
What Killed the Dinosaurs?
Today on the show, we travel back in time to the Late Cretaceous, some 66 million years ago, when death fell from the sky.
9 Huhti 7min

Ammonoids & Conodonts: Triassic Exposures of Nevada
Step into the sunbaked folds of West Union Canyon, just beyond Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park in Nevada, and you are quite literally walking along one of North America’s most important geological fault...
9 Huhti 7min

Descendants of the Cambrian: Sea Anemones
At first glance, anemones look like soft blossoms anchored to rock, their tentacles swaying with the tide. But look a little closer and you’ll see a skilled predator at work. Each of those delicate ar...
8 Huhti 3min

Hawai'i: Islands Born of Fire
Long, long ago—millions of years before you or me, before the canoes of the Polynesian voyagers, before the first birds ever touched these shores—there was only ocean. A vast blue desert stretching fa...
27 Syys 20256min

Dinosaurs, Ammonites, Trilobites: What is Paleontology
Join in the exploration of the fascinating science of paleontology — that lens that examines ancient animals, plants & ecosystems from wee single-celled organisms to big & mighty dinosaurs.
22 Huhti 20256min

Stone, Bone & Water: Cretaceous Capilano Fossil Field Trip
Cretaceous Capilano Fossil Field Trip — From downtown Vancouver, drive north through Stanley Park and over the Lion’s Gate Bridge. Take the North Vancouver exit toward the ferries. Turn right onto Tay...
12 Huhti 20257min

Theropods of a Feather: Living Dinosaurs, the Birds
Welcome to the Fossil Huntress Podcast. Today on the show we’re talking about living dinosaurs—our avian friends, the birds. From the tiniest hummingbird to the towering ostrich, these feathered creat...
1 Huhti 20258min














