It would be wise to rephrase this more specifically but with this much information to deal with the question it is hard to tell what you are really asking. I would assume the cave men discovered human bones when they broke their legs with clubs or when another one got chewed up by a large dinosuar. >.<
The first dinosaur fossil was discovered in 1822 in England by Mary Ann Mantell and her husband, Gideon Mantell. The fossil was later named Iguanodon.
Peter Barrett is credited with finding the first tetrapod fossil in Antarctica in 1967.
Fossil remains of Kenyapithecus were discovered by Mary Leakey in the late 1960s in Kenya's Tugen Hills.
There is no definitive answer to who discovered the last fossil on earth, as new fossils are still being discovered regularly by paleontologists around the world. Fossil discoveries are ongoing and driven by scientific research and exploration.
Dinosaur Species In Australia --AtlascopcosaurusAustralovenatorAustrosaurusDiamantinasaurusFulgurotheriumGrallatorKakuruLeaellynasauraMinmiMuttaburrasaurusOzraptorQantassaurusRapatorRhoetosaurusSerendipaceratopsTimimusWalgettosuchusWintonopusWintonotitan
The first fossil discovered in Antarctica was a Nodosaurid Ankylosaur. It was found in 1986.
Carlos Jaramillos
The first dinosaur fossil was discovered in 1822 in England by Mary Ann Mantell and her husband, Gideon Mantell. The fossil was later named Iguanodon.
Cryolophosaurus was the first dinosaur discovered in antarctica
Othniel Charles Marsh discovered Stegosaurus in 1877. The fossil was found in Morrison, Colorado.
Peter Barrett is credited with finding the first tetrapod fossil in Antarctica in 1967.
The first Stegosaurus fossil was found in Colorado, USA, in 1876 by M. P. Felch.
Othniel Charles Marsh discovered Stegosaurus in 1877. The fossil was found in Morrison, Colorado.
The first dinosaur fossil ever found in Antarctica is called Antarctopelta. Its fossils date to the late Cretaceous period. Cryolophosaurus, the first theropod discovered in Antarctica, date back to the early Jurassic period.
The first dinosaur fossil ever found in Antarctica is called Antarctopelta. Its fossils date to the late Cretaceous period. Cryolophosaurus, the first theropod discovered in Antarctica, date back to the early Jurassic period.
Fossil remains of Kenyapithecus were discovered by Mary Leakey in the late 1960s in Kenya's Tugen Hills.
There is no definitive answer to who discovered the last fossil on earth, as new fossils are still being discovered regularly by paleontologists around the world. Fossil discoveries are ongoing and driven by scientific research and exploration.