Researchers may have just scratched the
surface of a major new dinosaur site nearly inside the Arctic Circle.
This past summer, they discovered thousands of fossilized dinosaur
footprints, large and small, along the rocky banks of Alaska's Yukon
River.
In July, the scientists from the University of Alaska
Museum of the North embarked on a 500-mile (800 kilometers) journey
down the Tanana and Yukon rivers; they brought back 2,000 pounds (900
kilograms) of dinosaur footprint fossils.
"We found dinosaur
footprints by the scores on literally every outcrop we stopped at,"
expedition researcher Paul McCarthy of the University of Alaska
Fairbanks said in a statement. "I've seen dinosaur footprints in Alaska
now in rocks from southwest Alaska, the North Slope and Denali
National Park in the Interior, but there aren't many places where
footprints occur in such abundance." [See Photos of the Dinosaur Tracks Along the Yukon River]
In the last decade, dinosaur footprints
have been found in Alaska's Denali National Park, left in rocks that
formed 65 million to 80 million years ago, during the Late Cretaceous
Period. The new prints along the Yukon River might date back 25 million
to 30 million years earlier, McCarthy said.
"It took several
years of dedicated looking before the first footprint was discovered in
Denali in 2005, but since that time hundreds of tracks of dinosaurs
and birds have been found," McCarthy explained in a statement. "In
contrast, the tracks were so abundant along the Yukon River that we
could find and collect as many as 50 specimens in as little as 10
minutes."
Pat Druckenmiller, the museum's earth sciences curator, added that a find of this magnitude is rare today.
"This
is the kind of discovery you would have expected in the Lower 48 a
hundred years ago," Druckenmiller said in a statement. "We found a great
diversity of dinosaur types, evidence of an extinct ecosystem we never
knew existed."
The dino tracks
were preserved in "natural casts" formed after the creatures stepped
in mud, and sand filled in their footprints. The result? Fossils that
look like "blobs with toes," Druckenmiller said.
The researchers
say they have much more work ahead of them to understand and describe
their findings. They are working with local villages and Native groups
to coordinate future expeditions in the region.
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