Fósseis, A Vida Que Foi...

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a person holding up a large rock with yellow flowers on it
A
an animal that is on display in a museum
Woolly Rhinoceros
a large animal skeleton in a museum with antlers hanging from it's back
vincentkhoo819
"The Irish Deer or Giant Deer was a species of Megaloceros and one of the largest deer that ever lived. Its range extended across Eurasia, from Ireland to east of Lake Baikal, during the Late Pleistocene. The latest known remains of the species have been carbon dated to about 7,700 years ago." More at the post. Text & image via vincentkhoo819 And, look at those vertebral spines in the upper thoracic region! Must have been attachment site for some massive muscles.
an animal skeleton is in the middle of a museum display with other animals on it
A giant deer from the Ice Age comes from a bog in Ireland, ca. 10,000 B.C., AMH.
an ammonet shell is shown on top of a rock with two arrows pointing in opposite directions
Pearl-Nautilus
Pearl-Nautilus Ammonite
an image of a bird that is flying in the air
National Geographic
The exquisite fossil, which was rescued from poachers, is one of the few known dinosaurs that lived on the water.
a statue of an animal with long horns in a museum display case filled with people looking at it
The Last of the Siberian Unicorns: What Happened to the Beasts of Legend?
The Last of the Siberian Unicorns: What Happened to the Mammoth-Sized One-Horned Beasts of Legend?
a bronze dragon head on display in a museum
Fóssil De Dragão? Não, é Um Dinossauro! - Mundo Gump
Fóssil de Dragão
a dinosaur skeleton is shown in front of a rock wall
Resultado de imagem para fossils
a dinosaur skeleton on display in a museum
Smilodon - Wikipedia
SABERTOOTH TIGER!! Smilodon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
an animal skeleton on display in a museum
saber-toothed tiger skull
a man laying on top of a large elephant's body in the sand next to a pile of rocks
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Arthropleura 8.5 ft. long relative of centipedes and millipedes native to the Late Carboniferous (340 - 280 million years ago) of what is now northeastern North America and Scotland. It is the largest known land invertebrate of all time.