Brisbane Dinosaur Fossil Is Australia's Oldest

University of Queensland
A man sits beside a trolley with his hands resting on a fossil.

Professor Bruce Runnegar with the fossil he found almost 70 years ago.

(Photo credit: The University of Queensland )

Key points

  • The dinosaur fossil is the first to be confirmed as found in an Australian capital city.
  • Professor Bruce Runnegar found it 68 years ago when he was a high school student but it was never formally recorded.
  • The fossil has travelled across the world as part of Professor Runnegar's teaching collection.

University of Queensland research has confirmed Brisbane's only dinosaur fossil is Australia's oldest, dating back to the earliest part of the Late Triassic period 230 million years ago.

The 18.5-centimetre footprint (pictured below) was discovered by a teenager at Petrie's Quarry at Albion in 1958 but remained unstudied for more than 60 years.

Dr Anthony Romilio from UQ's Dinosaur Lab said the footprint set in stone proved dinosaurs were present in Australia a lot earlier than previously recognised.

A close-up image of the fossil found by Bruce Runnegar.

"This is the only dinosaur fossil to be found in an Australia capital city and shows how globally significant discoveries can remain hidden in plain sight," Dr Romilio said.

"Subsequent urban development has made the original site inaccessible, leaving this footprint as the only surviving dinosaur evidence from the area.

"It's likely the dinosaur was walking through or alongside a waterway when it left the footprint before it was then preserved in sandstone, which was cut millions of years later to construct buildings across Brisbane.

"Without the foresight to preserve this material, Brisbane's dinosaur history would still be completely unknown."

The footprint was made by a small, two-legged dinosaur, likely an early sauropodomorph, which is a primitive relative of later long‑necked dinosaurs.

Dr Romilio said based on its size, the animal stood roughly 75 to 80 centimetres tall at the hip and weighed about 140 kilograms.

A man stands behind a table in a laboratory

Dr Anthony Romilio used software to recreate a cast of what the dinosaur footprint would have looked like.

(Photo credit: The University of Queensland)

Study co-author and UQ Honorary Professor Bruce Runnegar was the teenager who collected the fossil during a visit to the quarry with school friends and has kept it since.

"At the time, we suspected the marks might be dinosaur tracks, but we couldn't have imagined their national significance," Professor Runnegar said.

Professor Runnegar went on to study a Bachelor of Science and PhD at UQ and then to teach palaeontology at the University of New England at Armidale and University of California, Los Angeles, where he showed the Brisbane fossil to students.

"It was a great example of a special kind of trace fossil because the footprint was made in sediment by a heavy animal," he said.

"When I saw Dr Romilio's ability to reconstruct, analyse and map dinosaur footprints, I decided to reach out to have the fossil formally documented.

"More than 60 years after we found it, it's extraordinary to see it recognised as Australia's oldest dinosaur fossil."

The fossil is now housed at the Queensland Museum where it will be available for ongoing research.

The research is published in Alcheringa.

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