Tracking Gigantic Carnivorous Dinosaurs From Australia’s Jurassic Park

Oakey Mine Dinosaur Footprints

One of the dinosaur footprints from an Oakey mine (photograph and false-color deep map). Credit: Dr Anthony Romilio

North America had the T. rex, South America had the Giganotosaurus and Africa the Spinosaurus – now evidence shows Australia had gigantic predatory dinosaurs.

The discovery came in University of Queensland research, led by paleontologist Dr. Anthony Romilio, which analyzed southern Queensland dinosaur footprint fossils dated to the latter part of the Jurassic Period, between 165 and 151 million-year-ago.

“I’ve always wondered, where were Australia’s big carnivorous dinosaurs?” Dr. Romilio said.

“But I think we’ve found them, right here in Queensland.

“The specimens of these gigantic dinosaurs were not fossilized bones, which are the sorts of things that are typically housed at museums.

“Rather, we looked at footprints, which – in Australia – are much more abundant. These tracks were made by dinosaurs walking through the swamp-forests that once occupied much of the landscape of what is now southern Queensland.”

Most of the tracks used in the study belong to theropods, the same group of dinosaurs that includes Australovenator, Velociraptor, and their modern-day descendants, birds.

Jurassic Dinosaur Track-Maker Reconstruction

A reconstruction of a Jurassic dinosaur track-maker from southern Queensland in front of a silhouette of the largest known T. rex. Credit: Dr. Anthony Romilio

Dr. Romilio said these were clearly not bird tracks.

“Most of these footprints are around 50 to 60 centimeters (20 to 24 inches) in length, with some of the really huge tracks measuring nearly 80 centimeters,” he said.

“We estimate these tracks were made by large-bodied carnivorous dinosaurs, some of which were up to three meters high at the hips and probably around 10 meters long.

“To put that into perspective, T. rex got to about 3.25 meters (11 feet) at the hips and attained lengths of 12 to 13 meters (39 to 43 feet) long, but it didn’t appear until 90 million years after our Queensland giants.

“The Queensland tracks were probably made by giant carnosaurs – the group that includes the Allosaurus. At the time, these were probably some of the largest predatory dinosaurs on the planet.”

Despite the study providing important new insights into Australia’s natural heritage, the fossils are not a recent discovery.

“The tracks have been known for more than half a century,” Dr. Romilio said. “They were discovered in the ceilings of underground coal mines from Rosewood near Ipswich, and Oakey just north of Toowoomba, back in the 1950s and 1960s.

“Most hadn’t been scientifically described, and were left for decades in museum drawers waiting to be re-discovered.

“Finding these fossils has been our way of tracking down the creatures from Australia’s Jurassic Park.”

Reference: “Footprints of large theropod dinosaurs in the Middle–UpperJurassic (lower Callovian–lower Tithonian) Walloon Coal Measures of southern Queensland, Australia.” by Anthony Romilio, Steven W. Salisbury and Andréas Jannel, 12 June 2020, Historical Biology.
DOI: 10.1080/08912963.2020.1772252

Be the first to comment on "Tracking Gigantic Carnivorous Dinosaurs From Australia’s Jurassic Park"

Leave a comment

Email address is optional. If provided, your email will not be published or shared.