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Ichnos
An International Journal for Plant and Animal Traces
Volume 14, 2007 - Issue 3-4
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Original Articles

Trackway Ratio: A New Look at Trackway Gauge in the Analysis of Quadrupedal Dinosaur Trackways and its Implications for Ichnotaxonomy

, &
Pages 257-270 | Published online: 31 May 2007
 

Abstract

A new parameter, the Trackway Ratio (TR), is proposed to supplement the previously used trackway gauge to describe and quantify the relative width of trackways in dinosaur quadrupedal gaits. It is expressed as the ratio of the width of the tracks relative to the total width of the trackway (both measured perpendicular to the long axis of the trackway). The ratio may be used with either pes (PTR) or manus (MTR) tracks. The PTR range of values for wide-, medium- and narrow-gauge trackways of previous authors are provisionally suggested to be ≤35%, 36–49% and ≥50%, respectively. The application of such a ratio would permit a more consistent ichnotaxonomy to be adopted where both track morphology and trackway parameters are used to define ichnotaxa.

Determination of the TR, as well as other parameters, will be affected by track preservation quality. Recent experiments on track simulation in the laboratory have shed further light on observations made in the field concerning the value of track measurements (in particular track length and width) recorded from below the surface on which the maker was moving. Experimental track simulations in the laboratory have shown that the dimensions of transmitted tracks preserved below the surface on which the foot was impressed may vary from 65% to 135% of the true dimensions of the indenter. Two case studies are presented that quantify the errors that may be made on calculating TR and the size, gait and speed of the maker, from trackways if the preservation of the tracks are not fully understood.

It is shown that in individual trackways the PTR may vary along the length of the trackway; so that part of the trackway may be classified as wide-gauge and other parts medium-gauge. There is a relationship between variation in PTR and that of pace angulation along the length of a single trackway. An analysis of 42 trackways, principally sauropod, shows a temporal distribution that does not agree closely with previous suggestions relating to narrow- and wide-gauge trackways.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We wish to thank Dr. Jim Farlow for kindly making available a detailed drawing of the trackway of Brontopodus birdi from the Paluxy River, Texas. Drs. Jim Farlow and Martin Lockley are also thanked for their constructive comments on an earlier draft of the paper. Technical help from Paul Coles is gratefully acknowledged.

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