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Paleontologists have discovered tracks belonging to meat-eating theropods and long-necked sauropods on the Isle of Skye.
The dinosaur that made them is said to be between five and six metres long, spiky and armoured with a stiff tail or full club. The species has been named Ruopodosaurus clava.
Scientists explain which dinosaur was the fasted using simulations. Fossil footprints can't accurately capture a dinosaur’s ...
Scientists have identified fossil dinosaur footprints from a new species in B.C. and Alberta. They're believed to be the first tracks found in the world to be identified as belonging to club ...
A paleontological dig site in St. George has been saved from development after the city agreed to relocate a planned ...
New dinosaur footprints dubbed Ruopodosaurus clava were made by armoured ankylosaurid dinosaurs. While the exact species that made these footprints is unknown, it was likely similar to Gobisaurus or ...
Researcher Victoria Arbour was part of a team that discovered a new species of dinosaur based on tracks found in the Canadian Rockies. Royal BC Museum More than two decades ago in the small town ...
The set of tracks discovered on Skye show the movements of at least two dinosaur species — one a theropod, from the group that includes predators such as Tyrannosaurus rex, the other a sauropod ...