Cretaceous Streaming. the Expedition that Will Show the Discovery of Fossils in a 70 Million Year Deposit
7 Articles
7 Articles
SAN CARLOS DE BARILOCHE.- The live broadcast of the "Cretaceous Expedition" of the National Council of Scientific and Technical Research (Conicet) in Rio Negro began today. Paleontological streaming allows us to see in real time the discovery of fossils in a 70 million year deposit. Live transmission can be followed until Friday 10 this month, from 11 to 12.30 and from 17 to 18.30, through YouTube channel @paleocueva_lacev and on Instagram in th…
The discovery was made in Rio Negro and is part of an expedition that seeks to show, live, how it works.
The furor for the scientific expedition to the underwater canyon Mar del Plata demonstrated the power of live transmissions to summon the curious and passionate for science. This time, the National Council of Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET) returns to join with streaming technologies to share the Cretaceous Expedition I, with the aim of finding remains of an unpublished Argentine dinosaur. This is the first Argentine paleontological …
The project is led by the Laboratory of Comparative Anatomy and Evolution of Vertebrates (LACEV) and marks a milestone in national scientific dissemination. They look for remains of species that lived 70 million years ago.
After the Expedition at the Bottom of the Sea, Conicet Will Search for "Live" Dinosaurs in Patagonia
Researchers from the National Council of Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET) will carry out explorations in the province of Río Negro, near the town of General Roca, in a site where the most valuable material of the end of the Age of Dinosaurs was obtained in Patagonia. The objective is to continue the work of the previous campaign, carried out in 2024, in which the claw of a dinosaur known as Bonapartenykus ultimaus was found. Now, at t…
The Cretaceous Expedition I looks for fossils that allow to continue the work that began a year ago, when members of the team discovered the claw of an unpublished dinosaur in Argentina. Scientists will look for the missing remains of this specimen that will allow better understanding of the species that lived on the planet 70 million years ago. Then ...
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