The Columbus Dispatch

Visitors ruining dinosaur tracks

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SALT LAKE CITY — Visitors at a Utah state park have been dislodging dinosaur tracks imprinted in sandstone and throwing the pieces into a nearby lake, officials said.

The site lined with hundreds of the prehistori­c raptor tracks has been heavily damaged in the past six months, Red Fleet State Park manager Josh Hansen said.

Hansen recently caught a juvenile who was throwing slabs of stone into the reservoir, he told the Salt Lake Tribune. He heard two thumps into the water before docking his boat. Then he saw the person holding two toe imprints from a partial dinosaur track.

“I saved that one,” Hansen said. “He had already thrown multiple (tracks in the water).”

Many tracks are noticeable walking through the landscape, but others are not. Utah Division of State Parks spokesman Devan Chavez said his conservati­ve estimate is that at least 10 of the larger, more-visible footprints, which range from 3 to 17 inches, disappeare­d in the past six months.

“They’re just looking to throw rocks off the side,” Chavez said. “What they don’t realize is these rocks they’re picking up, they’re covered in dinosaur tracks.”

Some of the slabs sink to the bottom of Red Fleet Reservoir, some shatter upon hitting the surface and others dissolve entirely.

The park is considerin­g sending a diving team to recover what it can from the lakebed.

Though the dinosaur’s three-toed footprints are not fossils, they’re treated as such under Utah code. Anyone who destroys one could be charged with a felony, though no charges have been filed recently.

“We’re going to be cracking down on it a lot more,” Chavez said.

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