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Site thought to be a watering hole discovered on Arizona-Utah border where dinosaurs 'were happy'

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Published Date: 22 October 2008
THE footprints on rock read like a diagram for the T-Rex tango. Geologists have identified a small site on the Arizona-Utah border that is so packed with prehistoric animal tracks it has been dubbed "a dinosaur dance floor".
While the ferocious lizards of 190 million years ago were not known to favour social choreographed movements, unless dining upon each other, researchers believe the three-quarter acre site in the Vermilion Cliffs National Monument area was a place, p
erhaps a watering hole, where the creatures were "happy".

During the Jurassic period, large stretches of the American west were a desert, so the presence of more than 1,000 tracks of a variety of creatures has led geologists to conclude the site was an oasis.

The footprints are now providing rich fodder for researchers trying to understand dinosaurs that survived in what many considered a vast, uninhabitable desert.

"Get out there and try stepping in their footsteps, and you feel like you are playing the game 'Dance Dance Revolution' that teenagers dance on," says Professor Marjorie Chan from the University of Utah. "This kind of reminded me of that – a dinosaur dance floor – because there are so many tracks and a variety of different tracks."

The discovery adds yet another site to the region's long list of dinosaur hotspots. The difference is sheer number of prints. In some places, there are a dozen footprints in a square yard. Researchers identified four different kinds of tracks in the rock but have not determined which species left them behind.

Some of the footprints – once thought to be potholes formed by erosion – measure 16 inches across and have three toes and a heel. Others are smaller and more circular. The area also includes what researchers think are rare marks left by a tail.

Winston Seiler, who studied the site, said the area might have been a popular gathering spot. It could have been one of many where Early Jurassic dinosaurs stopped for refreshment before moving on.

Mr Seiler imagines dinosaurs were "happy to be at this place, having wandered up and down many a sand dune, exhausted from the heat and the blowing sand, relieved and happy to come to a place where there was water".

The study's findings were published in this month's issue of the journal Palaios. "It's an exciting site and deserving of a lot more work," said Jim Kirkland, Utah's state paleontologist.

He hopes that paleontologists will begin a large-scale survey of the site.

Dinosaur tracks can provide important insight on behaviour and movements across the landscape, said Andrew Milner, paleontologist at the St George Dinosaur Discovery Site at Johnson Farm in south-western Utah.

The newly discovered site, about three miles from the nearest road, is part of a protected wilderness area that also includes a sandstone geologic formation called The Wave.

Twenty permits are issued each day to enter the area. Linda Price, the monument's manager, expects interest in the spot will soar with word of the dinosaur tracks site. Scientists say the prints were preserved in sandstone after being covered by shifting dunes.

They became exposed through erosion and will eventually disappear through erosion, too.





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1

Scullion,

Canada 22/10/2008 01:36:39
I'm not sure huge lizards can be happy but at least they were content.
Hold on...message from Sarah Palin, "It was probably the town of Bedrock's leash free zone for dinosaur pets."
2

2dogs in D.C.,

22/10/2008 01:56:55
Oh,a dino-park.
3

Guga II,

Rockall 22/10/2008 07:53:38
#3 Roofarse Blowfly/bring them on.

Will you be retiring to a UFO with your alien buddies that you talk to?
4

,

22/10/2008 08:30:18
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
5

Guga II,

Rockall 22/10/2008 08:49:34
#6.

Whilst your beloved UKIP/Tories lose their deposits.
6

Jay Kay,

22/10/2008 12:55:40
As I am always fond of throwing into the mix to the nut case Jehova's witness mob that circle the doors occasionally, looking for like minded idiots to convert. If you, as you care to beleive, think that god made the earth in seven days with Adam and Eve and the garden of eden etc etc, then how the flying fox do you explain Mr Dinosaur over there??

They tend to want to leave, pretty quickly after that.

Religion, biggest means to control the masses and make piles of money ever, the problem is there are a lot of idiots out there who fell for it, instead of carrying out a detailed analysis of a few flaws in this so called good book, we are all supposed to blindly follow. And his kindom in heaven shall be above the clouds, eh! what now! in the clouds yeh, just like all the renaisance portrayals yep! ok then lets all beleive that eh!.

Sorry the Dino's were here long before us and probably long after our pathetic little shot at destroying the planet fails, some other bug or superior being will rise up to inhabit this little ball of mud floating in the cosmos. Maybe they can convert them instead.
7

Postmark-55,

China, 22/10/2008 23:52:25
#8 Jay Kay,
Very colourful yet truthful analogy, too bad so many of the masses fall for all that religious bunk, buying a seat on the bus to heaven. Unfortunately my parents fell for that all their lives and beyond, for they left all their money to a church.
8

A Clamper,

Edinburgh 23/10/2008 15:41:51
Yet more bad news for the Utah Mormons. No doubt they will be telling us that "god put them there to test our faith" or some other ridiculous interptertation.

 

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