
-
OpenAI wins $200 mn contract with US military
-
AFP photographer shot in face with rubber bullet at LA protest
-
Boca denied by two Argentines as Benfica fight back
-
Rise in 'harmful content' since Meta policy rollbacks: survey
-
Trump to leave G7 early after warning of Iran attack
-
'Strange' to play in front of 50,000 empty seats: Chelsea's Maresca
-
Netanyahu says 'changing face of Middle East' as Israel, Iran trade blows
-
Mexican band accused of glorifying cartels changes its tune
-
G7 leaders urge Trump to ease off trade war
-
Trump presses Iran to talk but holds back on joint G7 call
-
Colombia presidential hopeful 'critical' after shooting
-
Main doctor charged in actor Matthew Perry overdose to plead guilty
-
Chelsea defeat LAFC in poorly-attended Club World Cup opener
-
Tiafoe crashes out, Rune cruises through at Queen's Club
-
Netanyahu says campaign 'changing face of Middle East' as Israel, Iran trade blows
-
What's not being discussed at G7 as Trump shapes agenda
-
UK apologises to thousands of grooming victims as it toughens law
-
Iran state TV briefly knocked off air by strike after missiles kill 11 in Israel
-
Trump urges Iran to talk as G7 looks for common ground
-
Canada wildfire near Vancouver contained
-
Four Atletico ultras get suspended jail for Vinicius effigy
-
England's top women's league to expand to 14 teams
-
Oil prices drop, stocks climb as Iran-Israel war fears ease
-
UN refugee agency says will shed 3,500 jobs due to funding cuts
-
US moves to protect all species of pangolin, world's most trafficked mammal
-
Kneecap 'unfazed' by legal problems, says friend and director
-
Electric fences, drones, dogs protect G7 leaders from bear attack
-
The name's Metreweli... Who is UK MI6's first woman chief?
-
Oil prices fall, stocks rise as Iran-Israel war fears ease
-
Fighter jets, refuelling aircraft, frigate: UK assets in Mideast
-
Iranian Nobel laureates, Cannes winner urge halt to Iran-Israel conflict
-
Struggling Gucci owner's shares soar over new CEO reports
-
Khamenei, Iran's political survivor, faces ultimate test
-
Ireland prepares to excavate 'mass grave' at mother and baby home
-
France shuts Israeli weapons booths at Paris Air Show
-
Iran and Israel exchange deadly strikes in spiralling air war
-
Ex-England captain Farrell rejoins Saracens from Racing 92
-
UN slashes global aid plan over 'deepest funding cuts ever'
-
Sri Lanka's Mathews hails 'dream run' in final Test against Bangladesh
-
Former England captain Farrell rejoins Saracens from Racing 92
-
Olympic champ Ingebrigtsen's father acquitted of abusing son
-
Maria climbs 43 places in WTA rankings after Queen's win
-
Iran hits Israel with deadly missile onslaught
-
German court jails Syrian 'torture' doctor for life
-
Oil prices fall even as Israel-Iran strikes extend into fourth day
-
Scientists track egret's 38-hour flight from Australia to PNG
-
Los Angeles curfew to continue for 'couple more days': mayor
-
Iran hits Tel Aviv after overnight Israeli strikes on Tehran
-
China factory output slows but consumption offers bright spot
-
G7 confronts Israel-Iran crisis as Trump dominates summit

'Death shadow' dinosaur unearthed in Argentina
Argentine paleontologists have announced the discovery of an apex-predator dinosaur that measured three stories from nose to tail and eviscerated its prey with sharp, curved claws.
The six-ton giant, the largest megaraptor unearthed to date, fed on smaller dinosaurs that it ripped to shreds with its talons before digging into their intestines, paleontologist Mauro Aranciaga told AFP.
It would have been the "apex predator" of its time, said Aranciaga -- well deserving of its chilling scientific name "Maip macrothorax."
The first part, "Maip," is derived from an "evil" mythological figure of Patagonia's indigenous Aonikenk people.
The character was associated with "the shadow of the death" that "kills with cold wind" in the Andes mountains, according to a study reporting the find in the Nature journal Scientific Reports.
The second part, "macrothorax," refers to the enormous expanse of the creature's chest cavity -- some 1.2 meters (3.9 feet) wide.
- 'Childhood dream' -
The newly-identified monster measured nine to 10 meters in length, larger than any previously discovered type of megaraptor -- a group of flesh-eating giants that once roamed what is now South America, according to Aranciaga's team.
It lived about 70 million years ago towards the end of the Cretaceous period in what was then a tropical forest, long before the Andes mountain range and glaciers that now define Patagonia.
The killer reptile had two sharp, curved claws per front paw, each talon some 40 centimeters (15.7 inches) long.
Aranciaga, now 29, had the good fortune of finding the first piece of Maip on his first-ever professional expedition three years ago to Argentina's Santa Cruz province.
This led to months of meticulous digging, cleaning and classification of a large cache of bones: vertebrae as well as bits of rib, hip, tail and arm.
"When I lifted the vertebra and saw that it had the characteristics of a megaraptor, it was really a huge thrill," recalled Aranciaga.
"Somehow I fulfilled my childhood dream... finding a new fossil and it turning out to be a megaraptor: the group in which I specialize," he told AFP.
Maip was one of the last megaraptors to inhabit Earth before the dinosaurs went extinct about 66 million years ago, according to Fernando Novas of the Argentine Museum of Natural Sciences' Laboratory of Comparative Anatomy.
It is also the southernmost megaraptor ever found, added Aranciaga, a doctoral fellow at Argentina's National Scientific and Technical Research Council (Conicet).
F.Bennett--AMWN