By: Angeline Hope | 2011-11-09 | Gifts One way to study the age of dinosaurs is to have toys designed after them, like dinosaur plush toys. These soft and huggable toys are very endearing to children, which makes it even easier to teach them about the species. Learning about things that we no longer see in reality can prove to be difficult. It is good to know that toy manufacturers have included dinosaur plush toys in their products to read more
By: Pushpitha Wijesinghe | 2010-09-30 | Travel Tips The Vallée de Mai Nature Reserve is one of the two UNESCO World Heritage sites found in the paradise isles of Seychelles. Nestling within the Praslin National Park, this is one of the few primeval forests still in existence that has been preserved due to millennia of geological isolation. It is also famously home to the endemic Coco de Mer palm, which produces the largest seeds ever seen in the world. read more
By: John Prytz | 2011-08-14 | Nature There are myths and legends that tell of human beings abducted as a food source by flying beasties. Confining ourselves to the Americas, especially the indigenous natives of North America, the question is, is there anything verified by science that's birdlike or that flies that could snack on a fully grown human? If not, something's screwy somewhere and other explanations are required. read more
By: ted | 2010-12-10 | Gifts Cruncher, Mattel's newest interactive Prehistoric Pets dinosaur, roars to life the moment you turn him on. This feisty little pet has a huge personality and reacts to petting, feeding, and sounds with a variety of lively movements and noises. read more
By: John Stevens | 2011-05-03 | News and society Thousands of fabulous prehistoric paintings are found in some caves from France, Bulgaria, Argentina, Brazil, India and other regions provide an insight into what prehistoric people thought and how creative they were in the ancient time. read more
By: Kelsie Polsier | 2010-03-30 | Fashion Anyone who has even the slightest bit of knowledge when it come to fashion will agree with me that there is nothing worse than seeing someone wearing a suit which looks too old for them. To be perfectly honest, when you have retailers such as H&M out there - there is no excuse for this type of thing either. read more
By: Jenny Styles | 2010-04-03 | Wildlife and Environment When we think of prehistoric animals, our thoughts turn to T Rex's and Velociraptors. But mammals appeared on the earth in the later years of the Triassic period, which was along the same timeline as dinosaurs. Throughout their early lives, these mammals were little, they lived nocturnally, and they fed mostly on insects. read more
By: Rajkumar Kanagasingam | 2010-04-04 | Environmental Drifting memories of the ruined Poompugar came back to me while I was moving around the altered coastal line of Mullaitivu, and the prehistoric asteroid, which struck the Planet. Geologists Gary Byerly, Xiaogang Xie, Donald Lowe and Joseph Wooden of Louisiana State and Stanford universities published in the journal SCIENCE about the strike. read more
By: shahidini | 2011-03-22 | City Guides A survey team of the Kerala State Archaeological Department inspecting a rock-shelter believed to be 2,500 to 3,000 years old at in Devikulam taluk. read more
By: Davi Patull | 2010-12-21 | Arts & Entertainment There are few pleasures to match sitting on your back porch, deck, patio or balcony... and watching a beautiful array of birds flitting to and fro amongst the feeders you have set up. read more
By: Wheeler Randy | 2010-10-10 | Finance Humans were at the point of extinction at least twice. Modern understanding of prehistoric life may be wrong. read more
By: John Mayers | 2010-12-01 | Writing & Speaking Bergamo is an ancient city. We have found traces of a settlement of prehistoric age, between the sixth and fifth centuries BC, and is due to the main feature of these early inhabitants of the city in half and half on the hill top. read more
By: Ritika | 2011-01-30 | News and society Fox as human pets? Sounds strange, isn't it? But early man may have preferred the company of fox to dog, states a new archaeological study. read more
By: Neil J. Francis | 2010-03-29 | Tattoos Henna, also called hina, a tropical flowered plant, a tall bush or tiny tree, its name originating off the Arabic word Lawsonia Inermis, normally grows in Africa, Northern Australia and Southern Asia. Its leaves yield red orange dye applied in tinting the human hair besides hands and feet. read more
By: Sarah Roles | 2010-03-31 | City Guides Lascaux, in south west France is home to a series of caves famous for their Paleolithic paintings. Located near the village of Montignac in the Dordogne, these amazing preserved artworks are estimated to be 16,000 years old. Art lovers, amateur archeologists and the plain curious will want to visit these unique cave paintings in Lascaux. read more