cretaceous and Paleogene ...
STEVNS KLINT, Denmark — An amateur fossil hunter has uncovered a piece of animal vomit dating back 66 million years on a beach in Denmark.
On the scenic Danish seaside cliffs of Stevns Klint, a local fossil enthusiast recently discovered something not-so-picturesque: some of the world’s oldest vomit.
A fragment of fossilized vomit has been discovered in the white limestone cliffs of Stevns Klint on the Danish island of Zealand. The cliffs are among the best visual evidence of the meteorite impact ...
Local fossil hunter Peter Bennicke spotted the fossilized remains in a chunk of chalk in Denmark’s Stevns Klint (or Cliffs of Stevns), on the island of Zealand.
66-million-year-old vomit fossil discovered in Denmark The rare find, which was discovered at Stevns Klint, a coastal region off the Baltic Sea, reveals ancient predator-prey dynamics.
Peter Bennicke noticed a “strange small cluster of lily pieces in a piece of chalk” at Stevns Klint in eastern Denmark, according to a statement from Geomuseum Faxe, a local museum where the ...