Imagine a wall with more than 5,000 dinosaur tracks: they call it the dinosaurs dancefloor
In 1994, while walking around a cement factory in southern Bolivia, Klaus Schütt discovered a limestone wall with a shear size of 25'000 square meters literally covered by dinosaur tracks. A few years later, in 1998, a scientific team lead by Swiss paleontologist Christian Meyer investigated the wall, and proved it was "the largest site of dinosaur tracks found so far".
There are more than 5,000 tracks of 294 different dinosaurs made during the second half of the Cretaceous period.
There is such an impressive amount of tracks that some of the researchers said this place seemed to be a dinosaurs’ dancefloor.
Perhaps, the most special track is a 347 meters footpath, the longest dinosaur trackway ever known, made by a baby Tyrannosaurus rex nicknamed “Johnny Wallker” by researchers.