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A total of 108,000 fish bones were identified, and amongst them were bones of many species, for example, anchovy and black sea bream, which we usually consider to be typical of waters much farther ...
Scientists studying ancient fish bones in Scandinavia have discovered that warm-water species like anchovies and black sea bream that once thrived in Danish waters during a prehistoric warm period ...
D scans of ancient lungfish jaws reveal how early fish evolved to eat differently - offering fresh insight into vertebrate evolution.
University of California - San Diego. "Bone-munching worms from the deep sea thrive on fish bones." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com / releases / 2011 / 04 / 110414091108.htm (accessed June 2 ...
Old fish bones could make the eco-friendly plastic we’ve been waiting for We have a ocean-destroying plastic problem, but fishery waste could help. By Shaena Montanari ...
But during one of her first digs, in the same Palaikastro she now surveys, the presence of an entirely different find captivated her—fish bones. Working by the sea, Mylona and other students ...
But the fish do eat the underwater amphipods that mob a mackerel feast. Remotely related to harmless garden pill bugs, trench amphipods clean mackerel to the bones, Gerringer says.
It's easy to see why — crunchy, salty, packed with umami, but light and fresh, they're the perfect accompaniment to a cold beer. They're easy to make at home, too.
A new study led by a scientist at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego is painting a more complete picture of an extraordinary sea worm that makes its living in the depths of the ocean ...