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New York Post
12-06-2025
- Entertainment
- New York Post
Reno 411! A summer guide to the Biggest Little City in America
If everything you know about the Biggest Little City (pop: 275K) you learned from a certain 'Cops' parody on Comedy Central, here's a crash course on doing the college town right, post-ski rat season. Triple play 8 Enjoy nights at the round table. Reno-Tahoe Beautifully backdropped by the High Eastern Sierra foothills, Reno's the Row is hardly of the 'skid' variety. It's a troika of massive, hustling-n-bustling fancyish hotel-casinos perfect for us all-poker, no-powder types. Advertisement The Eldorado, the Silver Legacy and Circus Circus span six blocks wholly owned by Caesars Entertainment, Inc. (what Eldorado Resorts rebranded itself as after acquiring old Caesars and all its properties). Each has its own unique charms: Eldorado skews more upscale and sophisticated, Circus Circus has a giant arcade for kids. 8 Pick a hotel-casino, any hotel-casino, along Reno's Row including Eldorado, Circus Circus and Silver Legacy. — they're all corded umbilically attached via skyway. Insight Studio But we ended up at the dining- and night life-focused, 1,720-roomed Silver Legacy, home to a mood-lit Ramsay's Kitchen (warning vegans: best to avoid his delicious, had-parents take on 'lollipops') and the always queued- and gussied-up Aura Ultra Lounge. Advertisement Dromophobic? Not a problem. Enter any one of the three and you can easily visit the other two without ever stepping foot outside via the Row's skyways. Bonus: While the overly smokey, stale-smelling floors of the dizzying beep-booping, ding-a-linging casinos of yore could make non-gamers feel a certain kind of way, these days, the old rolled cigarette smog factor has been considerably reduced thanks to vape converts. Much obliged! Fin city 8 Jaws was a mere guppy compared to the draconic ichthyosaur. Chris Bunting Two hundred and fifty million years ago, Reno's scariest creature wasn't that angsty, 127-foot-tall clown named Topsy struggling to hold up the Circus Circus sign. It was the bowling lane-length prehistoric dino dolphin, er, sea reptile, called the ichthyosaur. Fitting, since back then, what is now the desertic Silver State was completely underwater (some yearn for those days over the summer). Advertisement Reno's groovy Nevada Art Museum has devoted 9,000 square feet — its entire third floor — to these lovingly nicknamed 'sea dragons' in an exhibit running through mid-January of next year called Deep Time. It features the world's largest collection of ichthyosaur fossils including a 33-foot Triassic Period skeleton of one, the most complete in the world, along with a life-size, e-wall-simulated sea dragon to swim-walk with, no trunks needed. 8 The museum turned bone-aquarium is as funky on the outside as it is within. Courtesy of the Nevada Museum of Art. 8 See the world as an Ichthy did in the trippiest of ways (use a safe word). Courtesy of the Nevada Museum of Art. Advertisement Kiddos will especially love (and maybe try to outdo — sorry, parents) the exhibit's room filled entirely with a massive collection of dinosaur toys; another room (possibly for less-sober grown-ups) lets you see the world, as an ichthy would see it, 'underwater.' GA is $15. The mural of the story 8 Reno is mad about murals; you're hard-pressed to find a naked wall throughout town. Handout Game respects game, and nowhere else is that better on display than in Reno's unusually cordial street art scene. Get used to the name Erik Burke, or rather his initials E.B., as you'll be seeing a lot of it on Pineapple Pedicab's art tours of downtown where the world-renowned and Reno-born E.B. has painted giant murals on the sides of several multi-storied buildings, including one of his wife (awww) and also signs them with his age at their time of completion. Best part: Local graffiti taggers respectfully leave them be and (mostly) undefiled, according to my no-fear pedaler guide Taz. You'll also come across other artists' trippy works like a flying bus formerly driven IRL, cut in half then glued back together on a rising stand, plus other sculptures and installations lucky enough to have been spared dismantling after a gig at nearby Burning Man such as the Space Whale (a 40-foot, stained-glass mommy cetacean and her calf). The hour-long tour of Reno's other nickname they hope to one day make stick — Art Town — is $55 per person, with each pedicab sitting up to three. Vroom with a view Advertisement 8 Gear heads will explode inside the wondrous National Automobile Museum. Universal Images Group via Getty Images Listen here, buddy, drop the spray paint and back away from the electric cars — these are non-Elon creations you've stumbled across at Reno's National Automobile Museum. In fact, the very first cars ever marketed were all electric, preceding gas-powered ones by years and years. You'll learn this and mucho mas at the multi-zoned (classic, race cars, celebrity mobiles, etc.) NAM, just a five-minute walk from the Row. Its exhibits come in large part thanks to the late William Fisk Harrah. There was only one thing the late hotel-casino magnate loved more than gamblizing the state, and that was cars (he owned 1,400 of them). He had an army of scouts scour the country for unique and classic ones, some literally uncovered beneath tarps and stashed away in barns in the middle of nowhere. 8 The cars are up for 'adoption' if you have the scratch. warasit – Advertisement Once Harrah kicked the can in 1978, his massive collection changed hands (mostly into those of then-hospitality giant Holiday Inn) but after public demand, private sales, auctions and the like, many found their way to this place, opened in 1989, now home to some 240-plus rare and restored vehicles from the late 19th century up until today. Ford Model T? Check. Elvis's Caddy Eldorado Coupe? Yep. That vehicular Frankenstein Jay Leno stitched together from two wrecks that's half-Jeep, half-Ferrari dubbed the Jerrari? Heck yes. And do you like the cut of that Doc Brown-worthy DeLorean's jib over yonder? 'Adopt' it, or any of the other cars on display (meaning, donate money to help keep it in tip-top condition and land your name on a plaque right next to it). Just no actual fiddling around with said foster. Tix are $15 for adults, $10 for kids.


India.com
10-06-2025
- Science
- India.com
Meet Worlds Oldest Dinosaur: Unearthed In Brazil, Way Older Than Humans Evolution, Reveals Existence Of Life On Earth .... Million Years Ago
photoDetails english 2913915 Updated:Jun 10, 2025, 07:00 PM IST Introduction to the Oldest Dinosaurs 1 / 10 Dinosaurs first roamed Earth around 245 million years ago during the Triassic Period. The oldest dinosaur fossils offer a window into their early evolution, revealing how these creatures began their journey to dominate the planet. This gallery dives into the key contenders for the title of the world's oldest dinosaur, highlighting recent discoveries and their impact on paleontology. Nyasasaurus parringtoni - The Earliest Candidate? 2 / 10 Found in Tanzania in the 1930s, Nyasasaurus parringtoni is dated to about 243 million years ago, making it a strong contender for the oldest dinosaur. Its fossils, including an arm bone and vertebrae, show dinosaur-like features, such as a deltopectoral crest. However, scientists debate whether it's a true dinosaur or a close relative, as its traits blur the line between dinosaurs and their precursors. Brazil's 233-Million-Year-Old Herrerasauridae 3 / 10 In 2024, heavy rains in Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil, exposed a nearly complete Herrerasauridae skeleton, dated to 233 million years ago. This bipedal carnivore, roughly 2.5 meters long, is one of the oldest known dinosaurs. Its discovery provides fresh insights into the early evolution of predatory dinosaurs in South America. The Herrerasauridae Family 4 / 10 Herrerasauridae, an early dinosaur family, includes species like Herrerasaurus and Gnathovorax cabreirai. These bipedal predators, with sharp claws and serrated teeth, were apex predators in the Late Triassic. Found primarily in South America, their fossils help us understand the early diversification of dinosaurs. Eoraptor - An Early Saurischian 5 / 10 Discovered in Argentina's Ischigualasto Formation, Eoraptor lived about 231 million years ago. Once thought to be a Herrerasaurid, it's now classified as an early sauropodomorph. This small, omnivorous dinosaur, with both herbivorous and carnivorous traits, shows how dinosaurs began to branch into different groups. Ahvaytum bahndooiveche - North America's Oldest 6 / 10 Unearthed in Wyoming, Ahvaytum bahndooiveche is a chicken-sized raptor from 230 million years ago, making it North America's oldest known dinosaur. Its discovery suggests dinosaurs reached the Northern Hemisphere earlier than previously thought, expanding our view of their geographic spread. The Triassic Period Context 7 / 10 The oldest dinosaurs emerged in the Middle to Late Triassic, following the Permian-Triassic extinction event, which wiped out much of Earth's life. On the supercontinent Pangaea, these early dinosaurs thrived in regions now known as South America, Africa, and North America, setting the stage for their global dominance. Fossil Preservation and Discovery 8 / 10 Well-preserved fossils, like the Brazilian Herrerasauridae, allow scientists to study early dinosaurs in detail. Advanced tools like CT scans reveal bone structure and growth patterns, helping paleontologists confirm species and understand their lifestyles, from diet to movement. Paleontological Significance 9 / 10 Fossils of the oldest dinosaurs, such as Nyasasaurus and Eoraptor, fill critical gaps in the evolutionary timeline. They show how small, agile creatures evolved into the massive dinosaurs of later periods. Ongoing discoveries in fossil-rich areas continue to refine this story. 10 / 10 The quest to identify the world's oldest dinosaur reveals a dynamic picture of early evolution. From Nyasasaurus in Tanzania to Ahvaytum in Wyoming, each fossil adds a piece to the puzzle, showing how dinosaurs rose to prominence and shaped Earth's history.


Yomiuri Shimbun
27-05-2025
- Science
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Fossils Show Unexpected Last Refuge of Ferocious Land-living Crocs
Jorge Machuky / Handout via Reuters A terrestrial crocodile relative from a lineage called sebecids is seen in this image released on April 29. WASHINGTON (Reuters) — After the demise of the dinosaurs following an asteroid strike 66 million years ago, mammals became Earth's dominant land animals. But that does not mean they went unchallenged. In South America, for instance, nightmarish land-living crocs — cousins of today's crocodiles and alligators — became apex predators. This lineage of terrestrial crocs, called sebecids, lasted longer than previously believed, according to researchers who described fossils recently unearthed in the Dominican Republic that reveal that the islands of the Caribbean served as an unexpected last refuge for these ferocious predators. Until now, the most recent fossils of sebecids were found in Colombia and dated to about 10.5-12.5 million years ago. The Dominican Republic fossils date to about 5-7 million years ago. The largest of the sebecids reached roughly 6 meters long, though the partial remains from the Dominican Republic indicate an animal up to about 2 meters long. 'These were the type of predators that one thinks were from the dinosaur times,' said Lazaro Vinola Lopez, a graduate student in paleontology at the University of Florida and lead author of the research published last month in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. Instead, Vinola Lopez said, sebecids were at the top of the food chain in South America during the age of mammals alongside terror birds, giant flightless birds up to about 3 meters tall with massive hooked beaks, and saber-toothed marsupials, counterparts to the saber-toothed cats of North America and elsewhere. Various types of crocs have inhabited Earth dating back to the Triassic Period more than 200 million years ago. Most, like the ones alive today, lived a semiaquatic lifestyle. But some conquered the marine realm and others lived exclusively on land, like the sebecids. The sebecids were built differently than the usual semiaquatic crocs. They had longer legs and a more upright stance, capable of running quickly to chase down prey. They had a narrow and deep skull — superficially resembling that of a meat-eating dinosaur and much different from modern crocs that have a wider and shallower skull. And the teeth of sebecids were tall and narrow with fine serrations running along the edges for cutting through meat, also similar to carnivorous dinosaurs. Like many other crocs, they had protective armor made of bony plates called scutes embedded in their skin. The fossils found in the Dominican Republic in 2023 were a single tooth that closely resembled those of South American sebecids and two vertebrae with characteristics that enabled the researchers to definitively conclude that these remains belonged to a sebecid. 'It is amazing to think that these fast-moving, dinosaur-like terrestrial crocs with serrated teeth specialized for cutting meat survived in the Caribbean hunting sloths, rodents and whatever else was around up until just a few million years ago,' said study coauthor Jonathan Bloch, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Florida Museum of Natural History at the University of Florida. The researchers said that fossils of two teeth apparently from a sebecid dating to about 18 million years ago that were previously discovered in Cuba and a similar one dating to around 29 million years previously found in Puerto Rico suggest that this lineage was widespread in the islands of the West Indies. But how did land-living crocs from South America manage to get there? The researchers said their presence on the islands is another clue indicating there may have been a pathway of temporary land bridges or a chain of islands that permitted land animals to travel from South America to the Caribbean around 32-35 million years ago. 'The distance between the islands and northern South America was significantly shorter than what it is today. This likely facilitated the dispersal of sebecids from South America,' Vinola Lopez said. 'This shows how important islands can be as a biodiversity museum, preserving the last members of some groups that have gone extinct everywhere.'
Yahoo
23-05-2025
- Science
- Yahoo
Newly identified prehistoric creature found in Canada seen as a 'fascinating beast'
May 22 (UPI) -- A group of Canadian fossils is identified as a new genus of the elasmosaurus "sea monster" that existed tens of millions of years ago, a newly published study announced. The newly identified genus officially is named the "Traskasuara sandrae," according to the study published today in the Journal of Systematic Paleontology. Elasmosaurs were large sea creatures with extremely long necks and viper-like heads with large jaws and very sharp and long teeth for capturing, crushing and consuming prey. The Traskasaura combined several "primitive and derived traits" that differ from the elasmosaurs that existed some 85 million years ago. Both are types of plesiosaurs, which were marine reptiles that existed during the late Triassic Period from about 215 million years ago to the Late Cretaceous Period about 66 million years ago. Unknown type of plesiosaur "Plesiosaur fossils have been known for decades in British Columbia," lead author F. Robin O'Keefe said. "However, the identity of the animal that left the fossils has remained a mystery, even as it was declared [British Columbia's] provincial fossil in 2023." O'Keefe said the research study published today solves the mystery of the fossils' origins. "The scientific confusion concerning this taxon is understandable," O'Keefe said. "The shoulder ... is unlike any other plesiosaur I have ever seen." The Pacific Northwest "finally has a Mesozoic reptile to call its own," said O'Keefe, who is an expert on prehistoric marine animals dating back to the age of dinosaurs and an educator at Marshall University in West Virginia. Strange and fascinating beast "Fittingly, a region known for its rich marine life today was host to strange and wonderful marine reptiles in the Age of Dinosaurs," he added. "Traskasaura is a strange, convergently evolved, fascinating beast." The Traskasaura's unique combination of physical adaptations made it an especially effective hunter from above and one of the first plesiosaurs to do so. Their necks grew to nearly 40 feet in length while their bodies resembled that of a small whale with forward flippers that propelled them through water. The marine reptile's bone structure suggests it was especially adept and downward swimming to dive onto its prey from above, while its teeth were well-suited for devouring ammonites by crushing their shells, O'Keefe said. First fossil was discovered in 1988 The first Traskasaura fossil was located along the Puntledge River in Canada's Vancouver Island in 1988 and dates to the Late Cretaceous Period. Other fossils since have been discovered, and three from theHaslam Formation on Vancouver Island are discussed in the article published in the latest edition of the Journal of Systematic Paleontology. The fossils first were discussed in 2002 and in recent years rose in global prominence after officials in British Columbia made it the province's official fossil emblem. The Traskasaura fossils are on display at The Courtenay and District Museum and Paleontology Centre in Courtenay, B.C.
Yahoo
02-05-2025
- Science
- Yahoo
Fossils show unexpected last refuge of ferocious land-living crocs
By Will Dunham WASHINGTON (Reuters) -After the demise of the dinosaurs following an asteroid strike 66 million years ago, mammals became Earth's dominant land animals. But that does not mean they went unchallenged. In South America, for instance, nightmarish land-living crocs - cousins of today's crocodiles and alligators - became apex predators. This lineage of terrestrial crocs, called sebecids, lasted longer than previously believed, according to researchers who described fossils recently unearthed in the Dominican Republic that reveal that the islands of the Caribbean served as an unexpected last refuge for these ferocious predators. Until now, the most recent fossils of sebecids were found in Colombia and dated to about 10.5-12.5 million years ago. The Dominican Republic fossils date to about 5-7 million years ago. The largest of the sebecids reached roughly 20 feet (6 meters) long, though the partial remains from the Dominican Republic indicate an animal up to about 7 feet (2 meters) long. "These were the type of predators that one thinks were from the dinosaur times," said Lazaro Viñola Lopez, a graduate student in paleontology at the University of Florida and lead author of the research published this week in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. Instead, Viñola Lopez said, sebecids were at the top of the food chain in South America during the age of mammals alongside terror birds, giant flightless birds up to about 10 feet (3 meters) tall with massive hooked beaks, and saber-toothed marsupials, counterparts to the saber-toothed cats of North America and elsewhere. Various types of crocs have inhabited Earth dating back to the Triassic Period more than 200 million years ago. Most, like the ones alive today, lived a semiaquatic lifestyle. But some conquered the marine realm and others lived exclusively on land, like the sebecids. The sebecids were built differently than the usual semiaquatic crocs. They had longer legs and a more upright stance, capable of running quickly to chase down prey. They had a narrow and deep skull - superficially resembling that of a meat-eating dinosaur and much different from modern crocs that have a wider and shallower skull. And the teeth of sebecids were tall and narrow with fine serrations running along the edges for cutting through meat, also similar to carnivorous dinosaurs. Like many other crocs, they had protective armor made of bony plates called scutes embedded in their skin. The fossils found in the Dominican Republic in 2023 were a single tooth that closely resembled those of South American sebecids and two vertebrae with characteristics that enabled the researchers to definitively conclude that these remains belonged to a sebecid. "It is amazing to think that these fast-moving, dinosaur-like terrestrial crocs with serrated teeth specialized for cutting meat survived in the Caribbean hunting sloths, rodents and whatever else was around up until just a few million years ago," said study co-author Jonathan Bloch, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the Florida Museum of Natural History at the University of Florida. The researchers said that fossils of two teeth apparently from a sebecid dating to about 18 million years ago that were previously discovered in Cuba and a similar one dating to around 29 million years previously found in Puerto Rico suggest that this lineage was widespread in the islands of the West Indies. But how did land-living crocs from South America manage to get there? The researchers said their presence on the islands is another clue indicating there may have been a pathway of temporary land bridges or a chain of islands that permitted land animals to travel from South America to the Caribbean around 32-35 million years ago. "The distance between the islands and northern South America was significantly shorter than what it is today. This likely facilitated the dispersal of sebecids from South America," Viñola Lopez said. "This shows how important islands can be as a biodiversity museum, preserving the last members of some groups that have gone extinct everywhere."