Severe drought in Texas has offered a rare sighting of some ancient dinosaur tracks preserved in stone about 113 million years ago, but they'll soon vanish again. These are the footprints a carnivorous dinosaur called an Acrocanthosaurus, revealed on the bed of the Paluxy River in Glen Rose, Texas during the August 2022 drought. About 20 years before he died, Baker's father was the first to find the dinosaur footprints, revealed during a different drought. Only during extreme drought are some visible," said Baker, who is the manager of the Dinosaur Valley Park Store and volunteers at the Glen Rose, Texas park. Volunteers help clean and preserve 113 million-year-old dinosaur footprints revealed in Dinosaur Valley State Park in Texas after months of drought.
Source: CBC News August 25, 2022 19:10 UTC