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Spring Bloom
NBC News
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Comments by "Spring Bloom" (@springbloom5940) on "Texas Drought Reveals Dinosaur Tracks In Dried Up Riverbed" video.
@uniquelylily1166 Well, likely not, or hed be showing you a Pedernales point.
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Slow moving, very clean water. These are typically shallow, clear streams. They're all over the Texas Hill Country. Theres a fantastic spot near Hondo on a private property.
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Most are not underwater, most of the time. These are hard limestone bed streams that are usually shallow, slow and very clean, so theres not much erosion. Some are under deep layers of sediment, so dont get eroded. If you lookup Dinosaur Valley State Park(where these are) and 'Texas dinosaur tracks', you'll find lots of information on how they formed and were preserved.
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They're a dime a dozen. Literally. Used to go to a place in Tarpley on a private ranch. Just had a box on the gate to drop a quarter in.
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@jordanwyatt4084 Yeah, this is a fluff piece for the park, thats being way overblown. Its interesting they found some they didn't know about, but, I mean, its Dinosaur Valley 🤨
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@84potions You're welcome
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@curtkeisler7623 Yes, something is not right. Mostly your understanding of erosion and geography. Of course, MSNBC doesn't exactly foster knowledge.
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Seriously? These things are all over the Hill Country, along with every other manner of fossil.
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In the comments: shock and amazement that dinosaur tracks are at Dinosaur Valley State Park
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These are stone bed streams that flow very clean and slow water, so theres very little erosion. This is a misleading video, because most of these tracks are almost never underwater.
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These things are everywhere in Texas Hill Country.
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🤦🤦🤦🤦🤦
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Used to go out to a really good spot at Tarpley, whenever visiting family in Hondo. It was a private property with a little box on the gate, to drop a quarter. Excellent quality sauropod tracks. I don't think its publicly accessible, anymore.
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Basically, yes
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What? So you're not shocked and amazed that Texas has fossils?
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Yes, thats what happens when you disrupt the hydrologic cycle by taking water from where the climate puts it, to somewhere the climate obliterates it.
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