From Deseret News archives:

Dinos ran rampant near lake

Powell's receding shoreline yields thousands of tracks

Published: Wednesday, May 11, 2005 10:34 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
When Andre Delgalvis found the first dinosaur track a couple of years ago, he was mildly impressed.

Today he's astounded.

He's now discovered thousands of tracks in dozens of locations along the receding shoreline of Lake Powell.

"I couldn't believe how many tracks I was finding," he said, peering over a slab of Navajo sandstone peppered with the footprints of Jurassic Age dinosaurs and crocodiles. "Tracks are appearing that possibly no one's ever seen before."

Delgalvis, of Grand Junction, Colo., is a professional photographer who specializes in moody, color-rich portraits of Lake Powell. Now he's part of a team organizing an extraordinary rescue effort for what one scientist calls an "amazing" discovery — to rescue the rich lode of dinosaur tracks before Lake Powell rises up and swallows them again, perhaps forever.

In recent weeks, Delgalvis' discoveries have caught the attention of professor Martin Lockley, a geologist and dinosaur track expert with the University of Colorado in Denver.

"Yes," Lockley said, "we've definitely found some new stuff here."

Story continues below
Lockley previously documented dinosaur tracks in about three dozen locations near Lake Powell. With Delgalvis' help, there are now about 80 documented sites with tracks — most of which had been submerged for 30 years.

Lockley said that although the water kept the tracks inaccessible, it actually enhanced many of the footprints. "It's brought out the subtle relief, if you like, more clearly."

For better pictures, Lockley himself sometimes enhances the footprints by filling them in with loose red dirt to better define their shape for the camera. But even without such tricks, many of the tracks are astonishingly vivid. Pointing to an 8-inch track left by a meat-eating raptor 200 million years ago, Delgalvis said, "You can see the claws. And you can actually see the digits, the knuckles."

A quarter-mile away across the lake, Lockley pointed to a pair of footprints several feet apart, with a long groove stretching between them.

"That's where a dinosaur dragged his tail," Lockley said. The impressions were preserved after the mud in which they were initially made hardened into sandstone.

A few steps away, four large tracks make up what dinosaur experts call a "trackway." All four prints were evidently made by a single dinosaur, walking in a northeasterly direction 200 million years ago. Lockley believes the four footprints were left by a carnivore known as dilophosaurus, the same species portrayed on the T-shirt he was wearing.

The dinosaur was probably 5 to 6 feet at the hip and was 15 to 18 feet long, Lockley said.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
Bob Greenwell KSL-TV

Most of the 80 documented sites with tracks had been submerged for 30 years. These prints show where a dinosaur dragged his tail.

previousnext

Latest comments

Landon Horne is the TE in the state

Ever get the feeling we are looking at a hostile takeover of our nation?

Obama to meet with Senate Dems

You don't understand the Gospel of Jesus very well. Yes, he wants us to...

Editorial: Herbert's budget

I'm so sick of you. You are arrogant, self serving, and miss informed. I...

Stay the course with our president

Are you talking about Obama or the people that are advising him? like: Ayers,...

If it is written in the Mormon Times, maybe they should keep it off the...

Correction. BYU has made it a tradition of winning 10 games, and still...

Letters: Explaining Palin

"...Let me explain it in very simple terms. Palin relates to, speaks to and...

Now that the national press has latched onto the story there is going to be...

RE: Boise vs Utah & BYU That should be fun, I think, to have 3 of the top...

Advertisements