Watch: Drought reveals dinosaur tracks in Texas riverbed

A severe drought in Texas has led to the discovery of a series of dinosaur tracks that were left behind around 113 million years ago. The sizeable markings were reportedly found last week in a dried out riverbed in Dinosaur Valley State Park, which is renowned for the number of prehistoric prints that can be found at the location. Officials at the site say that the creature responsible for the three-toed tracks was an Acrocanthosaurus, a Tyrannosaurus Rex relative that would have stood approximately 15 feet tall and weighed a whopping seven tons.

Normally hidden beneath sediment and the waters of the Paluxy River, the prints have only recently become visible due to the difficult drought conditions impacting the area. To that end, with rain forecast for the region, it is expected that the tracks will soon be covered once again, making their proverbial moment in the sun rather brief. That said, park officials say that this is actually for the best as the river, when it is flowing, serves to protect the prints from being exposed to the elements which could cause them to vanish for good.

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By Tim Binnall / Coast to Coast AM News Editor

Tim Binnall is the news editor for the Coast to Coast AM website as well as the host of the pioneering paranormal podcast Binnall of America. For more than a decade and over the course of hundreds of BoA programs, he has interviewed a vast array of researchers, spanning a wide spectrum of paranormal genres and ranging from bonafide esoteric icons to up-and-coming future players in 'the field.' A graduate of Syracuse University, Binnall aims to maintain an outsider's perspective on the paranormal world with a distinct appreciation for its absurdities and a keen interest in the personalities and sociology of esoteric studies.

(Source: coasttocoastam.com; August 23, 2022; https://tinyurl.com/2n9hdzl9)
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