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Fossil track

A fossil track or ichnite (Greek "ιχνιον" (ichnion) – a track, trace or footstep) is a fossilized footprint. This is a type of trace fossil. A fossil trackway is a sequence of fossil tracks left by a single organism. Over the years, many ichnites have been found, around the world, giving important clues about the behaviour (and foot structure and stride) of the animals that made them. For instance, multiple ichnites of a single species, close together, suggest 'herd' or 'pack' behaviour of that species.

A reverse ichnite of the impression of Jialingpus yuechiensis, on display at the Paleozoological Museum of China.

Combinations of footprints of different species provide clues about the interactions of those species. Even a set of footprints of a single animal gives important clues, as to whether it was bipedal or quadrupedal. In this way, it has been suggested that some pterosaurs, when on the ground, used their forelimbs in an unexpected quadrupedal action.

Special conditions are required, in order to preserve a footprint made in soft ground (such as an alluvial plain or a formative sedimentary deposit). A possible scenario is a sea or lake shore that became dried out to a firm mud in hot, dry conditions, received the footprints (because it would only have been partially hardened and the animal would have been heavy) and then became silted over in a flash storm.

The first ichnite found was in 1800 in Massachusetts, US, by a farmer named Pliny Moody, who found 1-foot (31 cm) long fossilized footprints. They were thought by Harvard and Yale scholars to be from "Noah's Raven".[1]

A famous group of ichnites was found in a limestone quarry at Ardley, 20 km Northeast of Oxford, England, in 1997. They were thought to have been made by Megalosaurus and possibly Cetiosaurus. There are replicas of some of these footprints, set across the lawn of Oxford University Museum of Natural History (OUMNH).

A creature named Cheirotherium was, for a long time and still may be, only known from its fossilized trail. Its footprints were first found in 1834, in Thuringia, Germany, dating from the Late Triassic Period.

The largest known dinosaur footprints, belonging to sauropods and dating from the early Cretaceous were found to the north of Broome on the Dampier Peninsula, Western Australia, with some footprints measuring 1.7 m.[2][3] The 3D digital documentation of tracks has the benefit of being able to examine ichnite in detail remotely and distribute the data to colleagues and other interested personnel.[4]

Fossil trackway Protichnites in sedimentary stone.

Fossil trackways Edit

Many fossil trackways were made by dinosaurs, early tetrapods, and other quadrupeds and bipeds on land. Marine organisms also made many ancient trackways (such as the trails of trilobites and eurypterids like Hibbertopterus).

Some basic fossil trackway types:

  1. footprints
  2. tail drags
  3. belly drag marks – (e.g., tetrapods)[5]
  4. chain of trace platforms – (example: Yorgia)
  5. body imprint – (Monuron trackway, insect)
 
Specialized marine trace trackway, Yorgia, from the Ediacaran of northern Russia.

The majority of fossil trackways are foot impressions on land, or subsurface water, but other types of creatures will leave distinctive impressions. Examples of creatures supported, or partially supported, in a water environment are known. The fossil "millipede-type" genus Arthropleura left its multi-legged/feet trackways on land.

Hominid trackways Edit

Africa Edit

Tanzania Edit
 
Laetoli Site, February 2006

Some of the earliest trackways for human ancestors have been discovered in Tanzania.[6] The Laetoli trackway is famous for the hominin footprints preserved in volcanic ash. After the footprints were made in powdery ash, soft rain cemented the ash layer into tuff, preserving the prints.[6] The hominid prints were produced by three individuals, one walking in the footprints of the other, making the original tracks difficult to discover. As the tracks lead in the same direction, they might have been produced by a group – but there is nothing else to support the common reconstruction of a nuclear family visiting the waterhole together.

South Africa Edit

In South Africa, two ancient trackways have been found containing footprints, one at Langebaan and one at Nahoon. Both trackways occur in calcareous eolianites or hardened sand dunes. At Nahoon, trackways of at least five species of vertebrates, including three hominid footprints, are preserved as casts.[7] The prints at Langebaan are the oldest human footprints, dated to approximately 117,000 years old.[8]

Australia Edit

New South Wales Edit

Twenty six human fossil trackways have been found in the Willandra Lakes area adjacent to Lake Garnpung, consisting of 563 human footprints from 19,000 to 20,000 years ago.[9]

Early Tetrapod Edit

The earliest land creatures (actually land-marine coastal-riverine-marshland) left some of the first terrestrial trackways. They range from tetrapods to proto-reptilians and others.

A possible first connection of a trackway with the vertebrate that left it was published by Drs. Sebastian Voigt and David Berman and Amy Henrici in the 12 September 2007 issue of Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. The paleontologists who made the connection were aided by unusually detailed trackways left in fine-grained Lower Permian mud of the Tambach Formation in central Germany, together with exceptionally complete fossilised skeletons in the same 290-million-year-old strata. They matched the two most common trackways with the two most common fossils, two reptile-like herbivores known as Diadectes absitus (with the trackway pseudonym Ichniotherium cottae) and Orobates pabsti (with the trackway pseudonym of Orobates pabsti).[10]

The Permo-Carboniferous of Prince Edward Island, Canada contains trackways of tetrapods and stem-reptiles.[11] Macrofloral and palynological information help date them.

Ireland hosts late Middle Devonian tetrapod trackways at three sites on Valentia Island within the Valentia Slate Formation.[12][13]

The earliest fossil trackway of primitive tetrapods in Australia occurs in the Genoa River Gorge, Victoria, dating from the Devonian 350 million years ago.[14]

Dinosaur trackways Edit

 
Arabian Peninsula dinosaur trackway.

Dinosaurs lived on the continents before grasses evolved (the "Age of the Grasses" evolved with the "Age of the Mammals"); the dinosaurs lived in the Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous and left many trackways, both from plant-eaters and the meat-eaters, in various layers of mud and sand.

With scientific analysis, dinosaur specialists are now analyzing tracks for the walking-speeds, or sprint-running speeds for all categories of dinosaurs, even to the large plant eaters, but especially the faster 3-toed meat hunters. Evidence of herding, as well as pack hunting are also being investigated.

Brazil Edit

Africa Edit

Namibia Edit
 
Dinosaur trace fossil of Otjihaenamparero

In north-central Namibia there is a dinosaur trackway in sandstone on what is now the private farm Otjihaenamparero. Larger footprints are of a ceratosauria and smaller ones of syntarsus. The prints are believed to be around 190 million years old.[15][16]

Zimbabwe Edit

In the Lower Zimbabwe Rift Valley there is a trackway in 140 Ma rose-coloured sandstone of Chewore Area. The small footprint size, with both manus and pes, implies that it is a trackway of a juvenile, a probable carnosaur.[17]

North America Edit

 
Probable Dilophosaurus footprint from Red Fleet State Park, northeastern Utah.

The western regions of North America, especially the western border of the Western Interior Seaway, are common for dinosaur trackways. Wyoming has dinosaur trackways from the Late Cretaceous, 65 ma.[18] (A model example of this 3-toed Wyoming trackway was made for presentation)[19]

 
Theropod and sauropod tracks under water in the Paluxy River

In the United States, dinosaur footprints and trackways are found in the Glen Rose Formation, the most famous of these being the Paluxy River site in Dinosaur Valley State Park. These were the first sauropoda footprints scientifically documented, and were designated a US National Natural Landmark in 1969. Some are as large as about 3 feet across. The prints are thought to have been preserved originally in a tidal flat or a lagoon.[20] There are tracks from two types of dinosaur. The first type of tracks are from a sauropod and were made by an animal of 30 to 50 feet in length, perhaps a brachiosaurid such as Pleurocoelus,[20] and the second tracks by a theropoda, an animal of 20 to 30 feet in length, perhaps an Acrocanthosaurus. A variety of scenarios was proposed to explain the tracks, but most likely represent twelve sauropods "probably as a herd, followed somewhat later by three theropods that may or may not have been stalking – but that certainly were not attacking."[20]

Other examples include:

China Edit

The Gansu dinosaur trackway located in the Liujiazia National Dinosaur Geopark in Yanguoxia, China contains hundreds of tracks including 245 dinosaur, 350 theropod, 364 sauropod and 628 ornithopod tracks among others.[22]

Australia Edit

The Lark Quarry Trackway in Queensland contains three-toed tracks made by a heard of ornithopod dinosaurs crossing a river. It was once believed they respresented a large predator chasing doqn a mixed flock of small ornithopods and theropods, but this was contested in 2011.[23]

Mammal trackways Edit

Mammal trackways are among the least common trackways. Mammals were not often in mud, or riverine environments; they were more often in forestlands or grasslands. Thus the earlier tetrapods or proto-tetrapods would yield the most fossil trackways. The Walchia forest of Brule, Nova Scotia has an example of an in situ Walchia forest, and tetrapod trackways that extended over some period of time through the forest area.

United States Edit

Australia Edit

A recent marsupial trackway site in the Colac district of Australia (west of Colac) contains marsupial trackways as well as kangaroo and wallaby tracks.[26]

Gallery of images Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-07-25. Retrieved 2010-02-21.
  2. ^ Devlin, Hannah; agencies (2017-03-28). "World's largest dinosaur footprints discovered in Western Australia". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-12-01.
  3. ^ Salisbury, Steven W.; Romilio, Anthony; Herne, Matthew C.; Tucker, Ryan T.; Nair, Jay P. (2016-12-12). "The Dinosaurian Ichnofauna of the Lower Cretaceous (Valanginian–Barremian) Broome Sandstone of the Walmadany Area (James Price Point), Dampier Peninsula, Western Australia". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 36 (sup1): 1–152. doi:10.1080/02724634.2016.1269539. ISSN 0272-4634.
  4. ^ Romilio, Anthony; Dick, Roslyn; Skinner, Heather; Millar, Janice (2020-02-13). "Archival data provides insights into the ambiguous track-maker gait from the Lower Jurassic (Sinemurian) Razorback beds, Queensland, Australia: evidence of theropod quadrupedalism?". Historical Biology. 33 (9): 1573–1579. doi:10.1080/08912963.2020.1720014. ISSN 0891-2963.
  5. ^ Stössel, I, Williams, E.A. & Higgs, K.T. 2016. Ichnology and depositional environment of the Middle Devonian Valentia Island tetrapod trackways, south-west Ireland. Palaeogeog., Palaeoclimatol., Palaeoecol., 462, 16–40
  6. ^ a b "Laetoli Footprint Trails". The Smithsonian Institution's Human Origins Program. Retrieved 2022-08-29.
  7. ^ Last Interglacial Hominid and Associated Vertebrate Fossil Trackways in Coastal Eolianites, South Africa, 2008
  8. ^ South Africa West Coast article on Langebaan footprints
  9. ^ Westaway, Michael C.; Cupper, Matthew L.; Johnston, Harvey; Graham, Ian (June 2013). "The Willandra Fossil Trackway: Assessment of ground penetrating radar survey results and additional OSL dating at a unique Australian site". Australian Archaeology. 76 (76): 84–89. doi:10.1080/03122417.2013.11681969. hdl:10072/55451. JSTOR 23621961. S2CID 107464142.
  10. ^ Science Daily, "Who Went There? Matching Fossil Tracks With Their Makers", 15 September 2007.
  11. ^ Calder, J.H., Baird, D. & Urdang, E.B. 2004. On the discovery of tetrapod trackways from Permo-Carboniferous redbeds of Prince Edward Island and their biostratigraphic significance. Atlantic Geology, 40, 217–226. [1]
  12. ^ Stössel, I. 1995. The discovery of a new Devonian tetrapod trackway in SW Ireland. J. Geol. Soc. Lond. 152, 407–413.
  13. ^ Stössel, I, Williams, E.A. & Higgs, K.T. 2016. Ichnology and depositional environment of the Middle Devonian Valentia Island tetrapod trackways, south-west Ireland. Palaeogeog., Palaeoclimatol., Palaeoecol., 462, 16–40
  14. ^ Warren, J.W. & Wakefield, N.A., 1972. Trackways of tetrapod vertebrates from the Upper Devonian of Victoria, Aust. Nature 238, 469-470.
  15. ^ Lockley, M. G. (1991). Tracking dinosaurs : a new look at an ancient world. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 238. ISBN 0-521-39463-5. OCLC 23176761.
  16. ^ "Guest Farm Namibia – Dinosaur Tracks-Footprints National Monument von Namibia". www.dinosaurstracks-guestfarm.com. Retrieved 2021-11-06.
  17. ^ "Walking with baby dinosaurs", manus and pes prints
  18. ^ Dinosaur Hunting in Wyoming, photo: Arlene and Gabe at the trackways. [2]
  19. ^ Dinosaur Hunting in Wyoming, photo: trackways for presentation.
  20. ^ a b c Martin Lockley & Adrian P. Hunt, Dinosaur Tracks and Other Fossil Footprints of the Western United States, Columbia U. Press, New York (1995)
  21. ^ Area with 200-plus dinosaur tracks opening to public soon accessdate=2014-08-25
  22. ^ Fujita, Sato; Lee, Yuong-Nam; Azuma, Yoichi; Li, Daqing (2012). "Unusual Tridactyl Trackways with Tail Traces from the Lower Cretaceous Heikou Group, Gansu Province". PALAIOS. 27 (8): 560–570. doi:10.2110/palo.2012.p12-015r. JSTOR 41692731. S2CID 128491569.
  23. ^ Romilio, Anthony; Salisbury, Steven W. (2011-04-01). "A reassessment of large theropod dinosaur tracks from the mid-Cretaceous (late Albian–Cenomanian) Winton Formation of Lark Quarry, central-western Queensland, Australia: A case for mistaken identity". Cretaceous Research. 32 (2): 135–142. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2010.11.003. ISSN 0195-6671.
  24. ^ "World's longest fossilized human trackways discovered at White Sands National Park". Las Cruces Sun News. 9 October 2020. Retrieved 11 October 2020.
  25. ^ Bennett, Matthew R.; Bustos, David; Odess, Daniel; Urban, Tommy M.; Lallensack, Jens N.; Budka, Marcin; Santucci, Vincent L.; Martinez, Patrick; Wiseman, Ashleigh L. A.; Reynolds, Sally C. (1 December 2020). "Walking in mud: Remarkable Pleistocene human trackways from White Sands National Park (New Mexico)". Quaternary Science Reviews. 249: 106610. Bibcode:2020QSRv..24906610B. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2020.106610. S2CID 225132473.
  26. ^ Unrivalled fossil find, The Cola Herald

External links Edit

  • Texts on natural casts of dinosaur tracks found in Utah coal mines
  • "Fossil Footprints" . The American Cyclopædia. 1879.
  • Wyoming 3-toed trackways
  • Zimbabwe juvenile dinosaur trackway
  • Redbeds of Prince Edward Island, Permo-Carboniferous

Dinosaur trackways:

  • Photo-High Res – (Outdoor photo); Article Photo from Dakota Formation, Colorado

Early Tetrapods:

  • Earth History, (tetrapod trackways, etc.)

Australia

  • Marsupial trackways, Colac district.

fossil, track, fossil, track, ichnite, greek, ιχνιον, ichnion, track, trace, footstep, fossilized, footprint, this, type, trace, fossil, fossil, trackway, sequence, fossil, tracks, left, single, organism, over, years, many, ichnites, have, been, found, around,. A fossil track or ichnite Greek ixnion ichnion a track trace or footstep is a fossilized footprint This is a type of trace fossil A fossil trackway is a sequence of fossil tracks left by a single organism Over the years many ichnites have been found around the world giving important clues about the behaviour and foot structure and stride of the animals that made them For instance multiple ichnites of a single species close together suggest herd or pack behaviour of that species A reverse ichnite of the impression of Jialingpus yuechiensis on display at the Paleozoological Museum of China Combinations of footprints of different species provide clues about the interactions of those species Even a set of footprints of a single animal gives important clues as to whether it was bipedal or quadrupedal In this way it has been suggested that some pterosaurs when on the ground used their forelimbs in an unexpected quadrupedal action Special conditions are required in order to preserve a footprint made in soft ground such as an alluvial plain or a formative sedimentary deposit A possible scenario is a sea or lake shore that became dried out to a firm mud in hot dry conditions received the footprints because it would only have been partially hardened and the animal would have been heavy and then became silted over in a flash storm The first ichnite found was in 1800 in Massachusetts US by a farmer named Pliny Moody who found 1 foot 31 cm long fossilized footprints They were thought by Harvard and Yale scholars to be from Noah s Raven 1 A famous group of ichnites was found in a limestone quarry at Ardley 20 km Northeast of Oxford England in 1997 They were thought to have been made by Megalosaurus and possibly Cetiosaurus There are replicas of some of these footprints set across the lawn of Oxford University Museum of Natural History OUMNH A creature named Cheirotherium was for a long time and still may be only known from its fossilized trail Its footprints were first found in 1834 in Thuringia Germany dating from the Late Triassic Period The largest known dinosaur footprints belonging to sauropods and dating from the early Cretaceous were found to the north of Broome on the Dampier Peninsula Western Australia with some footprints measuring 1 7 m 2 3 The 3D digital documentation of tracks has the benefit of being able to examine ichnite in detail remotely and distribute the data to colleagues and other interested personnel 4 Fossil trackway Protichnites in sedimentary stone Contents 1 Fossil trackways 1 1 Hominid trackways 1 1 1 Africa 1 1 1 1 Tanzania 1 1 1 2 South Africa 1 1 2 Australia 1 1 2 1 New South Wales 1 2 Early Tetrapod 1 3 Dinosaur trackways 1 3 1 Brazil 1 3 2 Africa 1 3 2 1 Namibia 1 3 2 2 Zimbabwe 1 3 3 North America 1 3 4 China 1 3 5 Australia 1 4 Mammal trackways 1 4 1 United States 1 4 2 Australia 2 Gallery of images 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksFossil trackways EditMany fossil trackways were made by dinosaurs early tetrapods and other quadrupeds and bipeds on land Marine organisms also made many ancient trackways such as the trails of trilobites and eurypterids like Hibbertopterus Some basic fossil trackway types footprints tail drags belly drag marks e g tetrapods 5 chain of trace platforms example Yorgia body imprint Monuron trackway insect nbsp Specialized marine trace trackway Yorgia from the Ediacaran of northern Russia The majority of fossil trackways are foot impressions on land or subsurface water but other types of creatures will leave distinctive impressions Examples of creatures supported or partially supported in a water environment are known The fossil millipede type genus Arthropleura left its multi legged feet trackways on land Hominid trackways Edit Africa Edit Tanzania Edit See also Laetoli nbsp Laetoli Site February 2006Some of the earliest trackways for human ancestors have been discovered in Tanzania 6 The Laetoli trackway is famous for the hominin footprints preserved in volcanic ash After the footprints were made in powdery ash soft rain cemented the ash layer into tuff preserving the prints 6 The hominid prints were produced by three individuals one walking in the footprints of the other making the original tracks difficult to discover As the tracks lead in the same direction they might have been produced by a group but there is nothing else to support the common reconstruction of a nuclear family visiting the waterhole together South Africa Edit In South Africa two ancient trackways have been found containing footprints one at Langebaan and one at Nahoon Both trackways occur in calcareous eolianites or hardened sand dunes At Nahoon trackways of at least five species of vertebrates including three hominid footprints are preserved as casts 7 The prints at Langebaan are the oldest human footprints dated to approximately 117 000 years old 8 Australia Edit New South Wales Edit Twenty six human fossil trackways have been found in the Willandra Lakes area adjacent to Lake Garnpung consisting of 563 human footprints from 19 000 to 20 000 years ago 9 Early Tetrapod Edit The earliest land creatures actually land marine coastal riverine marshland left some of the first terrestrial trackways They range from tetrapods to proto reptilians and others A possible first connection of a trackway with the vertebrate that left it was published by Drs Sebastian Voigt and David Berman and Amy Henrici in the 12 September 2007 issue of Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology The paleontologists who made the connection were aided by unusually detailed trackways left in fine grained Lower Permian mud of the Tambach Formation in central Germany together with exceptionally complete fossilised skeletons in the same 290 million year old strata They matched the two most common trackways with the two most common fossils two reptile like herbivores known as Diadectes absitus with the trackway pseudonym Ichniotherium cottae and Orobates pabsti with the trackway pseudonym of Orobates pabsti 10 The Permo Carboniferous of Prince Edward Island Canada contains trackways of tetrapods and stem reptiles 11 Macrofloral and palynological information help date them Ireland hosts late Middle Devonian tetrapod trackways at three sites on Valentia Island within the Valentia Slate Formation 12 13 The earliest fossil trackway of primitive tetrapods in Australia occurs in the Genoa River Gorge Victoria dating from the Devonian 350 million years ago 14 Dinosaur trackways Edit nbsp Arabian Peninsula dinosaur trackway Dinosaurs lived on the continents before grasses evolved the Age of the Grasses evolved with the Age of the Mammals the dinosaurs lived in the Triassic Jurassic and Cretaceous and left many trackways both from plant eaters and the meat eaters in various layers of mud and sand With scientific analysis dinosaur specialists are now analyzing tracks for the walking speeds or sprint running speeds for all categories of dinosaurs even to the large plant eaters but especially the faster 3 toed meat hunters Evidence of herding as well as pack hunting are also being investigated Brazil Edit Valley of the Dinosaurs Paraiba BrazilAfrica Edit Namibia Edit nbsp Dinosaur trace fossil of OtjihaenampareroIn north central Namibia there is a dinosaur trackway in sandstone on what is now the private farm Otjihaenamparero Larger footprints are of a ceratosauria and smaller ones of syntarsus The prints are believed to be around 190 million years old 15 16 Zimbabwe Edit In the Lower Zimbabwe Rift Valley there is a trackway in 140 Ma rose coloured sandstone of Chewore Area The small footprint size with both manus and pes implies that it is a trackway of a juvenile a probable carnosaur 17 North America Edit nbsp Probable Dilophosaurus footprint from Red Fleet State Park northeastern Utah The western regions of North America especially the western border of the Western Interior Seaway are common for dinosaur trackways Wyoming has dinosaur trackways from the Late Cretaceous 65 ma 18 A model example of this 3 toed Wyoming trackway was made for presentation 19 nbsp Theropod and sauropod tracks under water in the Paluxy RiverIn the United States dinosaur footprints and trackways are found in the Glen Rose Formation the most famous of these being the Paluxy River site in Dinosaur Valley State Park These were the first sauropoda footprints scientifically documented and were designated a US National Natural Landmark in 1969 Some are as large as about 3 feet across The prints are thought to have been preserved originally in a tidal flat or a lagoon 20 There are tracks from two types of dinosaur The first type of tracks are from a sauropod and were made by an animal of 30 to 50 feet in length perhaps a brachiosaurid such as Pleurocoelus 20 and the second tracks by a theropoda an animal of 20 to 30 feet in length perhaps an Acrocanthosaurus A variety of scenarios was proposed to explain the tracks but most likely represent twelve sauropods probably as a herd followed somewhat later by three theropods that may or may not have been stalking but that certainly were not attacking 20 Other examples include Dinosaur tracks near Moab Utah 21 Dinosaur Footprints Reservation in Holyoke Massachusetts US Red Gulch Dinosaur Tracksite Wyoming Prehistoric Trackways National Monument near Las Cruces New Mexico Connecticut River Valley trackways in New England Clayton Lake State Park dinosaur trackway near Clayton New MexicoChina Edit The Gansu dinosaur trackway located in the Liujiazia National Dinosaur Geopark in Yanguoxia China contains hundreds of tracks including 245 dinosaur 350 theropod 364 sauropod and 628 ornithopod tracks among others 22 Australia Edit The Lark Quarry Trackway in Queensland contains three toed tracks made by a heard of ornithopod dinosaurs crossing a river It was once believed they respresented a large predator chasing doqn a mixed flock of small ornithopods and theropods but this was contested in 2011 23 Mammal trackways Edit Mammal trackways are among the least common trackways Mammals were not often in mud or riverine environments they were more often in forestlands or grasslands Thus the earlier tetrapods or proto tetrapods would yield the most fossil trackways The Walchia forest of Brule Nova Scotia has an example of an in situ Walchia forest and tetrapod trackways that extended over some period of time through the forest area United States Edit A 1 5km long Late Pleistocene Age trackway of Human child and adult fossilized footprints as well as mammoth and giant ground sloth tracks have been found at White Sands National Park Near Alamogordo New Mexico 24 25 Australia Edit A recent marsupial trackway site in the Colac district of Australia west of Colac contains marsupial trackways as well as kangaroo and wallaby tracks 26 Gallery of images Edit nbsp Cheirotherium trace fossil displayed in Oxford University Museum of Natural History nbsp Cross section of Pleistocene mammoth footprints at The Mammoth Site Hot Springs South Dakota nbsp Eubrontes a dinosaur footprint in the Lower Jurassic Moenave Formation at the St George Dinosaur Discovery Site at Johnson Farm southwestern Utah nbsp Gigandipus a dinosaur footprint in the Lower Jurassic Moenave Formation at the St George Dinosaur Discovery Site at Johnson Farm southwestern Utah nbsp Cameloid footprint Lamaichnum alfi Sarjeant and Reynolds 1999 convex hyporelief from the Barstow Formation Miocene of Rainbow Basin California nbsp Saurichnites intermedius nbsp A carnivorous theropod trackway near Enciso La Rioja Spain nbsp Petalichnus arthropod walking traces Devonian of northeastern Ohio nbsp Moa footprints near the Manawatu River New Zealand nbsp Hibbertopterus trackway negative relief image a groove infilled by sand appears as a ridgelineSee also Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Trackways fossils nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Trace fossils Ichnites a type of ichnite List of stratigraphic units with dinosaur tracks Formations with ichnites List of non Dinosauria fossil trackway articles List of fossil sitesReferences Edit Noahs Raven Archived from the original on 2009 07 25 Retrieved 2010 02 21 Devlin Hannah agencies 2017 03 28 World s largest dinosaur footprints discovered in Western Australia The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2017 12 01 Salisbury Steven W Romilio Anthony Herne Matthew C Tucker Ryan T Nair Jay P 2016 12 12 The Dinosaurian Ichnofauna of the Lower Cretaceous Valanginian Barremian Broome Sandstone of the Walmadany Area James Price Point Dampier Peninsula Western Australia Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 36 sup1 1 152 doi 10 1080 02724634 2016 1269539 ISSN 0272 4634 Romilio Anthony Dick Roslyn Skinner Heather Millar Janice 2020 02 13 Archival data provides insights into the ambiguous track maker gait from the Lower Jurassic Sinemurian Razorback beds Queensland Australia evidence of theropod quadrupedalism Historical Biology 33 9 1573 1579 doi 10 1080 08912963 2020 1720014 ISSN 0891 2963 Stossel I Williams E A amp Higgs K T 2016 Ichnology and depositional environment of the Middle Devonian Valentia Island tetrapod trackways south west Ireland Palaeogeog Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol 462 16 40 a b Laetoli Footprint Trails The Smithsonian Institution s Human Origins Program Retrieved 2022 08 29 Last Interglacial Hominid and Associated Vertebrate Fossil Trackways in Coastal Eolianites South Africa 2008 South Africa West Coast article on Langebaan footprints Westaway Michael C Cupper Matthew L Johnston Harvey Graham Ian June 2013 The Willandra Fossil Trackway Assessment of ground penetrating radar survey results and additional OSL dating at a unique Australian site Australian Archaeology 76 76 84 89 doi 10 1080 03122417 2013 11681969 hdl 10072 55451 JSTOR 23621961 S2CID 107464142 Science Daily Who Went There Matching Fossil Tracks With Their Makers 15 September 2007 Calder J H Baird D amp Urdang E B 2004 On the discovery of tetrapod trackways from Permo Carboniferous redbeds of Prince Edward Island and their biostratigraphic significance Atlantic Geology 40 217 226 1 Stossel I 1995 The discovery of a new Devonian tetrapod trackway in SW Ireland J Geol Soc Lond 152 407 413 Stossel I Williams E A amp Higgs K T 2016 Ichnology and depositional environment of the Middle Devonian Valentia Island tetrapod trackways south west Ireland Palaeogeog Palaeoclimatol Palaeoecol 462 16 40 Warren J W amp Wakefield N A 1972 Trackways of tetrapod vertebrates from the Upper Devonian of Victoria Aust Nature 238 469 470 Lockley M G 1991 Tracking dinosaurs a new look at an ancient world Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 238 ISBN 0 521 39463 5 OCLC 23176761 Guest Farm Namibia Dinosaur Tracks Footprints National Monument von Namibia www dinosaurstracks guestfarm com Retrieved 2021 11 06 Walking with baby dinosaurs manus and pes prints Dinosaur Hunting in Wyoming photo Arlene and Gabe at the trackways 2 Dinosaur Hunting in Wyoming photo trackways for presentation a b c Martin Lockley amp Adrian P Hunt Dinosaur Tracks and Other Fossil Footprints of the Western United States Columbia U Press New York 1995 Area with 200 plus dinosaur tracks opening to public soon accessdate 2014 08 25 Fujita Sato Lee Yuong Nam Azuma Yoichi Li Daqing 2012 Unusual Tridactyl Trackways with Tail Traces from the Lower Cretaceous Heikou Group Gansu Province PALAIOS 27 8 560 570 doi 10 2110 palo 2012 p12 015r JSTOR 41692731 S2CID 128491569 Romilio Anthony Salisbury Steven W 2011 04 01 A reassessment of large theropod dinosaur tracks from the mid Cretaceous late Albian Cenomanian Winton Formation of Lark Quarry central western Queensland Australia A case for mistaken identity Cretaceous Research 32 2 135 142 doi 10 1016 j cretres 2010 11 003 ISSN 0195 6671 World s longest fossilized human trackways discovered at White Sands National Park Las Cruces Sun News 9 October 2020 Retrieved 11 October 2020 Bennett Matthew R Bustos David Odess Daniel Urban Tommy M Lallensack Jens N Budka Marcin Santucci Vincent L Martinez Patrick Wiseman Ashleigh L A Reynolds Sally C 1 December 2020 Walking in mud Remarkable Pleistocene human trackways from White Sands National Park New Mexico Quaternary Science Reviews 249 106610 Bibcode 2020QSRv 24906610B doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2020 106610 S2CID 225132473 Unrivalled fossil find The Cola HeraldExternal links EditTexts on natural casts of dinosaur tracks found in Utah coal mines Fossil Footprints The American Cyclopaedia 1879 Wyoming 3 toed trackways Zimbabwe juvenile dinosaur trackway Redbeds of Prince Edward Island Permo CarboniferousDinosaur trackways Photo High Res Outdoor photo Article Photo from Dakota Formation ColoradoEarly Tetrapods Earth History tetrapod trackways etc Australia Marsupial trackways Colac district Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fossil track amp oldid 1170994361 Fossil trackways, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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