Housing Watch Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Brontopodus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brontopodus

    Farlow, Pillman & Hawthorne, 1989. Brontopodus is an ichnogenus of dinosaur footprint. The footprint has diplodocid form, but four toes when almost every diplodocid has no more than three. This leaves Dyslocosaurus as the only known genus capable of producing the footprints. In 2020 Molina-Perez and Larramendi estimated the size of an ...

  3. Tyrannosauripus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyrannosauripus

    Tyrannosauripus is an ichnogenus of dinosaur footprint. It was discovered by geologist Charles "Chuck" Pillmore in 1983 and formally described by Martin Lockley and Adrian Hunt in 1994. [ 1] This fossil footprint from northern New Mexico is 96 cm long and given its Late Cretaceous age (about 66 million years old), it very likely belonged to the ...

  4. Fossil track - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fossil_track

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

  5. Aire Range Dinosaur Footprint Natural Monument - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aire_Range_Dinosaur...

    The Aire Range Dinosaur Footprint Natural Monument, also known as Ourém - Torres Novas Dinosaur Footprint Natural Monument, is a natural monument in the Serras de Aire e Candeeiros Natural Park, Portugal, known for its long and well-preserved sauropod trackways. When discovered, it had the single longest known sauropod trackway in the world at ...

  6. Dinosaur State Park and Arboretum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinosaur_State_Park_and...

    The largest and most plentiful footprints bear the name Eubrontes, an ichnogenus (fossilized footprint type) named by geologist Edward Hitchcock. They were probably created by a carnivorous theropod dinosaur similar to Dilophosaurus. The Eubrontes tracks range from 10 to 16 inches (410 mm) in length and are spaced 3.5 to 4.5 feet (1.4 m) apart ...

  7. Irasutoya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irasutoya

    Irasutoya ( Japanese: いらすとや, derived from Japanese: イラスト, romanized : irasuto, lit. 'illustration' and Japanese: 屋, romanized : -ya, lit. 'shop') is a website operated by illustrator Takashi Mifune that offers gratis clip art illustrations. These works can be used for both commercial and non-commercial applications, but ...

  8. Grallator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grallator

    Grallator ["GRA-luh-tor"] is an ichnogenus (form taxon based on footprints) which covers a common type of small, three-toed print made by a variety of bipedal theropod dinosaurs. Grallator -type footprints have been found in formations dating from the Early Triassic through to the early Cretaceous periods. They are found in the United States ...

  9. Lark Quarry Dinosaur Trackways - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lark_Quarry_Dinosaur_Trackways

    The footprints were first discovered in the 1960s by station manager, Glen Seymour, in the nearby Seymour Quarry. Palaeontologists from the Queensland Museum, including Mary Wade and Tony Thulborn and the University of Queensland excavated Lark Quarry during 1976–77 (the quarry was named after Malcolm Lark, a volunteer who removed a lot of the overlying rock.)