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  2. Carenque Natural Monument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carenque_Natural_Monument

    The Carenque Natural Monument is a fossil site of dinosaur footprints located in the parish of Belas in the municipality of Sintra, Portugal. It was designated as a natural monument in 1997 by Decree No. 19/97 of May 5. [1]

  3. Eubrontes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eubrontes

    Eubrontes is the name of fossilised dinosaur footprints dating from the Late Triassic and Early Jurassic. They have been identified from France, Poland, Slovakia, [ 2 ] Czech Republic, [ 3 ] Italy, Spain, Sweden, Australia (Queensland), US, [ 4 ] India, [ 5 ] China [ 1 ] and Brazil (South).

  4. Natural Monument of Carenque - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_Monument_of_Carenque

    [2] [3] This monument consists of a set of subcircular and tridactyl footprints containing one of the largest tracks in Europe, with an extension of approximately 140 m (460 ft). It is possible to observe a fossil record with hundreds of dinosaur footprints from the beginning of the Upper Cretaceous on a track over 120 m (390 ft), of 2 ...

  5. Researchers found that the dinosaur footprints were discovered over 3,700 miles away from each other – and that the footprints were made 120 million years ago on a "supercontinent known as ...

  6. Scientists have found the U.K.’s largest dinosaur footprint site ever.. The tracks were discovered in a quarry in Oxfordshire — about 60 miles northwest of London — by quarry employee Gary ...

  7. Matching dinosaur footprints found more than 3,700 miles apart

    www.aol.com/matching-dinosaur-footprints-found...

    Footprints dating back 120 million years show where dinosaurs were able to cross between land that's now part of two different continents. Matching dinosaur footprints found more than 3,700 miles ...

  8. Saurexallopus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saurexallopus

    Saurexallopus (meaning "reptile different foot") is an ichnogenus of four-toed theropod footprints from the Late Cretaceous period. The type ichnospecies is S. lovei, named and described in 1996 from the Harebell Formation. [1] The taxon was originally named Exallopus, but later renamed as Saurexallopus as the former was preoccupied by a ...

  9. Wakinyantanka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wakinyantanka

    Wakinyantanka are large, tridactyl, and bipedal pes prints, with the middle (third) toe being the longest (mesaxonic), typical of theropod footprints. The digits of Wakinyantanka are long and slender, and are widely divaricating so that the prints are roughly as wide as they are long, averaging between 55–60 centimetres (22–24 in) long and 60 centimetres (24 in) wide.