comparemela.com
Home
Live Updates
An Ancient Leviathan Named for King Tut, But Moby-Dinky in S
An Ancient Leviathan Named for King Tut, But Moby-Dinky in S
An Ancient Leviathan Named for King Tut, But Moby-Dinky in Size
Paleontologists in Egypt announced the discovery of Tutcetus rayanensis, an eight-foot-long leviathan that lived 41 million years ago.
Related Keywords
Wadi El Rayan ,
Al Bar Ala Mar ,
Egypt ,
Fayum ,
Al Fayyum ,
London ,
City Of ,
United Kingdom ,
American University ,
Al Qahirah ,
Mansoura ,
Ad Daqahliyah ,
Alabama ,
United States ,
Giza ,
Al Jizah ,
Greece ,
Peru ,
Greek ,
Egyptian ,
Richard Owen ,
Hesham Sallam ,
Nicholas Pyenson ,
Herman Melville ,
Moby Dick ,
Jonathan Geisler ,
Mohammed Antar ,
Erik Seiffert ,
Smithsonian National Museum Of Natural History ,
London Geological Society ,
University Of Southern California ,
Communications Biology ,
York Institute Of Technology ,
Egyptian Museum ,
Mansoura University ,
American University Of Cairo ,
Fayum Depression ,
Western Desert ,
Bartonian Age ,
Tethys Sea ,
King Tut ,
Grand Egyptian Museum ,
Wadi El Rayan Protected Area ,
Wadi Al Hitan ,
National Museum ,
Natural History ,
Southern California ,
New York Institute ,
Paleontology ,
Fish ,
Whales ,
Fossil ,
Archaeology Anthropology ,
Your Feed Science ,
Your Feed Animals ,