Palaeontologist Ascanio Rincon works on the skull of a scimitar cat --of the saber-toothed cat genus-- on August 12, 2008 at the Venezuelan Institute of Scientific Research (IVIC) in Caracas. The fossile remains of six scimitar cats (Homotherium) -extinguished more than 500,000 years ago- were found in a fossile site in Venezuela, in what is said to be the most important paleontological discovery in South America in the last six decades, according to experts.
Palaeontologist Ascanio Rincon measures the skull of a scimitar cat --of the saber-toothed cat genus-- on August 12, 2008 at the Venezuelan Institute of Scientific Research (IVIC) in Caracas. The fossile remains of six scimitar cats (Homotherium) -extinguished more than 500,000 years ago- were found in a fossile site in Venezuela, in what is said to be the most important paleontological discovery in South America in the last six decades, according to experts.
Palaeontologist Ascanio Rincon measures the skull of a scimitar cat --of the saber-toothed cat genus-- on August 12, 2008 at the Venezuelan Institute of Scientific Research (IVIC) in Caracas. The fossile remains of six scimitar cats (Homotherium) -extinguished more than 500,000 years ago- were found in a fossile site in Venezuela, in what is said to be the most important paleontological discovery in South America in the last six decades, according to experts.
Picture of the skull of a scimitar cat --of the saber-toothed cat genus-- as seen on August 12, 2008 at the Venezuelan Institute of Scientific Research (IVIC) in Caracas. The fossile remains of six scimitar cats (Homotherium) -extinguished more than 500,000 years ago- were found in a fossile site in Venezuela, in what is said to be the most important paleontological discovery in South America in the last six decades, according to experts.
No comments:
Post a Comment