I was gonna say that but I couldn't spell it.Chupacabra
I was gonna say that but I couldn't spell it.Chupacabra
Nope.william, you aren't by chance a former Marine Aviator?
Why thanks! I am a retired Marine Aviator...and I had a good buddy fellow aviator, who's name was ...William Sublette...lost track of him 20 plus years ago.Nope.
Those guys are cool, hardcore, etc.
Slackadaisical would be a better descriptor for me.
I was thinking Dire wolf, also, but that's a big track. It is definitely from a canid of some sort. There was a very large prehistoric canid, larger than a Dire wolf, called an Epicyon, but I don't know their range, nor do I know if their period of existence would coincide with when that track was made. That's a pretty cool find, in any event.Good link! BUT notice how the track I posted is more open and you can draw an X between the toes and the pad. The one in the link is rounder and that X can’t be drawn. This is one way to tell the difference between a canine and a feline. The Wyoming track matches a canine in that respect. Reading about the extinct Dire wolf indicates that they were about or only a tiny bit larger then our current gray wolf. This track is twice as large of the wolf tracks I saw in Alaska. Still a puzzle to me as I have no formal training in such matters. In North America there were at least three types of Smilodon, the largest one is smaller then the one that made the South American track. But still the toes aren’t right.
I was shown this track and have heard two ideas of what it is, I have a third. It’s in sandstone of Wyoming with some other tracks. I won’t say what I think at this point as to not cloud the issue. Maybe the answer can be found by talking with some collage types.
IMG_0965 by Oliver Sudden, on Flickr
There is no "traction, no "push" in the direction of travel. Soil that soft would be heeled up some. A talented sculpt
Ya' know, things kind of get lost over 10,000 years or so.Shouldn’t there be more tracks?
Yep I’ll have to agree. Wampum cat.Skinwalker or Wampus Cat
I can’t answer that directly, but one of the things I know is that saber tooth cats were ‘all cat’ but had a very dog like carteristics. It been hypothesized they were slower but longer running then lions and tigers that are in their size range today.looks more cat than anything else
did sabertooth have retractable claws? if not then that is my take. If they did have retractable claws then I am at a loss.
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