It was found among an “unprecedented” 21 different types of dinosaur tracks and dwarfs a metre-long footprint discovered in the Gobi desert by a team of Japanese and Mongolian researchers.
Palaeontologists from the University of Queensland and James Cook University said their find was the most diverse array of dino footprints in the world.
The remains were unearthed in rocks aged up to 140 millions years old in the Kimberley region of Western Australia.
That's a lot of bronto-burgers.
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