You know what they say about dinosaurs with big feet? They left big holes.
Some of the largest footprints known to science were made 70 million to 90 million years ago, when a type of dinosaur believed to be a titanosaur galumphed across the muck in central Asia.
A few of these mud tracks filled with sand and silt, which hardened like plaster. Long after the titanosaur died off, the casts in the sand remained. We know about these big feet because a Mongolian paleontologist discovered a few of them in the Gobi Desert in August.
And what a titanic foot the dinosaur must have had. One of the most detailed tracks was a convex mound 1m in length, with impressions of the animal's massive nails. By US shoe standards, it would stretch its sneakers to a size 104. (The world's largest human feet max out at about 38cm, about a size 23 or 25.) The print was also much wider than any human foot, at 76cm across.
"The footprint is one of the biggest known footprints in the world," said Shinobu Ishigaki, a researcher at the Okayama University of Science in Japan and a member of the joint Mongolian-Japanese expedition to the Gobi. The researchers announced their discovery of the footprint in Japan.