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2/21/12 Once upon a time, more than 300 million years ago, Wallonia had no reason to envy the Bahamas. Fossil sponges tell us more about this period!
2/2/12 Whilst everyone had thought that they had – for the greater part – disappeared at the end of the Jurassic era, the ichthyosaurs actually had a much longer life.
4/27/11 The Microbial and Plant Ecology Laboratory at the University of Liège has identified six parameters which could serve as indicators of the biological quality of Walloon soils. It is now up to government to decide how to use them.
10/26/10 Frédéric Boulvain has brought out, through ‘Ellipses’ publishers, a course on sedimentary petrology which is already being used in numerous francophone universities.
9/10/10 The most ancient macroscopic fossils could be seen on the cover of Nature, on the 1st of July. Dating back 2.1 billion years, they were found in a quarry in Gabon. Emmanuelle Javaux, a ULg micro-palaeontologist, took part in the discovery.
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