Portal:Paleontology/DYK/6


 * ... that the extinct ant Anochetus lucidus is named for its shiny exoskeleton?
 * ... that the recently described extinct penguin Inkayacu from the Eocene of Peru is postulated to have had gray and reddish brown feathers, unlike the black and white feathers of living penguins?
 * ... that Ocepeia (pictured), a 60-million-year-old afrotherian mammal, is named after a Moroccan mining company?
 * ...that although related to modern filter feeding baleen whales, the recently discovered prehistoric whale Janjucetus had large serrated teeth implying that it fed on large fish or even sharks?
 * ... that seeds of the extinct tree Eucommia montana are found from British Columbia to Colorado?
 * ... that paleontologists have discovered the fossilized eggs of cephalopods, fishes, and reptiles, with some dinosaur eggs (pictured) being preserved with pathological shell deformities?
 * ... that Electrinocellia peculiaris is named for the Latin "electrum"  meaning amber,  "Inocellia", the type genus for Inocelliidae,  and "peculiaris" for the enigmatic nature of the species?
 * ... that Adolf Carl Noé challenged disbelief in the possibility of North American coal balls (example pictured) by presenting a wheelbarrow full of them?
 * ... that the extinct New Zealand Musk Duck was becoming more sedentary than its closest relative, the Australian Musk Duck?
 * ... that the Cretaceous Malagasy mammal Lavanify is most closely related to a species from India?