Digitizing Dinosaur Tracks

UngulateNerd92

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A UTSA-based team is changing the footprint of Texas paleontology

Around 125 million years before the foundation of Texas, a different kind of society was roaming its vast canyons, fertile plains and lofty mountains: that of the dinosaurs. Now, a San Antonio-based group of geoscientists is studying—and digitizing—ancient tracks imprinted in the terrain of the Lone Star State to gain new insight into the environment and behavior of these prehistoric beasts.

“Texas dinosaur footprints have been studied since the 1930s but never in this detail,” said Dr. Thomas Adams, curator of paleontology and geology at the Witte Museum in San Antonio. “They occur in 24 separate counties, with multiple localities per county, and each one can have anywhere from one to 300 footprints, so we’re talking about thousands of tracks and hundreds of individuals over a long period of time.”

Digitizing Dinosaur Tracks – Issuu
 
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