Denver scientists discover the rare fossil bones of 67.5 million years while drilling under their own car park

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A dinosaurs museum has made a remarkable discovery in its own car park while analyzing the geothermal heating potential.
The Denver Museum of Nature and Science in Colorado discovered a fossil bone of more than 750 feet under the ground, reported the Associated Press (AP).
James Hagadorn, a museum geology curator, said the discovery is “super rare”, according to AP.
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“Finding a dinosaur bone in a nucleus is like hitting a hole in a moon,” said Hagadorn.
“It’s like winning the Willy Wonka factory. It’s incredible.”

The Denver Museum of Nature and Science accidentally discovered a rare dinosaur fossil at 750 feet in its parking lot. (Richard M. Wicker / Denver Museum of Nature and Science via AP)
Using a bore of five centimeters wide, the museum officials discovered that the fossil would be from a vertebra of a small dinosaur of plants.
The dinosaur lived at the end of the Cretaceous, about 67.5 million years ago, reported AP.
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Officials also discovered fossilized vegetation in the bread hole near the bone.
“I would love to dig a 763 -foot hole in the parking lot to search this dinosaur, the rest. But I don’t think it will fly because we really need parking,” said Hagadorn.

The dinosaur lived at the end of the Cretaceous, about 67.5 million years ago, reported AP. (AP photo / Thomas Peipert)
Patrick O’Connor, curator of the paleontology of vertebrates at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, said that AP could be the deepest and oldest in Denver.
“This animal lived in what was probably a swampy environment that would have been highly vegetated at the time,” said O’Connor.
Thomas Williamson, paleontology curator at the Museum of New Mexico in Natural History and Science in Albuquerque, told AP that he guessed that discovery was a surprise.

Using a bore of five centimeters wide, the museum officials discovered that the fossil would be from a vertebra of a small dinosaur of plants. (Richard M. Wicker / Denver Museum of Nature and Science via AP)
“Scientifically, it’s not so exciting,” said Williamson.
The fossil is now exposed to the public at the museum.
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According to museum officials, according to museum officials, have noted that AP.
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In January, a “Highway Dinosaur” containing nearly 200 tracks was discovered in a limestone career in the south of England.
The “road” dates back 166 million years.