Other
dinosaur track sites contain their own remarkable hints about dinosaur lifestyles.
Around 70 million years ago, during the Late Cretaceous, the plant - eating reptiles probably lived in multigenerational herds — just like modern grazers,
a dinosaur track site in Alaska suggests.
Not exact matches
A
track site representing several types of
dinosaurs can reveal which major groups cohabited, indicate the proportion of juveniles to adults, and offer a general census of the populations in the area.
Over the next few years, thousands of
tracks were unearthed at the location now known as the St. George
Dinosaur Discovery
Site at Johnson Farm.
Other
dinosaur trackways can be found at the Plagne
site, including a series of 18
tracks extending over 38 m, left by a carnivore of the ichnogenus Megalosauripus.
The
tracks also show that both the long - necked and meat - eating
dinosaurs lived on the same
site at the same time.