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Dinosaur Tracks: How Are Fossilized Imprints Formed?

How did dinosaurs leave their footprints behind so many years ago? Stomp,
clomp, and squish your way to learn how to make fossils and create your very own
fossil imprints!

Problem: How did dinosaur footprints get


fossilized?
Materials
1 cup damp, used coffee grounds
½ cup of cold coffee
1 cup of flour
½ cup of salt
Wax paper
Bowl
Wooden spoon
Rolling pin

Procedure
1. Get out a large mixing bowl.
2. Place the damp coffee grounds, cold coffee, flour, and salt into the bowl. Stir
them together using the spoon. You can use your hands to make sure that
the mixture is mixed thoroughly and completely damp. The result will look
like muddy clay.
3. Now, roll out a sheet of wax paper. Put a handful of “clay” on the paper and use your hand or the rolling pin to form it into a ½
inch thick blob.
4. Press your fingers into the blob. What happens?
5. If you’d like, you can also collect items from outdoors and try squishing them into the clay as well.What items make the best
prints?
6. Once you’ve made your masterpiece, let the clay dry in a room temperature location over the next few days. Then, check out
your completed print!

Results
Your hand will make a print in the damp coffee ground clay and this print will stay as the clay dries.

Why?

Dinosaurs lived millions of years ago, but they left behind many clues that we can use to learn more about them. Of course, they left
behind fossilized bones, but they also left behind traces of their lives, including eggs and dinosaur dung. They also left behind their
footprints! We can track these ancient animals and learn more about their behavior using these prints. There are many more trace
fossils than there are body fossils, since one animal can make a lot of prints and eggs, but only leaves behind one body to fossilize.

Footprint fossils are called imprint fossils, which means that something got squished into wet soil, mud, or sand and then turned into a
fossil. How does this work? If you squish your foot into some damp mud, it’s likely that it will wash away during the next rain. However,
if sediment covers that mud after it dries, then the sediment itself can turn into a hardened layer of rock with the footprints safely tucked
inside. Over many millions of years, many layers of rock can stack on top of each other as water places sediment on top of existing
sediment or as successive landslides cover each other. Many millions of years later, these rocks can erode and break apart, revealing
the footprints inside.

Can you hide your fossil footprint inside something else? Experiment with clay, sand, and other materials like cornmeal to see if you
can create a place for your fossil to hide.

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