A life-reconstruction of herbivorous dinosaurs based on 220-million-year-old fossil footprints from Ipswich, Queensland, Australia.Image credit: Anthony Romilio. |
The dinosaur footprint is on display at the Queensland Museum, Brisbane. |
University of Queensland paleontologist Dr Anthony Romilio recently led an international team to re-analyze the footprints, dated to the latter part of the Triassic Period, around 220 million-year-ago.
“For years it’s been believed that these tracks were made by a massive predator that was part of the dinosaur family Eubrontes, with legs over two meters tall,” Dr Romilio said.
“This idea caused a sensation decades ago because no other meat-eating dinosaur in the world approached that size during the Triassic period.
“But our research shows the tracks were instead made by a dinosaur from the Evazoum family – vegetarian dinosaurs that were smaller, with legs about 1.4 meters tall and a body length of six meters.”
The research team suspected there was something not-quite-right with the original size estimates and there was a good reason for their doubts.