T. Rex footprint

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Victoria

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'T.rex footprint' found by British dinosaur hunter: report
Tue Oct 9

LONDON (AFP) - A Britain-based palaeontologist believes he has found the world's first known Tyrannosaurus rex footprint, he told a BBC television documentary Wednesday.

Phil Manning said he has high hopes the one square metre (about 11 square feet) print, from the famed Hell Creek area of the northwest US state of Montana, is from the flesh-eating giant, although 100 percent certainty is impossible.

"People have been trying to find T.rex tracks for a hundred years," Manning, who specialises in Jurassic and Cretaceous period dinosaur tracks, told the BBC.

"Unless you come across an animal dead in its tracks you can't say for definite what left them.

"However with information available about the numbers of T.rex in the rocks of the Hell Creek formation, it is the closest we have got so far to discovering a tyrannosaur track."

Manning, whose work still needs to be peer-reviewed, suggested the 67-million-year-old print "could only" be one of the two species previously found in Hell Creek, Nanotyrannus or its bigger relative Tyrannosaurus rex.

"The size of the footprint at 76 centimetres (30 inches) in length suggests it is more likely to be the latter," said the academic, from the University of Manchester, northwest England.

"There is no such thing as a truth in science, so for us this is as close as we get to what I think is a fantastic find."

Tyrannosaurus rex, which stood about 20 foot (six metres) tall, 40 foot long and weighed about seven tonnes, was one of the last dinosaurs to roam the earth before the entire species was wiped out about 65 million years ago.

All T.rex remains have been found in the Hell Creek area. Manning located the giant footprint last year.

Angela Milner, associate keeper of palaeontology at London's Natural History Museum, told AFP she was interested in comparing Manning's discovery with one found in New Mexico in 1993 that was given the name "Tyrannosaurus pillmorei".

"That print was about four centimetres longer... and is also thought to have been made by a T.rex," she said.

"It is never possible to be certain of the animal that made fossil footprints as they do not die conveniently at the end of their tracks.

"However both these prints occur in rocks of the right age, they definitely were made by large carnivorous dinosaurs -- and the only one that was that large enough to leave such a huge footprint was Tyrannosaurus rex."
 
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It helps to remind us there were/are bigger things than us out there. :)

V
 
Which is why one should never discount the possibilities. Dooo doo dooo doooooooo. :) There are things out there waaaay taller than me.


V
 
Which is why one should never discount the possibilities. Dooo doo dooo doooooooo. :) There are things out there waaaay taller than me.

V

and for your little size, YOU'VE left a big footprint TOO!! :)
With all the T.Rex that were apparently around, I wonder why it is, that their footprints are so hard to find??
 
And more discoveries...

V


Dinosaur skeleton unearthed in Argentina By MICHAEL ASTOR, Associated Press Writer
Mon Oct 15

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil - The skeleton of what is believed to be a new dinosaur species — a 105-foot plant-eater that is among the largest dinosaurs ever found — has been uncovered in Argentina, scientists said Monday.

Scientists from Argentina and Brazil said the Patagonian dinosaur appears to represent a previously unknown species of Titanosaur because of the unique structure of its neck. They named it Futalognkosaurus dukei after the Mapuche Indian words for "giant" and "chief," and for Duke Energy Argentina, which helped fund the skeleton's excavation.

"This is one of the biggest in the world and one of the most complete of these giants that exist," said Jorge Calvo, director of the paleontology center at the National University of Comahue, Argentina. He was lead author of a study on the dinosaur published in the peer-reviewed Annals of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences.

Scientists said the giant herbivore walked the Earth some 88 million years ago, during the late Cretaceous period.

Since the first bones were found on the banks of Lake Barreales in the Argentine province of Neuquen in 2000, paleontologists have dug up the dinosaur's neck, back region, hips and the first vertebra of its tail.

"I'm pretty certain it's a new species," agreed Peter Mackovicky, associate curator for dinosaurs at Chicago's Field Museum, who was not involved with the discovery. "I've seen some of the remains of Futalognkosaurus and it is truly gigantic."

Calvo said the neck alone must have been 56 feet long, and by studying the vertebrae, they figured the tail probably measured 49 feet. The dinosaur reached over 43 feet tall, and the excavated spinal column weighed about 9 tons when excavated. One neck vertebra alone measured more than 3 feet high.

Jeff Wilson, an assistant professor of paleontology at the University of Michigan, who was asked to review the finding, said he was impressed by the sheer amount of skeleton recovered.

"I should really try to underscore how incredible it is to have partial skeleton of something this size," Wilson said in telephone interview. "With these kind of bones you can't study them by moving them around on the table; you have to move around them yourself."

"It shows us the upper limit for dinosaur size," Wilson added. "There are some that are bigger but they all top out around this size."

Patagonia also was home to the other two largest dinosaur skeletons found to date — Argentinosaurus, at around 115 feet long, and Puertasaurus reuili, 115 feet to 131 feet long.

Comparison between the three herbivores, however, is difficult because scientists have only found few vertebrae of Puertasaurus, and while the skeleton of Futalognkosaurus (FOO-ta-long-koh-SOHR-us) is fairly complete, scientists have not uncovered any bones from its limbs.

North America's dinosaurs don't even compare in size, Mackovicky added in a phone interview. "Dinosaurs do get big here, but nothing near the proportions we see in South America."

The site where Futalognkosaurus was found has been a bonanza for paleontologists, yielding more than 1,000 specimens, including 240 fossil plants, 300 teeth and the remains of several other dinosaurs.

"As far as I know, there is no other place in the world where there is such a large and diverse quantity of fossils in such small area. That is truly unique," said Alexander Kellner, a researcher with the Brazilian National Museum and co-author of the dinosaur's scientific description.
 
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This kind of stuff always make me think of Dr Seuss' "Horton hears a who".........perhaps WE are the ones that our whole world is really just the size of a dandelion??
In the big scheme of things ...we pretty much are just a sneeze ! :)
Thanks for the kewl info V !
PS>>>>> gone up in the ballon yet????
jeannie
 
Fascinating stuff, V!
 
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