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erronis

(22,413 posts)
Tue Dec 16, 2025, 03:20 PM Yesterday

A photographer finds thousands of dinosaur footprints near Italian Winter Olympic venue

https://phys.org/news/2025-12-thousands-dinosaur-footprints-italian-winter.html
by Colleen Barry



A wildlife photographer stumbled upon one of the oldest and largest known collections of dinosaur footprints, dating back about 210 million years to the Triassic Period, high in an Italian national park near the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympic venue of Bormio, officials announced Tuesday.

The discovery in the Stelvio National Park was striking for the sheer number of footprints, estimated at as many as 20,000 over some five kilometers (three miles), and the location near the Swiss border, once a prehistoric coastal area, that has never previously yielded dinosaur tracks, experts said.

"This time reality really surpasses fantasy,'' said Cristiano Dal Sasso, a paleontologist at Milan's Natural History Museum, who received the first call from wildlife photographer Elio Della Ferrera after making the discovery.

The dinosaur prints are believed to have been made by long-necked bipedal herbivores that were up to 10 meters (33 feet) long, weighing up to four tons, similar to a Plateosaurus, Dal Sasso said. Some of the tracks were 40 centimeters wide, with visible claws.

. . .



The tracks were discovered by Della Ferrera, who set out to photograph deer and vultures in September when his camera was trained on a vertical wall about 600 meters (nearly 2,000 feet) above the nearest road.

The location, some 2,400 to 2,800 meters (7,900-9,200 feet) above sea level on a north-facing wall that is mostly in the shade, made the footprints, though in plain sight, particularly hard to spot without a very strong lens, Dal Sasso said.

. . .


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A photographer finds thousands of dinosaur footprints near Italian Winter Olympic venue (Original Post) erronis Yesterday OP
Cool, cool, cool! Hey, I'm walking here! Timeflyer Yesterday #1
Way cool Pas-de-Calais Yesterday #2
So....they were mountain climbers? Bayard Yesterday #3
Think plate tectonic shifts. erronis Yesterday #4
Just amazing. niyad Yesterday #5
Did you happen to see Judi Lynn's OP about the 18,000 dinosaur niyad Yesterday #6
Thanks for bringing that up. Here's the link to her post erronis Yesterday #7
You are most welcome. Not just archeology. .almost every field. Our niyad Yesterday #8

niyad

(129,237 posts)
6. Did you happen to see Judi Lynn's OP about the 18,000 dinosaur
Tue Dec 16, 2025, 09:52 PM
Yesterday

prints that were found near the Bolivian coastline? Posted in this forum on Dec. 5.

erronis

(22,413 posts)
7. Thanks for bringing that up. Here's the link to her post
Tue Dec 16, 2025, 10:02 PM
Yesterday
https://www.democraticunderground.com/122894617

The wonderful thing about archeology is that we'll probably never dig down to the bottom of it all. Always something new to discover!

niyad

(129,237 posts)
8. You are most welcome. Not just archeology. .almost every field. Our
Tue Dec 16, 2025, 10:12 PM
Yesterday

world is an incredible place.

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