Drought is increasing day by day due to global warming, which causes the balance in the world to deteriorate day by day. Due to the severe drought experienced in Europe in the past weeks, it has a history dating back to the 1600s and on the “If you see me, cry!” The Hunger Stones appeared.
Now, due to the severe drought in Texas, dinosaur tracks that are said to date back 113 million years have emerged in Dinosaur Valley State Park. It was announced that the resulting footprints belonged to a dinosaur species called “Acrocanthosaurus”
The dinosaur was about 5 meters tall and weighed 7 tons.
While these giant footprints in the park are estimated to belong to a dinosaur, Texas Dinosaur Valley State Park is known as one of the best protected areas in the world where such tracks are seen. Stephanie Salinas Garcia, of the Texas Department of Parks and Wildlife, explained that extreme drought has dried up nearly the entire river that runs through the center of the park, making its tracks visible.
Located in an inland area southwest of Dallas city, the state park was once at the edge of an ancient ocean, and dinosaurs are thought to have left footprints in the mud. It was noted that most of the recently uncovered tracks were left by Acrocanthosaurus, which as an adult weighed about 7 tons and was 4.5 meters tall. Of the 140 footprints left by the dinosaur, 60 were said to be visible.