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T. rex tracks preserved in New Mexico

CHI2000051802 - 18 MAY 2000 - CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, USA: Patrons get a look at "Sue" the Tyrannosaurus Rex at the Field Museum in Chicago, Thursday, May 18, 2000. "Sue" fp/Frank Polich. UPI
CHI2000051802 - 18 MAY 2000 - CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, USA: Patrons get a look at "Sue" the Tyrannosaurus Rex at the Field Museum in Chicago, Thursday, May 18, 2000. "Sue" fp/Frank Polich. UPI | License Photo

CIMARRON, N.M., July 13 (UPI) -- A second full footprint of a Tyrannosaurus rex has been discovered on the remote Philmont Boy Scout Ranch near Cimarron, N.M., a paleontologist said.

"This is one of the most important sites ever found in New Mexico," said Spencer Lucas, paleontology curator at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science.

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The first footprint was found at the site in 1983 by Charles Pillmore, a surveyor for the U.S. Geological Survey, who died in 2003.

Lucas discovered the second print, and a partial print of a third, last month, The (Santa Fe) New Mexican reported Monday. The two full tracks show an impression of three toes and a dew claw, Lucas said.

The prints -- the world's only confirmed full T. rex tracks -- indicate a 6-foot-stride for a creature that weighed 6 tons and was 42-feet long from nose to tail tip with teeth the size of bananas, Lucas said.

"It was a very fast, very powerful animal," Lucas said. "It was a killing machine."

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