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Dinosaur highway 'longest of its kind in the world'
Dinosaur highway 'longest of its kind in the world' 4 hours ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google Jordan Brooks , Oxford and Ethan Gudge , South of England Kevin Church/BBC The footprints were made 166 million years ago as a dinosaur walked across a lagoon A dinosaur trackway made up of 200 footprints which were made 166 million years ago is the largest of its kind uncovered in the world, researchers have said. The tracks were first spotted by a worker at Dewars Farm Quarry in Oxfordshire four years ago - with paleontologists soon descending on the site. Since then, an excavation saw scientists uncover hundreds of footprints at the site which they believe reveal the comings and goings of Cetiosaurus - a huge sauropod. Dr Emma Nichols, from Oxford University's Museum of Natural History, was called in to lead the excavation and said it was the "longest exposed continuous sauropod trackway in the world". Explaining the tracks, she said: "There were four trackways of sauropod footprints and none of them were the same size as each other." "What that tells us is a possibility of a bunch of different things - it could be that they were all Cetiosaurus and they were moving as a family herd, or as a herd of different aged individuals, not necessarily related. "Or it could be that we have more than one type of sauropod." Dr Emma Nichols, from Oxford University's Museum of Natural History, led the excavation Cetiosaurus were four-legged, long-necked, plant-eating beasts that could reach about 18m (59ft) in length. But they were not the only creatures that called what is now modern-day Oxfordshire home. Nichols said: "In 1997, at the first major excavation that is connected to the ones that we've been doing more recently, something really incredible was discovered, which is a Megalosaurus trackway. "The land in Oxfordshire would have been ruled by Megalosaurus - they were nine metres long and were Britain's answer to T-Rex." Mark Witton The dinosaurs left their mark as they walked across a tropical lagoon Winding back 166 million years, Nichols said the area surrounding the tracks would have been "a really lovely tropical, kind of lush environment". "Britain was actually underwater, and there was a shallow inland sea covering Oxfordshire - but there was a series of islands - like the Bahamas or Florida Keys - and that's where the dinosaurs would have been living," she said. "So Megalosaurus, Cetiosaurus and other dinosaurs would have been living on these little islands." One area of the site even reveals where the paths of a sauropod and megalosaurus once crossed, with Nichols saying the footprints were on the "same bedding plane". Kevin Church/BBC The trackways form a prehistoric crossroads All of the recently excavated footprints are evenly spaced except for one print, which is out of line with the others. Nichols suggested this showed the sauropod had stopped and leant on one leg for a moment "as if it's looking back over its left shoulder". "There mi