IFLScience on MSN
Did AI just identify the world’s oldest birds? Meet "DinoTracker", the app of ichnology’s dreams
Seems like there’s a Shazam for everything nowadays. First it was music, then plants, then plant diseases. You can even ask ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
AI uncovers dinosaur tracks that look eerily like birds from a time when birds shouldn’t have existed
A new artificial intelligence system is drawing renewed attention to one of paleontology’s oldest controversies. At the ...
Learn how artificial intelligence is helping reinterpret dinosaur footprints, including bird-like tracks that blur the line ...
Tracks believed to be the work of small, scampering dinosaurs may have been made by birds, pushing back the date of the ...
An AI app is decoding dinosaur footprints—and may have just spotted the world’s oldest birds hiding in plain sight.
Machine learning holds great promise for classifying and identifying fossils, and has recently been marshaled to identify trackmakers of dinosaur ...
Dinosaur skeletons often dominate museum halls, from the towering Tyrannosaurus rex known as Sue in Chicago to Sophie the ...
On03, Chinese paleontologists discovered the fossil of a dinosaur species with four wings. The 130-million-year-old fossil ...
The Liaoning Province of China has a reputation as a place where dinosaur fossils turn up on a regular basis in a remarkably preserved state. Many people think evolution happens in a very linear way.
The Dinotracker app was trained on eight major characteristics of dinosaur footprints to quickly determine the species.
Around 120 million years ago, a bird swallowed over 800 tiny stones and choked to death as a result. Paleontologists aren’t sure why. Like many recent fossil “discoveries,” researchers with the Field ...
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