Thailand Dinosaurs
-
{
- All
- News
- Videos
-
Scientists Find Fossils Of Southeast Asia's Giant Dinosaur In Thailand
- Friday May 15, 2026
- Science | Edited by Astitva Raj
According to the researchers, the largest predator in the ecosystem was a relative of the giant African meat-eating dinosaur Carcharodontosaurus.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Scientists Dig Up Southeast Asia's 90-Foot Long Dinosaur In Thailand
- Friday May 15, 2026
- World News | Reuters
Along a meandering river in a warm and arid region that is now Thailand roughly 113 million years ago, a planteating behemoth almost 90 feet (27 meters) long browsed
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Old bones yield a new age of dinosaurs in Thailand
- Tuesday July 13, 2010
- World News | Thomas Fuller, NYT News Service
When the rains come and the rivers swell, giant bones tend to wash up in this remote rice-farming corner of Thailand.For years, farmers did not know what they were or what to do with them.The superstitious buried them. Others brought them to Buddhist temples, where monks collected them alongside artifacts and other curios.Now the message is out: Do...
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Scientists Find Fossils Of Southeast Asia's Giant Dinosaur In Thailand
- Friday May 15, 2026
- Science | Edited by Astitva Raj
According to the researchers, the largest predator in the ecosystem was a relative of the giant African meat-eating dinosaur Carcharodontosaurus.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Scientists Dig Up Southeast Asia's 90-Foot Long Dinosaur In Thailand
- Friday May 15, 2026
- World News | Reuters
Along a meandering river in a warm and arid region that is now Thailand roughly 113 million years ago, a planteating behemoth almost 90 feet (27 meters) long browsed
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Old bones yield a new age of dinosaurs in Thailand
- Tuesday July 13, 2010
- World News | Thomas Fuller, NYT News Service
When the rains come and the rivers swell, giant bones tend to wash up in this remote rice-farming corner of Thailand.For years, farmers did not know what they were or what to do with them.The superstitious buried them. Others brought them to Buddhist temples, where monks collected them alongside artifacts and other curios.Now the message is out: Do...
-
www.ndtv.com