New dino in China: Linheraptor exquisitus

A 2008 expedition to China has produced a new dinosaur that lived between 65 and 145 million years ago.  
 

Scientists conclude: Space rock killed dinos

An international group of scientists have concluded that the extinction of the dinosaurs, and much of life on Earth 65 million years ago, happened because a gigantic asteroid impacted what is now called Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula
 

Abydosaurus mcintoshi is new dino species

A new dinosaur species has been discovered at Dinosaur National Monument near Jensen, Utah, U.S.A. The 105 million-year-old discovery is of a plant-eating dinosaur that is part of the sauropod family.
 

New Dino species discovered in South Africa

A new species of dinosaur that is similar to the gigantic sauropods has been discovered in a game reserve in central South Africa. The discovery by the team, led by a U.S. paleobiologist from Western Illinois University, helps to better define the period before the beginning of the sauropod.
 

New Zealand's South Island had dinosaurs, too

New Zealand geologists have uncovered the first evidence with respect to footprints that dinosaurs roamed New Zealand over seventy million years ago, and the first evidence ever of dinosaurs on South Island.
 

Zac the dinosaur calls Australia home

Australian palaeontologists discover a new species of dinosaur in Queensland, and nickname the 97 million year old sauropod "Zac."
 

Stupid clucking question: which came first the chicken or the dinosaur?

You might think that the world's leading paleontologists had better things to do than reverse engineer a chicken, but you would be wrong.
 

Australians find 98-million-year-old bones of “something-osaurs”

An excavation by the Australian Age of Dinosaurs has found “one of the biggest concentrations” of dinosaur bones on a sheep and cattle station near Winton in central western Queensland. They'e not quite sure yet what types of dinosaurs will eventually be identified.
 

Color My prehistoric World

According to a Yale University research study, color pigments from organic matter in a 100-million-year old fossilized feather may now give scientists the ability to know the real colors of now-extinct animals.