March 14, 2025

This High School Rock Is Teeming With Dinosaur Footprints—but No One Noticed for Decades – Gizmodo

During the early Jurassic period around 200 million years ago, Earth’s animals finally rebounded from one of the worst extinction events in the planet’s history. While paleontologists in Australia have not discovered any fossilized dinosaur bones from this period, these dinosaurs nevertheless made their bygone presence known.Researchers have discovered the greatest concentration of dinosaur footprints per square meter (10.7-square-feet) in Australia known to science. Unbeknownst to paleontologists, the slab of rock had been sitting in a high school for decades. Their study, published March 20 in the journal Historical Biology, details this and other early Jurassic dinosaur footprints hiding right under their noses.The 200-million-year-old footprints preserved in the high school rock “are from 47 individual dinosaurs which passed across a patch of wet, white clay, possibly walking along or crossing a waterway,” said Anthony Romilio, lead author of the study and a paleontologist at the University of Queensland, in a university statement. “It’s an unprecedented snapshot of dinosaur abundance, movement and behaviour from a time when no fossilised dinosaur bones have been found in Australia,” he added.Using a cast, 3D imaging, and light filters, Romilio documented 66 footprints on the boulder’s surface. Each print had three toes, identifying them as the ichnospecies Anomoepus scambus: small herbivores with long legs, short arms, a beak, and a “chunky body,” according to the paleontologist (by ichnospecies, paleontologists are referring to species based on trace fossils, such as fossilized footprints, trails, nests, and poop, as opposed to bones and teeth). When these chunky dinos meandered across the wet clay, they were traveling less than 4 miles per hour (6 kilometers per hour).The boulder was first discovered at a coal mine near Biloela, Central Queensland, two decades ago. It was then given to a high school, where it remained largely unnoticed until the community came across Romilio’s earlier work with dinosaur footprints and realized they might have something important.“Significant fossils like this can sit unnoticed for years, even in plain sight,” Romilio explained. “It’s incredible to think that a piece of history this rich was resting in a schoolyard all this time.”In fact, Romilio and his colleagues’ study highlights another set of footprints from the same region “also hiding in plain sight – I spotted it being used as a carpark entry delineator at Callide Mine,” he added. The specimen preserves two distinct footprints belonging to a larger two-legged dinosaur.“Along with a sample from a third rock that is encased in resin and was being used as a bookend, we have gained new insight into the ancient past in this region,” Romilio concluded. In other words, maybe you should take a closer look at that stone door stop your grandparents have had forever…
australiadinosaurstrace fossils
Get the best tech, science, and culture news in your inbox daily.

News from the future, delivered to your present.

Please select your desired newsletters and submit your email to upgrade your inbox.

A rocky stretch in Western Australia’s Pilbara, near Earth’s earliest-confirmed lifeforms, was hit by a meteorite about 3.5 billion years ago.

Paleontologists in Denmark found a once-gloopy, now-hardened mess that they believe was spat up by a Cretaceous-era fish.

The fossil, destroyed in an air raid 80 years ago, had faded from memory until a paleontologist found archival images.

Obviously from Australia, the largest of the three funnel-web spiders is nicknamed “Big Boy.”

Meet Lishulong wangi, a newly described dinosaur that lived 200 million years ago.

A chicken-sized dino, the oldest known in North America, has thrown a wrench in the widely accepted timeline of early dinosaur history.
Best of CES 2025 Awards ➜We may earn a commission when you buy through links on our sites.
©2025 GIZMODO USA LLC. All rights reserved.Mode
Follow us
Mode
Follow us

Source: https://gizmodo.com/this-high-school-rock-is-teeming-with-dinosaur-footprints-but-no-one-noticed-for-decades-2000575447

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Copyright © All rights reserved. | Newsphere by AF themes.