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  2. Bellatoripes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bellatoripes

    The tracks are large and three-toed, and based on their size are believed to have been made by tyrannosaurids, such as Albertosaurus and Daspletosaurus. Fossils of Bellatoripes are notable for preserving trackways of multiple individual tyrannosaurids all travelling in the same direction at similar speeds, suggesting the prints may have been ...

  3. Trace fossil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trace_fossil

    Perhaps the most spectacular trace fossils are the huge, three-toed footprints produced by dinosaurs and related archosaurs. These imprints give scientists clues as to how these animals lived. Although the skeletons of dinosaurs can be reconstructed, only their fossilized footprints can determine exactly how they stood and walked. Such tracks ...

  4. Grallator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grallator

    Grallator (GRA-lə-tor) is an ichnogenus (form taxon based on footprints) which covers a common type of small, three-toed print made by a variety of bipedal theropod dinosaurs. Grallator-type footprints have been found in formations dating from the Early Triassic through to the early Cretaceous periods.

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  6. Fossil track - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fossil_track

    There are tracks from two types of dinosaur. The first type of tracks are from a sauropod and were made by an animal of 30 to 50 feet in length, perhaps a brachiosaurid such as Pleurocoelus, [20] and the second tracks by a theropoda, an animal of 20 to 30 feet in length, perhaps an Acrocanthosaurus. A variety of scenarios was proposed to ...

  7. Animal track - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_track

    Bird tracks in snow. An animal track is an imprint left behind in soil, snow, or mud, or on some other ground surface, by an animal walking across it. Animal tracks are used by hunters in tracking their prey and by naturalists to identify animals living in a given area. [1]

  8. Lark Quarry Dinosaur Trackways - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lark_Quarry_Dinosaur_Trackways

    The footprints were first discovered in the 1960s by station manager, Glen Seymour, in the nearby Seymour Quarry. Palaeontologists from the Queensland Museum, including Mary Wade and Tony Thulborn and the University of Queensland excavated Lark Quarry during 1976–77 (the quarry was named after Malcolm Lark, a volunteer who removed a lot of the overlying rock.)

  9. Giant penguin hoax - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_penguin_hoax

    In 1948, several people reported finding large, three-toed animal tracks at Clearwater Beach in Florida. [2] Later, more tracks were found along the shore of Suwannee River, [4] 40 miles (64 kilometers) from the ocean. Later that year, a giant penguin was allegedly sighted at a distance. [2]