A cave in the Dominican Republic concealed thousands of years worth of animal bones that had been turned into nests by ...
For the first time ever, paleontologists have found fossil traces of burrowing bees nesting inside the buried bones of other ...
Fossils from a Caribbean cave reveal bees once nested inside animal bones, offering rare insight into ancient insect behavior ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
Ancient Caribbean Cave Reveals Bees That Lived Inside Bones
Generations of ancient, solitary bees made a home within the tooth holes of a fossilized jawbone, which was recently ...
Burrowing bees generally prefer to make their nests in the open, but some 20,000 years ago their ancestors lived in a cave ...
ZME Science on MSN
Ancient Bees Turned a Gruesome Bone Graveyard into a Cozy Home
The floor of the Cueva de Mono, a cave in the Dominican Republic, is a gruesome graveyard. For thousands of years, it served ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Fossils Suggest That Some Ancient Burrowing Bees Made Their Homes in Rodent Skulls
While cleaning fossils retrieved from a cave on a Caribbean island, a researcher noticed something strange in the hollow ...
About 20,000 years ago, a family of owls lived in a cave. Sometimes, they would cough up owl pellets containing the bones of ...
Paleontologists working in a cave on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola have discovered the first-known instance of ancient ...
Bones of now extinct species became a haven for bee babies thousands of years ago, scientists report in a first-of-its-kind ...
Scientists made a unique discovery in a cave on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola: dozens of fossilized bee nests inside rodent bones that were deposited by owls thousands of years ago.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results