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Oct 22, 2016 07:16 AM EDT

The Denali National Park- Site in Alaska Finally hands latest hard bone evidences on dinosaur's existence in Alaska. Responsible for digging the finds were the paleontologists of University of Alaska Fairbanks and some US National Park service crew. Both scientists and academics in the university set meet-up to inspect evidences.

The largest of the four fragments found was a few inches long, appearing to be a fossilized tendon. The filling and size of the tendon simply suggests that it belongs to a supremely large animal once exploring the earth's land and sky. The bone evidences will be further examined in a test which will finally prove of the bone's link to the most common large animal in Alaska during the Cretaceous, the Hadrosaur, Seeker reported.

The Hardrosaur is a duck-billed herbivore that ranks among the largest but kindest animals during the Cretaceous. Obviously delighting the researching academics and other paleontologists, such find in Alaska streams up further possibilities of other evidences lying around. Since the start of the digging in July, the academics never did cease in backing the university's project.

For the record, the digging not only revealed bones, but tracks and prints of the dinosaur's once giant trudges along the muddy path. All these markings hardened into what they have become now, Juneau Empire reported.

The specific figures responsible for the discovery made in Alaska months ago was University of Alaska's Museum of the North, Earth Sciences curator, Pat Druckenmiller. Along with his students and a team of paleontologists, Druckenmiller lead the group towards the cited tracks.

What they soon found instantly turned their senses further deep in the park. Interestingly, besides the latest bone fragments, a full solid limb from a medium-sized dinosaur came up among the finds, Smithsonian reported.

With these, at hand, a meet-up between academics and paleontologists was instantaneously set so that the university's research committee could ensure that more hard evidences are dug up in the future. After all, whatever the team can find will always add up to the magnificent collection in the university's museum.

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