Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Match the dinosaur footprints found on the two continents

More than 3,700 miles away on opposite sides of the Atlantic Ocean, researchers have discovered footprints left by dinosaurs that roamed from Africa to South America when the continents merged into a supercontinent.

More than 260 footprints located in Brazil and Cameroon are believed to be part of it. Early Cretaceous PeriodThat’s according to a study released Monday by the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science.

These tracks were originally formed 621 miles away on a thin layer of sandstone and mud on the former supercontinent Gondwanan, which later split off to form the South Atlantic Ocean.

The study shared photographs of footprints with similar patterns that appeared to be from similar ages and geographic contexts, according to Southern Methodist University paleontologist and lead study author Lewis L. Jacobs found.

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