![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiC2sGq-lrWA-tHxIMkn5bpqdiDGD9FGt7fdjQKuML8Oc-k520Ax8BhZPNP6KA15GbBmx23zaFR4okS28bY9auXyWqYUhFKHsWAThJ8S-TkGOl8E4BIw-fIzNxfGB9wiUBV0UtCoA/s400/eroded+dinosaur+footprints+Arizona.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDieGl5YiQHwygxGePXQPGYVHzjOOTS4gv-G2tPl7IHSq2c2YCpdSzJQ0OIz-xxS8KgfPSkteb0dNCyXeyCBJ7zPdXHdKSl0NNtiRuzmFjIKFR73BlNkNtQiCYY2idzIwKrpjRhQ/s400/dinosaur+dance+floor.jpg)
Here are a couple more photos of the now-famous "dinosaur dance floor" in northern Arizona. The top photo/drawing shows a rare imprint of a dinosaur tail dragged across the sand.
The lower one shows the extent of the footprint site in the Navajo Sandstone near Coyote Buttes.
[Credit, Winston Seiler, Univ. of Utah]
Update 7pm: Popular Science posted a gallery of 10 photos of the track site and the local scenery, including an index map.
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