Meet Dracula, the bloodsucking tick which feasted on dinosaurs 99m years ago
An Anglo-Spanish team of fossil hunters has found several perfectly preserved ticks amongst the remains of a feathered dinosaur nestAs if the dinosaurs didn ’t have enough to look out for with volcanic eruptions, fearsome predators stalking the land and a huge, unstoppable asteroid hurtling across space to ruin their day.Now scientists have found that the prehistoric beasts also hadblood-sucking ticks to contend with, having spotted carcasses of the parasites lodged in 99million-year-old lumps of Burmese amber along with material left over from dinosaurs and their nests.Continue reading...
Source: Guardian Unlimited Science - Category: Science Authors: Ian Sample Science editor Tags: Science Dinosaurs Evolution Biology Fossils Zoology Source Type: news
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