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Dinosaur Tracks Found In Arkansas

Dinosaur Arkansas

10/ 6/11 12:11 AM ET   AP

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. -- Researchers at the University of Arkansas are studying a new field of fossilized dinosaur tracks, including one set that appears to be from a large three-toed predator, the university said Wednesday.

The tracks were found on private land in southwest Arkansas and provide a window into the life forms that roamed the area as long as 120 million years ago during the Early Cretaceous period.

"The quality of the tracks and the length of the trackways make this an important site," said Stephen K. Boss, who led the project.

The research effort is funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation.

Based on the rock in which the footprints were found, researchers have a good idea of what the climate would have been like, Boss said.

"Picture an environment much like that of the shores of the Persian Gulf today. The air temperature was hot. The water was shallow and very salty," Boss said. "It was a harsh environment. We're not sure what the animals were doing here, but clearly they were here in some abundance."

Some of the tracks in the field have not been documented before in Arkansas. The researchers' work will expand knowledge about dinosaurs that roamed the area and the climate during the period.

The tracks from the three-toed dinosaur are about 2 feet long by 1 foot wide and likely are from Acrocanthosaurus atokensis, one of the largest predators ever known. There are also prints from sauropods, large, long-necked plant-eating dinosaurs. Other sauropod tracks have been found in the state, including at a site near Nashville, also in the state's southwest.

"Through tracks, we can learn all sorts things about dinosaur biomechanics and behavior," said University of Kansas researcher Brian Platt, who is taking part in the program. "Dinosaur bones can be dragged away by animals or swept out to sea. But we know that about 120 million years ago, dinosaurs walked right through here."

The grant from the National Science Foundation enabled a team of researchers to spend two weeks studying the site. They used traditional tools, including hammers, chisels and brooms, but also cutting-edge technology to record images, take measurements and map the site.

Rock samples from the site can also shed light on the conditions under which the dinosaurs lived.

"Because we see footprints here, we know that this surface was at one time exposed to the elements," said Celina Suarez, a postdoctoral researcher at Boise State University who will be joining the faculty at the University of Arkansas in the fall of 2012.

Researchers can calculate how much rain fell and how much moisture evaporated. Using data from this site and others, scientists can learn more about the climate in general and work to predict the planet's future climate.

"This site will add to the knowledge of both the animals and climate of the Early Cretaceous," Boss said. "Scientists will be studying these data for many years."

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FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. -- Researchers at the University of Arkansas are studying a new field of fossilized dinosaur tracks, including one set that appears to be from a large three-toed predator, the unive...
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. -- Researchers at the University of Arkansas are studying a new field of fossilized dinosaur tracks, including one set that appears to be from a large three-toed predator, the unive...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cayce58
09:43 AM on 10/07/2011
Been a great 20 years for dinosaurs. They have evolved from slow, stupid and cold blooded to quick, warm blooded and feathered. Given the new version, do you really think they would hang around with Michelle.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John Di Saia
An Opinionated Plastic Surgeon in the OC
09:38 AM on 10/07/2011
Chasing dino tracks in the middle of a recession with public funds.....great use of our money.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dallas Dunlap
09:45 AM on 10/07/2011
Actually, it is.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John Di Saia
An Opinionated Plastic Surgeon in the OC
01:59 PM on 10/07/2011
For the guy chasing the dino tracks maybe. Not for those of us who pay the bill.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
dimplasm
More chocolate, please.
06:21 PM on 10/07/2011
It is.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Tom Joad
"While there is a lower class, I am in it "
07:45 AM on 10/09/2011
...oh...there's a recession...I guess we should suspend the quest for knowledge...just like you...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John Di Saia
An Opinionated Plastic Surgeon in the OC
09:31 AM on 10/09/2011
Simply spend less of my money doing it thanks.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Tom Joad
"While there is a lower class, I am in it "
10:47 PM on 10/06/2011
...Huckabee's gonna blow a gasket...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Tom Joad
"While there is a lower class, I am in it "
10:38 PM on 10/06/2011
...tracking right through the buckle of the bible belt...oops...
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09:43 PM on 10/06/2011
They could be recent tracks. Arkansas still has a lot of dinosaurs.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
josie klapper
Who can I piss-off today?
08:50 AM on 10/09/2011
Beat me to it...
Cheers!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mcartri
05:08 PM on 10/06/2011
"These 5,000 year old dinosaur track's had Adam and Eve's foot prints directly behind them", said Michelle Bachmann. When asked why scientists haven't shown them, she replied, "Duh, the word 'Scientists' or "Atheists', as I prefer to call them, destroyed the foot prints. Adam and Eve were clearly out walking their pet dinosaur."
04:15 PM on 10/06/2011
Cool
Allgernon
Your position is clearly ambiguous
04:14 PM on 10/06/2011
The Early Cretaceous period was actually only 3500 years ago, so all academics are headed in the wrong direction. Plus, if the climate was warmer then, that belies claims of global warming.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Matt Chernesky
17 Year Old Little Gay Monster on HuffPost
04:05 PM on 10/06/2011
This is preposterous. The Earth is OBVIOUSLY only a few thousand years old! ;)
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feo
huh?
03:56 PM on 10/06/2011
Looks like Jesus' sandal prints to me.
03:27 PM on 10/06/2011
Is that the same kind of dinosaur that Adam and Eve rode?
03:23 PM on 10/06/2011
God just planted that to confuse us...

Seriously though, what a find!
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gutenmorgen
a.k.a. poopdeck
04:10 PM on 10/06/2011
"God just planted that to confuse us..." Did you know that Leonardo da Vinci had almost the same reaction when he first saw marine fossils high above the sea in rocks of the hills near Florence, Italy? Hundreds of years before him Arab scientists had concluded that such rocks had formed at the bottom of the sea. Some historians believe that Leonardo was very much aware of what had happened to Galileo.
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blackwind
Relax, nothing is under control
04:15 PM on 10/06/2011
I read somewhere that one of the Egyptian Pharohs correctly deduced that rocks full of sea life meant that that area was once under the sea.
There's still people that can't figure that much out.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alteredstory
Hold on to the center
03:23 PM on 10/06/2011
When I was taking a tracking course in highschool, one of the things we learned is that over time, almost any animal track can end up looking like almost any other animal track.

That's not to say these aren't what the researches hope they are, but changing conditions over a couple weeks can drastically change the size of a footprint, and these are millions of years old.
03:56 PM on 10/06/2011
What?#?! How do you turn an elephant track into a coyote track? A millipede trail into a footprint? Its true that you can have partial tracks, infilled tracks, eroded tracks, etc. Often times, with many examples to compare, the alteration is obvious. But to say any track can look like any other is false.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alteredstory
Hold on to the center
09:43 PM on 10/06/2011
Well, it's be lion and jackal, not coyote.

The point is that as conditions change, so do tracks. If it's in wet ground, and the ground freezes and thaws several times, the track will not only distort, but the ice crystals, combined with the shape of the track, and the substrate, can make the track grow a lot bigger, or can make toes merge.

Ever seen a hoarfrost? It can create a sort of solid bubble of earth, the water expanding itself apart, and then when it collapses in warmer temperatures, or crumbles, it creates a depression that can expand any previous depressions there.

Or maybe the substrate wasn't stable, and it flowed slowly, stretching the print.

I'm not saying this is definitely not what they claim, I'm just saying that the older tracks get, the trickier they are to read, and this one was very, very old before it was even fossilized. I don't even know what could happen to a track with the moving of tectonic plates.

Again - not saying this isn't a huge new carnivore, just saying that a multi-million-year-old track isn't exactly conclusive evidence.
03:17 PM on 10/06/2011
I found similar tracks in Utah, even a set that appeared to have a baby walking next to it's large mother , never seen anything where a mother and babies tracks were found together, I seem to be the only one to find them. Tried to get an expert to document them , but couldn't find anyone to actually spend he time.
03:24 PM on 10/06/2011
Should have poured some molds.
03:33 PM on 10/06/2011
I have detailed pictures, also found very rare tracks in a certain type of rock that tracks are not usually found , and can only be seen at a certain light level, locals walk by them on a popular trail for decades and never knew they were there, 4wheelers are running over the rock and starting to destroy it, told the local BLM about and they said there is nothing they can do.
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citycountryboy
02:51 PM on 10/06/2011
These findings, right down to the salty water aspect, correllate with early maps which show this to be a coastline, and todays climate changes and rising coastline indicate the possible return to that coastline, near central Arkansas, depicted by maps which are designed to predict the coastline of the future. Perhaps these maps are more thoroughly thought out than the deniers would have us believe.
03:28 PM on 10/06/2011
But don't forget that the continents have moved quite a lot since then and the landscape has changed shape.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Deli
Life after death, why wait?
03:30 PM on 10/06/2011
The coastal cycles may be like a tide that takes millions of years to cycle through. We are such dust motes in comparison to the life and climate this planet has seen.