Where Dinosaurs Roamed
Footprints at one of the nation's oldest—and most fought over—fossil beds offer new clues to how the behemoths lived
- By Genevieve Rajewski
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2008, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
He and others speculate that adult Apatosauri, some of the largest animals ever to walk the earth, could prop themselves up on two legs with the help of their long tails. But others argue that it would have been physiologically impossible to pump blood up the animals' long necks or to raise their heavy front limbs off the ground.
Bakker and Mossbrucker say their goal is to look at Quarry 10 holistically—considering the local geography, climate, flora and fauna—to create a picture of where and how Jurassic dinosaurs lived. "I want to know as completely as I can what kind of forgotten world these dinosaurs knew," says Mossbrucker. "I want to see what they saw, touch their earth with my own feet and be in the Jurassic."
Bakker gestures toward the pit, where Libby Prueher, the museum's curator of geology, sifts soil alongside volunteer Logan Thomas, a high-school student with a passion for snakes. "It's weird that [Marsh and Cope] thought that dinosaurs were a zero-sum game, that Marsh thought, ‘If Cope got a bone, I lost a bone,'" says Bakker. The goal isn't to vanquish one's rivals, he says: "the guiding inspiration for studying the dead dinosaurs is to get back to how they lived."
Genevieve Rajewski, a Boston-based writer, caught dinomania as a child and is surprised by how much paleontology has changed.
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Related topics: Dinosaurs Fossils Jurassic Period 19th Century Colorado
Additional Sources
"The Sauropod Chronicles," by Richard A. Kissel, Natural History, April 2007
Historic Dinosaur Quarries of the Dinosaur Ridge Area by Adrian Hunt et al., Friends of Dinosaur Ridge and the University of Colorado at Denver, 2002









Comments (7)
we had found some unexplained bones on our property and can not identify them can you please help?
Posted by Sabrina DeClue on March 26,2012 | 04:29 PM
Hi, my name is amber i am 13 years old and i have a therory for this type of stuff, archaeology is something more than just digging up fossils and finding bones it gives us an idea about how wedo stuff to save the planet or find out how others lived there lives. you compare and contrast, there are so many things you can figure out. I know that ur thinking that this is wrong accepting this from a young girl but its the truth. I have learned alot. sincerly, amber mock
Posted by amber mock on March 19,2009 | 11:49 AM
William Buckland, an English geologist, coined the term "coprolite" in the early 1800s. It is derived from the greek words kopros, meaning "dung", and lithos, meaning "stone".
Posted by Sarah on May 16,2008 | 04:19 PM
You left out the "insult" that Marsh saddled his rival Cope with for all time. I was told that after finding fossilized poop, Marsh, in honor of his rival named it coprolite, so that Cope would be associated in perputuity.
Posted by Christian Edwards on May 13,2008 | 10:53 AM
In response to Tracy Ford: The article is correct. I'm pretty sure that the tracks you are referring to are from the Middle Jurassic, far too old to be from Apatosaurus proper. Regardless, these footprints are from a site were Apatosaurus was found. I have seen these tiny sauropod tracks at the Morrison Museum, and they show distinct claw impressions that link them to Apatosaurus. The article references not just bipedal tracks but “functionally running” tracks. This too would distinguish these footprints from the Mexican tracks. I hope this adds clarity. Great article.
Posted by Tim Mulvey on May 2,2008 | 06:27 PM
This is wrong, this isn't the 'first' time 'Apatosaurus' i.e. sauropod junile tracks were found of them walking bipedally. In fact the first one that I know of was in 1996. Ferrusquia-Villafranca, I., Jimenez-Hiadalgo, E., and Bravo-Cuvas, V. M., 1996, Footprints of Small Sauropods from the Middle Jurassic of Oaxaca, Southeastern Mexico: In: The Continental Jurassic, edited by Morales, M., 1996, Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin, n. 60, p. 119-126. I even did a drawing of an Apatosaurus (adult) walking bipedally through a termite mound 'field in 2000. Tracy
Posted by Tracy Ford on April 30,2008 | 01:45 AM
The Morrison quarries are known as Dinosaur Ridge. The Friends of Dinosaur Ridge (http://www.dinoridge.org/) offer tours, and paleontologists at the Morrison Natural History Museum (http://www.mnhm.org/) dig there.
Posted by Sarah on April 30,2008 | 11:55 AM
Where are the Morrison Quarries? My Microsoft Streets & Trips does not yield the site the article discusses. Is it in or near Dinosaur National Monument?
Posted by Philip Neal on April 26,2008 | 10:01 PM
I thought "Where Dinosaurs Roamed" from your May 2008 issue was a great article by Ms. Rajewski; a fascinating read about "battling" paleontologists. It's amazing how uncivilized acedemics can be to each other. I thought this was a well-researched piece that didn't get lost in facts: the writer wove a lively narrative that made the most of the limited word count. I enjoy reading Smithsonian whenever I pick it up, but felt compelled to offer kudos for this story because it left me wanting to learn more. I am curious to know, however, why the writer was given such limited space for such a compelling story? (Is she working on a book on this topic? If so, I will keep a look out for it.) Perhaps I am a "dinomaniac," like the writer, but I thoroughly enjoyed this story and look forward to reading more of Ms. Rajewski's fine journalism. Well done. Smithsonian.
Posted by George Corsiglia on April 25,2008 | 09:40 PM