Tridactyl bird footprints preserved in Lower Eocene sandstone of the Chuckanut Formation in Whatcom County, Washington, USA, were made by a species of giant ground bird that walked along the subtropical lowland riverbank. The morphology and age of the tracks suggest the track maker was Diatryma (?=Gastornis). Although these birds have long been considered to be predators or scavengers, the absence of raptor-like claws supports earlier suggestions that they were herbivores. The Chuckanut tracks are herein named as Rivavipes giganteus ichnogenus and ichnospecies nov., inferred to belong to the extinct family Gastornithidae. © The Palaeontological Association.
CITATION STYLE
Mustoe, G. E., Tucker, D. S., & Kemplin, K. L. (2012). Giant Eocene bird footprints from Northwest Washington, USA. Palaeontology, 55(6), 1293–1305. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-4983.2012.01195.x
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