These were no mean feet. Scientists put their “stamp” on prehistory after discovering a massive dinosaur footprint in Mongolia said to have belonged to one of the largest two-legged animals ...
The excavation, conducted over a week in June 2024, involved more than 100 researchers, students, and volunteers. They uncovered five distinct trackways, comprising over 200 footprints ...
An excavation at a limestone quarry in Oxfordshire in the U.K. has yielded a massive, downright prehistoric find—not one, not dozens, but hundreds of footprints left behind by dinosaurs of the ...
Around 100 volunteers from the University of Birmingham ... the farther apart the footprints will be,” Tanner, who was not involved in the excavation, said. The fifth pathway contained prints ...
How were these tracks preserved? These dinosaurs roamed a warm, shallow lagoon, and their footprints were preserved when sediments likely covered them after a storm, protecting them from erosion. The ...
Around 100 volunteers from the University of Birmingham and the University of Oxford collaborated ... “The general rule of locomotion is that the faster the animal is moving, the farther apart the ...
Now a team of over 100 researchers from the Universities of Birmingham and Oxford have determined that the mysterious bumps found at Dewars Farm Quarry in Oxfordshire were in fact dinosaur tracks ...
The footprints were first spotted by quarry worker Gary Johnson when he felt ‘unusual bumps’ a few metres apart while driving his digger. After contacting experts at the University of Birmingham and ...
The extraordinary find, made after a team of more than 100 people excavated the Dewars ... of Oxford and Birmingham said. "These footprints offer an extraordinary window into the lives of ...