Dinosaurs not Stampeding but Swimming

By | January 10th, 2013|Dinosaur and Prehistoric Animal News Stories|4 Comments

New Study into the Lark Quarry Dinosaur Footprints

The Lark Quarry located near the town of Winton in Queensland (Australia) is the site of one of the most important collection of dinosaur tracks discovered to date.  When these tracks were first studied by Dr Tony Thulborn and his colleague Mary Wade and their work published in 1984, the footprints caused a sensation as the various trackways were interpreted as herd of smaller ornithopod dinosaurs in the company of some coelurosaurs stampeding after they were cornered by a lumbering giant theropod dinosaur.

Lark Quarry Dinosaur Footprints

Ichnologists (scientists who study trace fossils, especially footprints), assigned the name Wintonopus to the small, ornithopods, Skartopus to the larger coelurosaurs and the eleven prints believed to describe the large, predatory theropod attempting the ambush were assigned to Tyrannosauropus.  However, a new paper published in the academic publication “The Journal of Vertebrate Palaeontology” interprets the tracks in a very different way.

Lead author, Queensland palaeontologist Anthony Romilio presents evidence to suggest that these footprints are not evidence of a dinosaur ambush with a resulting stampede but the tracks made by dinosaurs as they forded a river.  Instead of “Walking with Dinosaurs”, this new research suggests a scenario of “Swimming or even Wading with Dinosaurs”!

Tri-dactyl Prints at the Lark Quarry Site (Queensland)

Evidence for swimming dinosaurs?

Picture credit: Dr Steve Salisbury

Upper Cretaceous Fossil Tracks

The footprints are believed to date from around 95 million years ago approximately (Albian to Cenomanian faunal stages of the Cretaceous), the strata that the footprints were discovered in does represent fluvial deposits (river sediments), however, this new interpretation proposes that the tracks were made by dinosaurs whilst in the water and not on the river bank.   Walking along a river bed, especially one where the water may have been no more than forty centimetres deep would have made sense if the banks were heavily vegetated, progress through dense scrub and forests would have been much slower if the dinosaurs had chosen a land route.

The Queensland palaeontologist stated:

“Many of the tracks are nothing more than elongated grooves, and probably formed when the claws of swimming dinosaurs scratched the river bottom.  Some of the more unusual tracks include ‘tippy-toe’ traces – this is where fully buoyed dinosaurs made deep, near vertical scratch marks with their toes as they propelled themselves through the water.”

The smaller dinosaurs, those referred to as Wintonopus may have swum, whilst the larger dinosaurs were able to wade across the water.

Swimming Ornithopods at the Lark Quarry Site

Dinosaurs going for a dip!

Picture credit: Anthony Romilio

In the paper, the scientist argues that it is difficult to see how the tracks could have been made by an animal walking or running on land, even one panicked by a ambush from a predator.  If the tracks had been made on land the impressions made would have been much flatter.

Fossilised Footprints

Fossilised footprints of a swimming dinosaur have been found in the past.  There is a very important single dinosaur trackway discovered in Spain that seems to show a tri-dactyl, theropod dinosaur touching the bottom of a lake occasionally as it swam across it.  The sediments preserve the claw marks and impressions made by the dinosaur at it touched the lake bed and pushed itself off again to continue its journey.

To read an article on the Spanish discovery: Swimming Dinosaurs.

The Lark Quarry site represents one of the most important sets of dinosaur footprints known to science.  More than 3,000 individual prints have been identified so far.  A number of the tracks, including the “dinosaur stampede/river crossing site” are on public display.

Using three-dimensional footprint mapping techniques, the University of Queensland scientist has already provided a number of new insights into the dinosaur tracks of Lark Quarry.  In 2010, Anthony Romilio published a scientific paper that suggested that the footprints assigned to the meat-eater Tyrannosauropus were actually made by a large, herbivorous ornithopod, a dinosaur similar to Muttaburrasaurus for example.

To read about the research into the Tyrannosauropus tracks: Lark Quarry Dinosaur Tracks Re-assessed.

Commenting on the newly published research and reflecting on the earlier work suggesting that the large dinosaur tracks were not made by a predator, Anthony stated that taken all together, the research suggested that the Lark Quarry sediments did not portray a dinosaur stampede.

For models and replicas of Australian prehistoric animals: Australian Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animal Figures (CollectA).