as in bones or say teeth,
photograph Stephen Rowland/Grand National Park, after a land slip, a boulder with fossilized tracks was revealed, park officials
said in a news release last Thursday, the fossil footprints are about 313 million
years old, according to researchers, “These are by far the oldest vertebrate tracks in Grand
Canyon, which is known for its abundant fossil tracks” Stephen Rowland, a
paleontologist at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, said in the news
release. “More significantly, they are among the oldest tracks on Earth of shelled-egg-laying
animals, such as reptiles, and the earliest evidence of vertebrate animals
walking in sand dunes.” apparently the footprints are the oldest recorded tracks of their kind, the tracks were in plain view for many hikers, but weren’t
discovered until Allan Krill, a Norwegian geology professor, was hiking with
students and saw a boulder containing “conspicuous fossil footprints,” park
officials said, researchers said the footprints show two separate animals
passing on the slope of a sand dune, which is significant because of the
“distinct arrangement of footprints.”
above trackway-bearing blocks. (A) Main
trackway block adjacent to Bright Angel Trail, with tracks in concave epirelief
(impressions). Scale is calibrated in decimeters. (B) Sketch of main trackway
surface. Note occurrence of Trackway 2 (alignments of small black spots) above
Trackway 1. (C) Jumble of rocks adjacent to Bright Angel Trail, including at
least two rocks with amniote tracks. (D) Counterpart block with tracks in
convex hyporelief (natural casts). Scale is calibrated in decimeters, from PLOS ONE, from this document, “The researchers’ reconstruction of this animal’s footfall
sequence reveals a distinctive gait called a lateral-sequence walk, in which
the legs on one side of the animal move in succession, the rear leg followed by
the foreleg, alternating with the movement of the two legs on the opposite
side,” Grand Canyon officials said, they “previously had no information about that,” Rowland
said. The fossil also shows the earliest-known use of sand dunes by vertebrate
animals, park officials said, amazing!
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