From Science Magazine.
During the Jurassic period 167 million years ago, dinosaurs mingled on the muddy outskirts of a balmy lagoon on what is now Scotland’s Isle of Skye. As both predators and prey frequented the watering hole, they made layers of overlapping footprints.
Those footfalls remain etched into Skye’s craggy coastline, forming a site with an unusually high number of tracks from predatory dinosaurs, researchers reported last year.
Read more: https://scim.ag/4qQ88CO
FOOTAGE CREDIT: BLAKESLY ET AL./PLOS ONE
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