News

Paleontologists have discovered tracks belonging to meat-eating theropods and long-necked sauropods on the Isle of Skye.
Footprints made tens of thousands of years ago may look like they’ve been erased by time and weather, but — like invisible ...
Scientists filming a documentary in Sardinia accidentally uncovered 165-million-year-old dinosaur footprints — the island’s ...
Both types of dinosaurs would have had to have enough weight to leave behind such footprints, sinking through the sand to the hardened mud below, and that could last until this day. Blakesley likened ...
Tyrannosaurus rex ancestors and their plant-eating dinosaur prey would have congregated to drink water from a lagoon in what ...
Many of the footprints belonged to theropods – meat-eating dinosaurs that walked on two legs. These include morphotype-1a, a ...
It is the site of a dramatic moment in Scottish history. The Isle of Skye's rocky shoreline is where Charles Edward Stuart - known as Bonnie Prince Charlie - arrived by boat disguised as a maid to ...
Among those footprints, scientists have found new evidence of ancient activity recorded in the sand — and it’s transforming their understanding of early human technology. These, too ...
Blakesley explained that this was due to the fact that there would have only been a thin layer of sand ... of the footprints to estimate that they would have moved at speeds of around 2.5 ...
The vice-president says Russia and China have increased footprints in the area and the world cannot "bury our heads in the ...
A set of moa tracks, preserved on a fallen sandstone slab, were discovered by a couple walking along Kaipara’; The slab and its precious contents w ...