![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjku3KM-RS51rBcH-db1N0shjrPt8uYQ5mWa6mzFmupG1LEmNE59PWp3Iq_LcT8VHHJ76WPjK8PtibYCtE1YV0uNBkkS6MNSad-DcYgv-uwU2cU53D8hyphenhyphenucCjZaFg9Q6NLoP2pxCmefVcM/s200/100616161207.jpg)
Paleontologists have discovered a variety of dinosaur bones in Alberta, Canada, from the Late Cretaceous that have evidence of mammalian tooth marks, the earliest such gnawing evidence from the primitive mammals of that age.
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