According to Dinosaur Valley State Park director Asa Vermeulen, they belong to an Acanthosaurus, a reptile that walked on two legs.

(LaPresse) Drought has caused dinosaur footprints more than 113 million years old to resurface in a nature park in Texas. The footprints had hitherto been covered by water and sediment in a lake, but they came to light again as the reservoir drained. According to Dinosaur Valley State Park director Asa Vermeulen, they belong to an Acanthosaurus, a reptile that walked on two legs.

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