An ancient hornless rhino fossil found in the Canadian Arctic, Epiaceratherium itjilik, shows rhinos once lived much farther ...
Scientists from the Canadian Museum of Nature have announced the discovery and description of an extinct rhinoceros from the ...
Live Science on MSN
Ancient 'frosty' rhino from Canada's High Arctic rewrites what scientists thought they knew about the North Atlantic Land Bridge
Researchers have gained new insights into rhinoceros evolution and the longevity of the North Atlantic Land Bridge from ...
Discover Magazine on MSN
This Ancient Species of Arctic Rhino May Have Crossed a Land Bridge 23 Million Years Ago
According to a new study published in Nature Ecology and Evolution, the species Epiatheracerium itjilik - also dubbed the ...
Rhinoceroses have been around for over 40 million years and have been found on all continents except South America and ...
Researchers describe the newly identified “Arctic Rhino” in a study published today in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution ...
Millions of years ago, a pony-sized, hornless rhino wandered through the woods and munched on leaves in what is now northern ...
Rhino fossils found in China have revealed that the newly-discovered species Paraceratherium lixiaense, or Linxia Giant Rhino, was one of the largest mammals to ever live on Earth. This rhino species ...
Rhinos once called the Arctic home and now scientists have identified a new extinct species in Devon Island, Nunavut—evidence that these mammals travelled farther north than any known rhino before ...
Rhinos have an evolutionary history that spans over 40 million years, encompassing all continents except South America and ...
The last wild rhinoceros hornbill seen in Singapore was in the late 1800s, says an environment group. Read more at ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results