Bell Phil R, Pickles Brian J, Ashby Sarah C, Walker Issy E, Hurst Sally, Rampe Michael, Durkin Paul, Brown Caleb M
Palaeoscience Research Centre, School of Environmental and Rural Science, University of New England, Armidale, New South Wales, Australia.
School of Biological Sciences, University of Reading, Whiteknights, Reading, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2025 Jul 23;20(7):e0324913. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0324913. eCollection 2025.
The badlands of Dinosaur Provincial Park (Alberta, Canada) are renowned for the exceptional abundance and diversity of Campanian-aged vertebrate body fossils, especially dinosaurs. Due to the steep exposures and rapid erosion, dinosaur tracks and trackways are considered extremely rare but have been recorded from a small number of concretionary casts, which pertain to hadrosaurids and a single tyrannosaurid. Here, we document the first multitaxic dinosaur footprint assemblage from the Dinosaur Park Formation based on a new locality that contains multiple individual ceratopsids, two tyrannosaurids, a possible ankylosaurian, and a small theropod-like taxon. Ceratopsid tracks are globally rare but dominate the new tracksite, suggesting gregarious behaviour, which is also supported by their regular spacing and parallel arrangement. The possible ankylosaurian track is identified (in part) on account of having three distinct pedal digits, consistent with the pedal anatomy of several Dinosaur Park ankylosaurids (Euoplocephalus, Dyoplosaurus) and the newly erected ichnotaxon Ruopodosaurus clava but differentiating it from other ankylosaurian tracks (Tetrapodosaurus isp.). Importantly, the new tracks are the first natural moulds (concave epirelief) found in Dinosaur Provincial Park, which, due to the unique geomorphology of the area, can only be recognised in outcrops where there are prominent sediment displacement rims. The new search image outlined here has already resulted in several subsequent trackway discoveries, and has the potential to transform ichnological studies in the Dinosaur Park Formation and related formations where badlands prevail.
恐龙省立公园(加拿大艾伯塔省)的荒原以坎帕阶脊椎动物身体化石异常丰富多样而闻名,尤其是恐龙化石。由于陡峭的露头和快速的侵蚀作用,恐龙足迹和足迹道被认为极为罕见,但已从少数结核铸型中记录到,这些铸型属于鸭嘴龙类和一种霸王龙类。在此,我们基于一个新地点记录了恐龙公园组首个多分类恐龙足迹组合,该地点包含多个个体的角龙类、两种霸王龙类、一种可能的甲龙类以及一个小型兽脚类类似分类单元。角龙类足迹在全球都很罕见,但在这个新足迹地点占主导地位,这表明它们具有群居行为,其规则的间距和平行排列也支持了这一点。这个可能的甲龙类足迹(部分)是根据有三个明显的趾来确定的,这与恐龙公园的几种甲龙类(优头甲龙、糙齿龙)以及新建立的遗迹分类单元钉状弱足龙的足部解剖结构一致,但与其他甲龙类足迹(似四足龙足迹)不同。重要的是,这些新足迹是在恐龙省立公园发现的首批天然铸型(凹面表浮雕),由于该地区独特的地貌,只有在有明显沉积物位移边缘的露头中才能识别。这里勾勒出的新搜索图像已经促成了后续多个足迹道的发现,并且有可能改变恐龙公园组及其他荒原占主导的相关地层的遗迹学研究。