Asteroid fragments and the first dinosaur fossils from the impact of the asteroid 66 million years ago have just been discovered at a dig site in North Dakota.
Unearthed by palaeontologist Robert DePalma, this could be the first piece of physical evidence that dinosaurs were wiped out by an asteroid strike, ending the Cretaceous period.
Along with the asteroid fragments and fossils, a rare pterosaur egg with fossilised bones of a baby pterosaur inside were found. A preserved burrow likely made by an early mammal, and a fossilised turtle that was skewered by a wooden stake, and a preserved Triceratops skin were also discovered at the dig site.
It is rare to find fossils that are within even the final few thousand years of the age of dinosaurs, which highlights the importance of these recent discoveries.
“This is the most incredible thing that we could possibly imagine here, the best case scenario… The one thing that we always wanted to find in this site and here we’ve got it.” said DePalma on these findings.
Because of the importance of these discoveries, a 90-minute film voiced by David Attenborough will be airing on 15 April on BBC One to cover it. This documentary will attempt to paint a picture of life at Tanis (the dig site) at the time of the asteroid strike.
Attenborough will be joined by DePalma and Prof Phil Manning from the University of Manchester. Footage will show them as they unearth a lot of these major discoveries and explore the area.
This footage includes the capture of the moment the team discovers the leg of a small herbivorous Thescelosaurus – a dinosaur that may have witnessed the asteroid impact. The programme also follows Robot and his team as they examine the fossilised dinosaur egg and other major discoveries.
Read more:
- Prehistoric mammals bulked up to survive in the changing post-dinosaur world
- 168-million-year-old stegosaurs fossil suggests the iconic dinosaurs originated in Asia
- How long did it take dinosaur eggs to hatch?