LOS ANGELES, Oct. 17 (Xinhua) -- U.S. researchers
have discovered a "dinosaur graveyard" in southeastern Utah that is yielding a
wealth of fossilized animals and footprints from the Jurassic and Cretaceous
periods, a newspaper report said on Friday.
The centerpiece of the new finds is the
well-preserved skeleton of a 150-million-year-old sauropod, a long-necked
herbivore, according to the Los Angeles Times.
The researchers have so far excavated only part of
the fossilized skeleton, which they estimate to be about 50 feet long. "It's big
and takes a lot of time," said paleontologist Luis Chiappe, director of the
Dinosaur Institute and the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.
The skeleton was found in the remains of what was
once a big riverbed and is now a light-colored stratum on the face of an exposed
cliff. Nearby in the bed were the disarticulated remains of other sauropods and
meat-eating dinosaurs, including the five-foot-long femur of a brachiosaur,
according to the paper.
On the ridgeline of the cliff, the team found a large
number of footprints preserved in sandstone, with one set of prints from the
Jurassic era, which ended about 145 million years ago, the paper said.
Prints of a sauropod were also found near tracks of
carnivorous theropods and herbivorous ornithopods from the early Cretaceous
period, which ended about 65 million years ago, said the paper.
Chiappe said most stunning of all, were the
three-toed prints of a European stegosaur, named Deltapodus. "Deltapodus tracks
have never been found in North America," he said.
Chiappe and his staff expect to spend at least
another decade excavating the site, the paper said.