Dinosaur tracks found on Arabian Peninsula

Friday, May 23, 2008
By NewsWax

A new study that was recently carried by the online publication PLoS ONE describes the finding of dinosaur tracks on the Arabian Peninsula. The first of the discoveries was of a two-footed tridactyl. These tracks showed that the animal had taken steps with an average length of just over a metre. The tracks were pointing in the SSW direction.

The study noted that “west of the tridactyl trackway, 11 subparallel quadrupedal trackways preserve evidence of large and small quadrupedal animals traveling together in a herd.” The study also noted that there may have been additional tracks that were not discovered.

The report described the method of finding the tracks: “Trackways were exposed by clearing away sand, small rocks and debris.” The tracks were found in Madar, 47 km north of the Yemeni capital.

Mohammed Al-Daheri, a journalist from the area of the discovery, was the first person to discover the existence of these tracks in the area. Anne S. Schulp, Mohammed Al-Wosabi and Nancy J. Stevens were subsequently contacted and asked to carry out the study.

source

Creative Commons Attribution 2.5

| More from NewsWax

Stumble It!

Share/Save/Bookmark

How to survive the coming food shortage.

One Response to “Dinosaur tracks found on Arabian Peninsula”

  1. 1
    Squiggy Says:

    Destroy them! The Koran doesn’t mention “dinosaur tracks” but they’re obviously some “great Satan” hoax. Destroy them and if you feel like it, kill an infidel.

Leave a Reply

International Mens Day and Fathers Day in Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden

Search MND

Introducing MRm: A New Men's Rights Magazine in PDF format

Download PDF Here

Support Our Sponsors!

Please support MND

Subscribe today:

SUSTAINER: $5/mo.


CONTRIBUTOR: $20/mo.


SUPPORTER: $50/mo.


Or Donate Any Amount

Archives

privacy policy | terms of service


Site Meter

MND: Your Daily Dose of Counter-Theory is Digg proof thanks to caching by WP Super Cache!