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Bukti Baru dinosaurus merupakan perenang yang kuat
New evidence dinosaurs were strong swimmers
Date:
April 8,
2013
Source:
University of Alberta
Summary:
A researcher has identified some of the strongest
evidence ever found that dinosaurs could paddle long distances. He examined
unusual claw marks left on a river bottom in China that is known to have been a
major travel-way for dinosaurs.
.............................
A University of Alberta researcher has identified some of
the strongest evidence ever found that dinosaurs could paddle long distances.
Working
together with an international research team, U of A graduate student Scott
Persons examined unusual claw marks left on a river bottom in China that is
known to have been a major travel-way for dinosaurs.
Alongside
easily identified fossilized footprints of many Cretaceous era animals
including giant long neck dinosaur's researchers found a series of claw marks
that Persons says indicates a coordinated, left-right, left-right progression.
"What
we have are scratches left by the tips of a two-legged dinosaur's feet,"
said Persons. "The dinosaur's claw marks show it was swimming along in
this river and just its tippy toes were touching bottom."
The claw
marks cover a distance of 15 meters which the researchers say is evidence of a
dinosaur's ability to swim with coordinated leg movements. The tracks were made
by carnivorous theropod dinosaur that is estimated to have stood roughly 1
meter at the hip.
Fossilized
rippling and evidence of mud cracks indicate that over 100 million years ago
the river, in what is now China's Szechuan Province, went through dry and wet
cycles. The river bed, which Persons describes as a "dinosaur
super-highway" has yielded plenty of full foot prints of other theropods
and gigantic four-legged sauropods.
With just
claw scratches on the river bottom to go with, Persons says the exact identity
of the paddling dinosaur can't be determined, but he suspects it could have
been an early tyrannosaur or a Sinocalliopteryx. Both species of
predators were known to have been in that area of China.
Persons is a
U of A, PhD candidate and co-author of the research. It was published April 8
in the journal Chinese Science Bulletin.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by University of Alberta. Note: Materials may be edited
for content and length.