Categories: Science

Record-Setting Dinosaur Footprint: ‘Couldn’t Believe What I Was Looking At’

The giant dinosaur footprint found in Yorkshire measures nearly a meter in length.
Marie Woods

A single footprint can tell a whole story. During the Jurassic era, around 166 million years ago, a jumbo meat-eating dinosaur strolled across what is now modern-day Yorkshire in England. At one point, it perhaps squatted down and then stood back up, leaving behind a truly epic footprint.

A team of researchers published a paper on the footprint in the Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society on Thursday. The three-toed print measures in at 31 inches (80 centimeters) long. It’s the largest of its kind ever found in Yorkshire. The owner of the foot was a carnivorous theropod, of which T. rex is a famous example.

Enlarge Image

An artist’s illustration shows what the theropod might have looked like when it left its footprint.


James McKay

“I couldn’t believe what I was looking at, I had to do a double take,”  archaeologist Marie Woods said in a University of Manchester statement. “I have seen a few smaller prints when out with friends, but nothing like this.” Woods, who spotted the fossil by chance, is a co-author of the study.

The footprint is a rare find in Yorkshire, with only six similar prints found in the area. An analysis of the print suggests the dinosaur was a type of megalosaurus, a large meat-eater known to prowl England during the Jurassic. It may have had a hip height as tall as 10 feet (3 meters).

Study co-author Dean Lomax of the University of Manchester said an analysis of the footprint’s angle, shape and claw impressions shows the dinosaur may have been squatting down before standing up. A single print makes it hard to know for sure just what the dino was doing. “It’s fun to think this dinosaur might well have been strolling along a muddy coastal plain one lazy Sunday afternoon in the Jurassic,” Lomax said.

The footprint was in danger of damage from erosion or tidal action, so experts collected it and transported it to Scarborough Museum and Galleries in the UK, where it’s expected to go on public display once conservation work is completed. Talk about one giant step … for a dinosaur.

Share

Recent Posts

AI wearable helps stroke survivors speak again

Losing the ability to speak clearly after a stroke can feel devastating. For many survivors,…

7 hours ago

Tax season scams surge as filing confusion grows

Tax season already brings stress. In 2026, it brings added confusion. Changes to tax filing…

7 hours ago

Major US shipping platform left customer data wide open to hackers

Cargo theft is no longer just about stolen trucks and forged paperwork. Over the past…

1 day ago

Amazon Prime settlement could put money back in your pocket

Amazon has agreed to pay $2.5 billion to settle allegations brought by the Federal Trade…

1 day ago

Under Armour data breach claims trigger alerts for millions of users

Sportswear and fitness brand Under Armour is investigating claims of a massive data breach after…

2 days ago

Fox News AI Newsletter: Amazon cuts thousands of roles

IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER: - Amazon to cut 16,000 roles as it looks to invest in…

2 days ago