Dinosaur predator and prey drank together from lagoons on Isle of Skye
Newly-identified dinosaur footprints on the Isle of Skye show herbivores and carnivores drank from freshwater lagoons together 167 million years ago, scientists have said.
A team at the University of Edinburgh analysed 131 dinosaur footprints at Prince Charles's Point on the island's Trotternish Peninsula.
The tracks include rarely-seen footprints of megalosaurs – a jeep-sized theropod and cousin and ancestor of the T.Rex – alongside those of plant-eating sauropods.
Researchers said the large, circular impressions made by the latter point to a long-necked dinosaur two or three times the size of an elephant.
The footprints were once considered by geologists to have been resting burrows of fish.
The researchers said the site provides a 'fascinating insight' into the environmental preferences and behaviours of dinosaurs from the Middle Jurassic period.
Analysis of the multi-directional tracks and walking gaits, they explained, suggest the prehistoric beasts milled around the lagoon's margins, similar to how animals congregate around watering holes today.
They added that the tracks show that regardless of dominance, the meat-eating therapods and plant-eating sauropods habitually spent time in lagoons, as opposed to exposed, drier mudflats.
Research lead Tone Blakesley said: 'The footprints at Prince Charles's Point provide a fascinating insight into the behaviours and environmental distributions of meat-eating theropods and plant-eating, long-necked sauropods during an important time in their evolution.
'On Skye, these dinosaurs clearly preferred shallowly submerged lagoonal environments over subaerially exposed mudflats.'
The first three footprints at the site were discovered five years ago by a University of Edinburgh student and colleagues during a visit to the shoreline.
Subsequent discoveries of other footprints in the area made it one of the most extensive dinosaur track sites in Scotland, with scientists saying they expect to find more.
The research team studied the tracks by taking thousands of overlapping photographs of the entire site with a drone, before using specialist software software to construct 3D models of the footprints via a technique called photogrammetry.
Steve Brusatte, personal chair of palaeontology and evolution at the University of Edinburgh, reflected on the fact the remote bay on the Trotternish Peninsula was also where Bonnie Prince Charlie hid in 1746 while on the run from British troops.
'Prince Charles's Point is a place where Scottish history and prehistory blend together,' he said.
'It's astounding to think that when Bonnie Prince Charlie was running for his life, he might have been sprinting in the footsteps of dinosaurs.'
The research, published in PLOS One, was funded by the Leverhulme Trust and National Geographic Society.
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