
Jason Gilchrist
Articles
-
Sep 25, 2024 |
bizcommunity.com | Cole Potgieter |Bhargav Acharya |Tannur Anders |Jason Gilchrist
Advertise your job vacancies2 days7 days30 daysBy Industry Show more But even a controlled ivory trade may send the wrong message. Ivory seized in the United States. Photo Credit: Gavin Shire / US Fish and Wildlife Service on Flickr (CC BY 2.0)For years, conservationists have struggled to find effective ways to combat the illegal trade in ivory.
-
Sep 19, 2024 |
thehindu.com | Jason Gilchrist
Scientists have estimated the size of an extinct flying reptile called a pterosaur, based on fragments of a fossil finger bone discovered in southern England in June 2022. These results reveal it to be the largest British pterosaur yet described, and the second-largest Jurassic pterosaur worldwide. This 149 million-year-old fossil, known as EC K2576 and nicknamed “Abfab” by the researchers, was found in Abingdon, Oxfordshire – and it is fabulous.
-
Sep 12, 2024 |
tolerance.ca | Jason Gilchrist |Edinburgh Napier
By Jason Gilchrist, Lecturer in the School of Applied Sciences, Edinburgh Napier University Scientists have estimated the size of an extinct flying reptile called a pterosaur, based on fragments of a fossil finger bone discovered in southern England in June 2022. These results reveal it to be the largest British pterosaur yet described, and the second-largest Jurassic pterosaur worldwide.
-
Sep 12, 2024 |
theconversation.com | Jason Gilchrist
Scientists have estimated the size of an extinct flying reptile called a pterosaur, based on fragments of a fossil finger bone discovered in southern England in June 2022. These results reveal it to be the largest British pterosaur yet described, and the second-largest Jurassic pterosaur worldwide. This 149 million-year-old fossil, known as EC K2576 and nicknamed “Abfab” by the researchers, was found in Abingdon, Oxfordshire – and it is fabulous.
-
Sep 12, 2024 |
ca.news.yahoo.com | Jason Gilchrist |Edinburgh Napier
Scientists have estimated the size of an extinct flying reptile called a pterosaur, based on fragments of a fossil finger bone discovered in southern England in June 2022. These results reveal it to be the largest British pterosaur yet described, and the second-largest Jurassic pterosaur worldwide. This 149 million-year-old fossil, known as EC K2576 and nicknamed “Abfab” by the researchers, was found in Abingdon, Oxfordshire – and it is fabulous.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →