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The Tid Bits.

Gar fish scale (left) and 'ossified tendon' from a large herbivorous dinosaur (right).

While excavating the huge hadrosaurid femur we found some other interesting little fossils. Among these are numerous little scales from large 'gar' or 'pike' fish. Also associated with the site are fragments of turtle, an isolated dinosaur tooth, and a partial rib bone. These fossils are all entombed in a muddy-sandstone matrix, solid evidence that they were deposited in a Cretaceous river channel.

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About This Project

The Late Cretaceous Almond Formation has been known to produce dinosaurs since 1937. Still, the fauna it preserves remains almost entirely unknown. In 2021 we found the first turtles, fish, and crocodylomorphs as well as several dinosaurs including hadrosaurids and the first ankylosaur from the formation. Our aim is return to the deposit and thoroughly document its ecosystem for the first time to inform future studies of dinosaur evolution and distribution.

Blast off!

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