If reports are to go by, a team of engineers from the Environment Agency, a government organization, was examining ways to fortify the coastal defenses at Yaverland seafront on the Isle of Wight when they stumbled upon these fossils.
Referring to this, Nick Gray, who is the regional flood and coastal-risk manager for the agency added that dinosaurs existing right where our team is working bridges the past and present, intertwining the contemporary challenges of addressing climate change with an era that we can only envision.
He further noted that we all have encountered such tales and watched the films, but this discovery merely offers us a glimpse into what life was like.
Experts speculate that the 125 million-year-old footprints might belong to a Mantellisaurus, a herbivorous dinosaur that measured 7m in length and had distinctive three-toed prints. Mantellisaurus thrived during the early Cretaceous period, which concluded approximately 66 million years ago.
The Environment Agency reported that the fossils were unearthed in a popular tourist spot, adjacent to a beachfront café, however, for experts, the revelation of such findings is not unexpected.
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