Paleontology
- 401
- Fossilfield Fossil Collection
- Images and information about a personal collection from Georgia, Kansas and Alabama.
- 402
- The Fossilguy
- Gives information about fossils, fossil collecting, and collecting sites mainly around the mid-Atlantic region of the United States. Offers fossil identification help.
- 403
- Australian Fossil Mammal Sites (Riversleigh / Naracoorte)
- Provides a brief description of these important World Heritage sites and links to each.
- 404
- Kronosaurus Korner
- Australian Museum displaying local fossils from the Cretaceous Inland Sea that covered a large section of Queensland 120 million years ago.
- 405
- University of Wyoming Geological Museum
- Includes more than 50,000 cataloged fossil, rock, and mineral specimens. Provides a virtual tour of the exhibits of dinosaur fossils, all found within the state.
- 406
- The Moa Pages
- Information on the Moa, New Zealand's giant extinct bird, including a general introduction, current research, an annotated bibliography, and illustrations.
- 407
- Northwest Paleontological Association
- The Association aims to bring vocational and professional paleontologists together for their mutual benefit. Provides information on membership, programs, images, resources and news.
- 408
- The Vermont Whale
- University of Vermont exhibit of the bones of a marine whale in the fields of rural Vermont.
- 410
- The Dinosaur Museum
- The history of the world of dinosaurs is presented with skeletons, fossilized skin, eggs, footprints, and realistic sculptures. Located in Blanding, Utah.
- 411
- The Cambrian Explosion
- Virtual museum exhibit about the major faunal radiation that occurred in the Cambrian.
- 414
- North Texas Fossils
- Lance Hall is an amateur fossil hunter and provides photographs of his finds in the Greater Dallas and Fort Worth areas.
- 416
- First Find of Edrioasteroids (Echinodermata) in the Bohemian Devonian
- Provides descriptions and photographs of three specimens of Rhenopyrgus sp. from the Dvorce-Prokop Limestone.
- 418
- The Cretaceous-tertiary Extinction Bolide
- Article from Science Frontiers Online arguing that the discovery of a worldwide iridium-rich layer is supporting evidence for the collision of an asteroid or comet with the earth about 65 million years ago.
