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Paleontologists have discovered tracks belonging to meat-eating theropods and long-necked sauropods on the Isle of Skye.
New dinosaur fossil tracks on the Isle of Skye reveal that the once-balmy environment was home to both fierce theropods and massive sauropods.
Fossilized footprints on the Isle of Skye in Scotland have revealed that a variety of dinosaurs once stalked the island's prehistoric landscape. New research, published April 2 in the journal PLOS ...
It is the site of a dramatic moment in Scottish history. The Isle of Skye's rocky shoreline is where Charles Edward Stuart - ...
The new site features over 130 footprints and trackways, some extending up to 12 meters in length. Jurassic-era dinosaurs ...
Huge meat-eating dinosaurs and their plant-eating prey shared the same watering holes on Skye 167 million years ago, say scientists. University of Edinburgh researchers examined dozens of dinosaur ...
Many of the footprints belonged to theropods – meat-eating dinosaurs that walked on two legs. These include morphotype-1a, a ...
a scientific study of dinosaur footprints found. The footprints at what is now the Isle of Skye, off Scotland’s north coast, revealed the existence of a popular stomping ground for dinosaurs, with ...
Newly-identified dinosaur footprints on the Isle of Skye reveal herbivores and carnivores coexisted at freshwater lagoons some 167 million years ago. A University of Edinburgh team analysed 131 ...