Museum researchers discover new dinosaur site along Yukon River

September 19, 2013

Theresa Bakker

Photo by Pat Druckenmiller. A dinosaur track exposed along the rocky shoreline of Yukon River. Finding the fossils involved walking along the river’s banks and turning over rocks.
Photo by Pat Druckenmiller. A dinosaur track exposed along the rocky shoreline of Yukon River. Finding the fossils involved walking along the river’s banks and turning over rocks.


Theresa Bakker
907-474-6941
9/19/13


University of Alaska Museum of the North researchers have found a major new site for dinosaur fossils in Alaska along the Yukon River.

A recent trip netted about 2,000 pounds of dinosaur footprints for the museum’s collection, according to earth sciences curator Pat Druckenmiller “There aren’t many places left in the world where paleontologists can just go out and find thousands of dinosaur footprints. This is the kind of discovery you would have expected in the Lower 48 a hundred years ago."

In July 2013, researchers set off in boats for a 500-mile journey down the Tanana and Yukon rivers. Co-discoverer Kevin May, operations manager at the UA Museum of the North, says the goal was to explore as many beaches as possible for evidence of dinosaurs. “Based on what we know about the geology along the Yukon River, the rocks exposed downriver from Ruby suggested they might be a good place to find dinosaurs”.

They found much more than they expected: dinosaur footprints big and small, from both meat- and plant-eaters.

“We found a great diversity of dinosaur types,” Druckenmiller said, “evidence of an extinct ecosystem we never knew existed.”

Photo by Kevin May. The dinobarge in action: heading down the Yukon River.
Photo by Kevin May. The dinobarge in action: heading down the Yukon River.


Paul McCarthy, Druckenmiller’s colleague from the Department of Geology and Geophysics at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, says the trip was amazing.

“We found dinosaur footprints by the scores on literally every outcrop we stopped at," he said. "I've seen dinosaur footprints in Alaska now in rocks from southwest Alaska, the North Slope, and Denali National Park in the Interior, but there aren't many places where footprints occur in such abundance.”

McCarthy is a geologist whose major research interests include paleolandscape evolution. He says the dinosaur footprint-bearing rocks from along the Yukon River are probably about 25-30 million years older than what’s been found in Denali Park. “It took several years of dedicated looking before the first footprint was discovered in Denali in 2005, but since that time hundreds of tracks of dinosaurs and birds have been found. In contrast, the tracks were so abundant along the Yukon River that we could find and collect as many as 50 specimens in as little as 10 minutes.”

Druckenmiller says that one of the reasons the Yukon River dinosaur tracks may have gone undiscovered for so long is their method of preservation. They are “natural casts” formed when sand filled in the actual footprint after the dinosaur stepped in mud.

“These are not negative impressions,” he said. “Rather they stick out from the rock and sometimes look like blobs with toes.”

The discovery is significant in that the Yukon River fossils are geologically older than other major sites in the state and that they preserve a record of dinosaurs previously unknown in the state.

“We have a whole lot of work to do,” Druckenmiller said. “We look forward to returning to the area and studying the site more.”

Photo by Kevin May. The crew found dozens of dinosaur tracks along one Yukon River beach. From left: Paul McCarthy, Julie Rousseau, Meghan Shay, Katherine Anderson, Meg O’Connor, Pat Druckenmiller and Jørn Hurum.
Photo by Kevin May. The crew found dozens of dinosaur tracks along one Yukon River beach. From left: Paul McCarthy, Julie Rousseau, Meghan Shay, Katherine Anderson, Meg O’Connor, Pat Druckenmiller and Jørn Hurum.


The museum is working with villages and Native corporations along the Yukon River to share information about the discovery with local communities and to coordinate future exploration.

The research team also included Jørn Hurum, from the University of Oslo Natural History Museum, UAMN earth sciences collection manager Julie Rousseau, and several UAF students. Roger Topp, head of production at the museum, filmed the expedition for an exhibit the museum is planning for the summer of 2015.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Pat Druckenmiller, UAMN earth sciences curator, at 907-474-6954 or via email at psdruckenmiller@alaska.edu.

ON THE WEB:  www.uaf.edu/museum

NOTE TO EDITORS: Photos are available for download online at uafcornerstone.net/dinosaur2013 or by contacting Bakker.

Additional photos below:

Photo by Roger Topp. Kevin May, Pat Druckenmiller and Paul McCarthy (left to right) inspecting an outcrop of Cretaceous rock along the Yukon River.
Photo by Roger Topp. Kevin May, Pat Druckenmiller and Paul McCarthy (left to right) inspecting an outcrop of Cretaceous rock along the Yukon River.


Photo by Roger Topp.  Katherine Anderson, Meg O’Connor, and Julie Rousseau wrap aluminum foil around tracks for safe transport back to the museum. Pat Druckenmiller is assigning field numbers and recording field notes about the fossils.
Photo by Roger Topp. Katherine Anderson, Meg O’Connor, and Julie Rousseau wrap aluminum foil around tracks for safe transport back to the museum. Pat Druckenmiller is assigning field numbers and recording field notes about the fossils.


Photo by Pat Druckenmiller.  The inflatable boats (aka “dinobarge”) used to travel down the river.
Photo by Pat Druckenmiller. The inflatable boats (aka “dinobarge”) used to travel down the river.


Photo by Pat Druckenmiller.  Hind foot print of an herbivorous dinosaur.
Photo by Pat Druckenmiller. Hind foot print of an herbivorous dinosaur.


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