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originally posted by: randomtangentsrme
a reply to: TheMisguidedAngel
No back pad at the least
originally posted by: Lumenari
originally posted by: randomtangentsrme
With the 3 toes it looks vaguely avian. But the heavy pad on the heel, is baffling. Although it has the rear facing claw.
It could be a Bald Eagle or Golden Eagle track that either collapsed, or was altered either by moisture or another track.
I could make an argument for moose or Elk track, with an eagle track over it.
Best I got.
I would have to agree with you on that...
The three toe with middle extended and a rear pad makes it Avian... the track could have been altered by moisture to make it bigger than the original track.
Golden eagles might get that big...
I doubt in Alaska there is an Emu or Ostrich running about...
The only other option is a Raptorex...
originally posted by: randomtangentsrme
a reply to: rickymouse
Nugget posted about Thunderbirds. We want to believe.
originally posted by: nugget1
a reply to: rickymouse
Great points, Ricky! :cheers
Science knows the abundance of chemicals in our food and water supply are having a negative effect on wildlife and haman life.
One of the areas being impacted the most is the indocrine system, which regulates human growth among other important functions.
'Evolution' caused the big scary birds of yesteryear to become the cute little feathered creatures we have today; could chemically induced de-evolution happen?
(Half joking.)
originally posted by: randomtangentsrme
a reply to: NoCorruptionAllowed
I'm willing to go down that rabbit hole. What dinosaurs have been sighted in Alaska recent and what was their migratory process over the last 20 years?