Times of Suriname Logo
Times of Suriname Logo

Engels

Meat-eating dinosaurs shared watering holes with their prey

EDINBURGH - 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 ...

Times of Suriname

examined dozens of dinosaur footprints at Prince Charles's Point on the island's Trotternish Peninsula. The dinosaurs included carnivorous megalosaurs - ancestors of Tyrannosaurus rex - and long necked herbivores that were up to three times bigger in size than an elephant. The scientists analysed the footprints to understand how the animals had moved, and suggested the different dinosaurs had "milled around" shallow freshwater lagoons. The researchers said the behaviour from the Middle Jurassic was similar to how animals congregated around watering holes today.

More than 130 footprints have been found so far at Prince Charles's Point, on Skye's north coast. The area is named after Bonnie Prince Charlie who had sought shelter on the peninsula while fleeing British government troops after the Battle of Culloden in 1746. The scientists said the footprints suggested meat-eating theropods and plant-eating sauropods habitually spent time in lagoons. They said subsequent discoveries had made the area one of the most extensive dinosaur track sites in Scotland. The Edinburgh research team's Tone Blakesley said the footprints provided a "fascinating insight" into dinosaur behaviour.

Palaeontologist Steve Brusatte added: "Prince Charles's Point is a place where Scottish history and prehistory blend together."It's astounding to think that when Bonnie Prince Charlie was running for his life, he might have been sprinting in the footsteps of dinosaurs." The first three footprints at Prince Charles's Point were discovered five years ago by a University of Edinburgh student and colleagues. Important fossil discoveries have been made on Skye over the last 40 years. They include a pony-sized dinosaur that lived 166 million years ago, and adult and juvenile mammals of the shrew-like Krusatodon. The island also saw the discovery of the largest Jurassic pterosaur fossil, Dearc sgiathanach - a 170-million-year-old winged reptile. (BBC/ Paige E. de Polo)

Gerelateerde Artikelen

Buitenland

Havenmedewerkers gaan minstens vijf dagen staken vanwege kabinetsplannen

NEDERLAND - Medewerkers van Nederlandse havens gaan minstens vijf dagen het werk neerleggen omdat ze ontevreden zijn over de kabinetsplannen rond sociale zekerheid.

Engels

Trump says other countries should 'just take' the Strait of Hormuz

WASHINGTON - US President Donald Trump said Tuesday the countries that have not joined the Middle East war but are struggling...

Binnenland

Aankomend korpschef Pinas wil politie moderniseren

PARAMARIBO – Met zijn aanstaande benoeming tot 51e korpschef van het Korps Politie Suriname (KPS), zet waarnemend politiechef Melvin Pinas stevig in op een koerswijziging binnen het korps.

Buitenland

Energie-inflatie stijgt verder door oorlog: 'Prijzen aan de pomp blijven hoog'

MIDDEN-OOSTEN - De inflatie is door het conflict in het Midden-Oosten voor het eerst sinds september gestegen. Economen verwachten dat dit pas het begin is,...

Engels

Huge fires at Russian oil facilities following Ukraine strikes

RUSSIA  - Satellite imagery and verified videos show Ukraine has repeatedly struck key Russian oil export infrastructure near the Baltic Sea in the past week, leaving some facilities burning for several days.