Because the quarry is located in an area famed among paleontologists as a hotbed for evidence of dinosaur activity ... by a Megalosaurus. The 30-foot-tall carnivorous theropod was a fearsome ...
The fossils were discovered in a rock layer known as the Popo Agie Formation and include parts of the species' legs, which helped confirm its classification as a dinosaur and likely a very early ...
researchers found 65-centimeter (2.1-foot) long footprints. From the footprints, researchers were also able to determine the direction and speed at which the dinosaurs were moving. Most of the ...
The Megalosaurus, a ferocious 30-foot-long predator, is famous for its distinctive large three-toed feet with claws. It is also the first dinosaur to ever be scientifically named, in 1824, by Oxford ...
SIOUX CITY -- Beginning Monday, the Goodwill of the Great Plains Outlet Center, 3100 W. Fourth St., will be open seven days a week. The Outlet Center, which gives donated items a second life, will ...
A fifth set belonged to the Megalosaurus, a ferocious 30-foot predator that left a distinctive triple-claw print and was the first dinosaur to be scientifically named two centuries ago.
LONDON-Researchers have uncovered hundreds of dinosaur footprints dating back to the middle Jurassic era in a quarry in Oxfordshire, southern England, showing that reptiles such as the 9m predator ...
London, Jan 2 (PTI) Researchers from the Universities of Oxford and Birmingham have uncovered a huge expanse of quarry floor filled with hundreds of different dinosaur footprints. In a stunning find, ...
Credit: Caroline Wood / University of Oxford Researchers determined the sauropod walked through first, as its print was later pressed down by the Megalosaurus. “Knowing that this one individual ...
By Lynsey Chutel Reporting from London Quarry workers in England have discovered the clawed footprints of a 30-foot ... made the print but that they believed it was a cetiosaurus, a dinosaur ...
"Knowing that this one individual dinosaur walked across this surface and left exactly that print is so exhilarating," the Oxford Museum's Duncan Murdock told the BBC. "You can sort of imagine it ...