A new titanosaur discovery, Chucarosaurus, has been found in Patagonia. While it’s not the largest dinosaur ever, the fragmented remains still matter: they provide fresh material for comparative anatomy and for mapping evolutionary relationships among titanosaur species. With few complete skeletons available, these partial fossils help fill gaps and refine dinosaur science as Patagonia’s fossil wealth continues to pay off.
Astronomers have identified exoplanet L98-59d, a super Earth about 1.6 times Earth’s size and roughly 35 light-years away. The planet is described as a scorching world with rivers of molten lava and surface temperatures around 1,900°C. The discovery adds another extreme target to study how rocky planets behave under intense heat.
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