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The Smallest Stegosaur Footprint Ever Found Will Make You Squee With Joy

The Smallest Stegosaur Footprint Ever Found Will Make You Squee With Joy 19 APRIL 2021 In a complete redefinition of the concept of cute , an international team of paleontologists has identified the tiniest known stegosaur footprint. Preserved in the stone in the Xinjiang Province of China for 100 million years, the print measures just 5.7 centimeters (2.24 inches) long, and was probably made by a baby stegosaur (ichnogenus Deltapodus) around the size of a cat, the research team said.   Fascinatingly, although we don t know the wee little animal s exact species, the print has allowed scientists to infer that baby stegosaurs may have walked differently from the adults.

Adorable baby dinosaur s footprint is just 6cm long

A tiny footprint belonging to a baby dinosaur has been discovered in China. The imprint measures just 2.24 inches (5.7cm) long and the exact species that made it remains unknown, but it is thought to be a diminutive stegosaur. The most famous stegosaur is the Stegosaurus, a 21 foot-long,plant-eating giant known for its protruding backplates and mace-like tail. Scroll down for video   A footprint found in China is thought to belong to a baby stegosaur, xperts believe it would be armoured and have a spiked tail, just like the enormous adults (pictured, artist s impression)  Pictured right, the tiny stegosaur footprint which was found in China.  It is shorter than the 12inch (30cm) footprints of the much larger adult stegosaur footprints also found at the site (left), indicating young stegosaurs may have walked on their toes, like birds and cats 

This is an opportunity to show what we stand for

This is an opportunity to show what we stand for We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss April 20, 2021 12.02am Normal text size Credit: To submit a letter to The Age, email letters@theage.com.au. Please include your home address and telephone number. THE WINTER OLYMPICS This is an opportunity to show what we stand for Your measured editorial (″⁣China can’t avoid the Olympics torchlight″⁣, 19/4) raised some pivotal points regarding how a nation such as Australia – with its ingrained social values of the dignity of the individual, freedom of speech, the rule of law and open government – might possibly participate in the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics.

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