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Dinosaur fossils found in Utah
Paleontologists have found six dinosaur fossils within a 50 by 200 yard excavation site in Utah. It seems strange that six creatures died in such close quarters, although I guess that's what happens in a sudden, mass extinction.
A newly discovered batch of well-preserved dinosaur bones, petrified trees and even freshwater clams in southeastern Utah could provide new clues about life in the region some 150 million years ago.
The Bureau of Land Management announced the find Monday, calling the quarry near Hanksville "a major dinosaur fossil discovery."
An excavation revealed at least four sauropods, which are long-necked, long-tailed plant-eating dinosaurs, and two carnivorous ones, according to the bureau. It may have also uncovered an herbivorous stegosaurus.
The site, roughly 50 yards wide by 200 yards long, was excavated by a team from the Burpee Museum of Natural History in Rockford, Ill. Museum officials visited the site for about a week last summer and returned this year for a three-week excavation.
The area has long been known to locals and BLM officials as a dinosaur haven. But no one knew of the site's magnitude until excavation began.
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June 17, 2008 at 04:26 pm by julianw, 226 views, 2 comments




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Comments (2)
at 19:59 on June 17th, 2008
Dino-mite!
at 23:01 on June 18th, 2008
Very interesting... Wonder how this accords with some older stories about dinosaur "death throes"? IE, extremely fast death under less-than-desirable (catastrophic) circumstances such as asphyxia, etc.
Cheers,
~Michael