• Mashup Score: 24

    Dinosaurs and mammals have coexisted for the last ~ 230 million years. Both groups arose during the Late Triassic and diversified throughout the Mesozoic and into the Cenozoic (the latter in the form of birds). Although they undoubtedly interacted in many ways, direct fossil evidence for their interaction is rare. Here we report a new fossil find from the Lujiatun Member of the Lower Cretaceous…

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    • A @SciReports paper reports on a fossil that appears to have preserved a small mammal in the process of attacking a bipedal, beaked dinosaur, suggesting small mammals during the Cretaceous may have preyed on dinosaurs considerably larger than themselves. https://t.co/Ag8IVpKlc6 https://t.co/6BpHuxZYUm

  • Mashup Score: 18

    Human activities greatly impact surface water quality, while being reliant upon it for water supply. Surface water quality is expected to change in the future as a result of alterations to pollutant loadings, surface water withdrawals and hydrological regimes, driven by both climate change and socio-economic developments. Here we use a high-resolution global surface water quality model to project…

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    • A study in @NatureWaterJnl suggests that up to 5.5 billion people could be affected by surface water pollution by 2100. The findings indicate that sub-Saharan Africa is predicted to become a global hotspot of surface water pollution. https://t.co/JfpGZSx1D7 https://t.co/FLKLo5qPos