File:PSM V66 D145 Carnivorous dinosaur tracks in high relief preserved in stone.png

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Summary

Description
English: Original figure caption: The Middletown Slab covered with the Footprints of Carnivorous Dinosaurs. The tracks are in high relief.
Additional notes: Most if not all of these tridactylous (i.e. three-toed) footprints/tracks (but not the actual trackmaker!) are referred to as Grallator or as Grallator-type trace fossils. “High relief” means that these are actually casts of footprints forming a positive relief on the lower surface of the sandstone slab (so-called positive hyporelief). The material that originally formed the mud over which the dinosaurs walked was too friable to be recovered from the quarry in one piece. The slab consists of so called ‘brownstone’ which is the trading name of the sandstone quarried at Middletown, Connecticut. This sandstone belongs to the Lower Jurassic Portland Formation of the Hartford Basin (“Connecticut Valley”) and thus to the upper part of the Newark Supergroup. The trackmakers probably were relatively small ‘primitive’ theropod dinosaurs (coelophysoids) such as Podokesaurus the remains of which were recovered from Lower Jurassic deposits of the Hartford Basin.
Date
Source 3rd text figure in: Nature’s Hieroglyphics. Popular Science Monthly 66:139–149
Author Richard S. Lull

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December 1904Gregorian

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current02:06, 2 October 2011Thumbnail for version as of 02:06, 2 October 20111,586 × 1,021 (478 KB)Ineuw

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