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  • Britney Spears still has poorly done extentions
    DUKAS_14456809_X17
    Britney Spears still has poorly done extentions
    Britney Spears has very badly down hair extentions in her hair with very long roots. June 4, 2010 X17online.com exclusive (FOTO:DUKAS/X17)
    DUKAS/X17

     

  • FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    DUK10118704_015
    FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Ref 10414
    Bentley 1
    13/05/2019
    See Ferrari text
    Picture credit: AcademeG

    Here’s a car designed to take the rough and tumble of off-road driving in style.It’s a luxury Bentley which has been converted into a tank with caterpillar-tracks.Russian car enthusiasts from YouTube channel AcademeG embarked upon an ambitious project in August last year to transform a Bentley Continental GT into what is officially named Ultratank. Over ten months , the suspension and wheel set-up was converted to take giant tank treads amongst other adjustments to the Bentley.Presenter Kosik said:” We have created real evil. “This Bentley Ultratank is a real Bentley on tracks. It knocks down anything in its way and does it comfortably.”Speaking in a video uploaded for the channel’s 3.5million subscribers, he declares that the team has “ accomplished success.”

    OPS: The Ultratank is reversed off its trailer resdy to be put through its paces in testing.

    Pictufre supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    DUK10118704_014
    FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Ref 10414
    Bentley 1
    13/05/2019
    See Ferrari text
    Picture credit: AcademeG

    Here’s a car designed to take the rough and tumble of off-road driving in style.It’s a luxury Bentley which has been converted into a tank with caterpillar-tracks.Russian car enthusiasts from YouTube channel AcademeG embarked upon an ambitious project in August last year to transform a Bentley Continental GT into what is officially named Ultratank. Over ten months , the suspension and wheel set-up was converted to take giant tank treads amongst other adjustments to the Bentley.Presenter Kosik said:” We have created real evil. “This Bentley Ultratank is a real Bentley on tracks. It knocks down anything in its way and does it comfortably.”Speaking in a video uploaded for the channel’s 3.5million subscribers, he declares that the team has “ accomplished success.”

    OPS: The Ultratank is loaded onto it's trailer to be taken for testing

    Pictufre supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    DUK10118704_013
    FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Ref 10414
    Bentley 1
    13/05/2019
    See Ferrari text
    Picture credit: AcademeG

    Here’s a car designed to take the rough and tumble of off-road driving in style.It’s a luxury Bentley which has been converted into a tank with caterpillar-tracks.Russian car enthusiasts from YouTube channel AcademeG embarked upon an ambitious project in August last year to transform a Bentley Continental GT into what is officially named Ultratank. Over ten months , the suspension and wheel set-up was converted to take giant tank treads amongst other adjustments to the Bentley.Presenter Kosik said:” We have created real evil. “This Bentley Ultratank is a real Bentley on tracks. It knocks down anything in its way and does it comfortably.”Speaking in a video uploaded for the channel’s 3.5million subscribers, he declares that the team has “ accomplished success.”

    OPS: The Ultratank is put through its paces in testing.

    Pictufre supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    DUK10118704_011
    FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Ref 10414
    Bentley 1
    13/05/2019
    See Ferrari text
    Picture credit: AcademeG

    Here’s a car designed to take the rough and tumble of off-road driving in style.It’s a luxury Bentley which has been converted into a tank with caterpillar-tracks.Russian car enthusiasts from YouTube channel AcademeG embarked upon an ambitious project in August last year to transform a Bentley Continental GT into what is officially named Ultratank. Over ten months , the suspension and wheel set-up was converted to take giant tank treads amongst other adjustments to the Bentley.Presenter Kosik said:” We have created real evil. “This Bentley Ultratank is a real Bentley on tracks. It knocks down anything in its way and does it comfortably.”Speaking in a video uploaded for the channel’s 3.5million subscribers, he declares that the team has “ accomplished success.”

    OPS: The Ultratank is put through its paces in testing.

    Pictufre supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    DUK10118704_009
    FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Ref 10414
    Bentley 1
    13/05/2019
    See Ferrari text
    Picture credit: AcademeG

    Here’s a car designed to take the rough and tumble of off-road driving in style.It’s a luxury Bentley which has been converted into a tank with caterpillar-tracks.Russian car enthusiasts from YouTube channel AcademeG embarked upon an ambitious project in August last year to transform a Bentley Continental GT into what is officially named Ultratank. Over ten months , the suspension and wheel set-up was converted to take giant tank treads amongst other adjustments to the Bentley.Presenter Kosik said:” We have created real evil. “This Bentley Ultratank is a real Bentley on tracks. It knocks down anything in its way and does it comfortably.”Speaking in a video uploaded for the channel’s 3.5million subscribers, he declares that the team has “ accomplished success.”

    OPS: The Ultratank is put through its paces in testing.

    Pictufre supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    DUK10118704_007
    FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Ref 10414
    Bentley 1
    13/05/2019
    See Ferrari text
    Picture credit: AcademeG

    Here’s a car designed to take the rough and tumble of off-road driving in style.It’s a luxury Bentley which has been converted into a tank with caterpillar-tracks.Russian car enthusiasts from YouTube channel AcademeG embarked upon an ambitious project in August last year to transform a Bentley Continental GT into what is officially named Ultratank. Over ten months , the suspension and wheel set-up was converted to take giant tank treads amongst other adjustments to the Bentley.Presenter Kosik said:” We have created real evil. “This Bentley Ultratank is a real Bentley on tracks. It knocks down anything in its way and does it comfortably.”Speaking in a video uploaded for the channel’s 3.5million subscribers, he declares that the team has “ accomplished success.”

    OPS: The Ultratank is put through its paces in testing.

    Pictufre supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    DUK10118704_006
    FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Ref 10414
    Bentley 1
    13/05/2019
    See Ferrari text
    Picture credit: AcademeG

    Here’s a car designed to take the rough and tumble of off-road driving in style.It’s a luxury Bentley which has been converted into a tank with caterpillar-tracks.Russian car enthusiasts from YouTube channel AcademeG embarked upon an ambitious project in August last year to transform a Bentley Continental GT into what is officially named Ultratank. Over ten months , the suspension and wheel set-up was converted to take giant tank treads amongst other adjustments to the Bentley.Presenter Kosik said:” We have created real evil. “This Bentley Ultratank is a real Bentley on tracks. It knocks down anything in its way and does it comfortably.”Speaking in a video uploaded for the channel’s 3.5million subscribers, he declares that the team has “ accomplished success.”

    OPS: The Ultratank is put through its paces in testing.

    Pictufre supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    DUK10118704_004
    FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Ref 10414
    Bentley 1
    13/05/2019
    See Ferrari text
    Picture credit: AcademeG

    Here’s a car designed to take the rough and tumble of off-road driving in style.It’s a luxury Bentley which has been converted into a tank with caterpillar-tracks.Russian car enthusiasts from YouTube channel AcademeG embarked upon an ambitious project in August last year to transform a Bentley Continental GT into what is officially named Ultratank. Over ten months , the suspension and wheel set-up was converted to take giant tank treads amongst other adjustments to the Bentley.Presenter Kosik said:” We have created real evil. “This Bentley Ultratank is a real Bentley on tracks. It knocks down anything in its way and does it comfortably.”Speaking in a video uploaded for the channel’s 3.5million subscribers, he declares that the team has “ accomplished success.”

    OPS: The Ultratank is put through its paces in testing.

    Pictufre supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    DUK10118704_002
    FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Ref 10414
    Bentley 1
    13/05/2019
    See Ferrari text
    Picture credit: AcademeG

    Here’s a car designed to take the rough and tumble of off-road driving in style.It’s a luxury Bentley which has been converted into a tank with caterpillar-tracks.Russian car enthusiasts from YouTube channel AcademeG embarked upon an ambitious project in August last year to transform a Bentley Continental GT into what is officially named Ultratank. Over ten months , the suspension and wheel set-up was converted to take giant tank treads amongst other adjustments to the Bentley.Presenter Kosik said:” We have created real evil. “This Bentley Ultratank is a real Bentley on tracks. It knocks down anything in its way and does it comfortably.”Speaking in a video uploaded for the channel’s 3.5million subscribers, he declares that the team has “ accomplished success.”

    OPS: The Ultratank is put through its paces in testing.

    Pictufre supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    DUK10118704_001
    FEATURE - Luxus-Bentley zum Off-Road-Panzer umgebaut
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Ref 10414
    Bentley 1
    13/05/2019
    See Ferrari text
    Picture credit: AcademeG

    Here’s a car designed to take the rough and tumble of off-road driving in style.It’s a luxury Bentley which has been converted into a tank with caterpillar-tracks.Russian car enthusiasts from YouTube channel AcademeG embarked upon an ambitious project in August last year to transform a Bentley Continental GT into what is officially named Ultratank. Over ten months , the suspension and wheel set-up was converted to take giant tank treads amongst other adjustments to the Bentley.Presenter Kosik said:” We have created real evil. “This Bentley Ultratank is a real Bentley on tracks. It knocks down anything in its way and does it comfortably.”Speaking in a video uploaded for the channel’s 3.5million subscribers, he declares that the team has “ accomplished success.”

    OPS: The Ultratank is put through its paces in testing.

    Pictufre supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Deutsches Braunkohlekraftwerk nach Blockade wieder im Normalbetrieb
    DUK10024963_024
    NEWS - Deutsches Braunkohlekraftwerk nach Blockade wieder im Normalbetrieb
    Aktivisten stürmen das Vattenfall Kohle-Kraftwerk im Rahmen der Proteste gegen Kohle-Energie in Welzow / 140516

    [Welzow, Brandenburg, Germany - 14.05.2016

    More than 1000 climate protection activist block the coal delivery tracks of the Vattenfall Coal power plant "Schwarze Pumpe" near Welzow on the 2nd protest day of the anti-coal ”Ende Gelaende”-Camp. From rail blockades starting, stormed hundreds of protesters during the day the power plant site. About 100 people were arrested.

    Mehr als 1000 Klimaschutz-Demonstranten blockierten, am zweiten Protesttag des Anti-Kohleprotest-Camps ”Ende Gelaende” die Schienen zum Vattenfall Kohlekraftwerk ”Schwarze Pumpe. Aus den Blockaden heraus stuermten viele hundert Demonstranten das Kraftwerksgelaende, die Polizei nahm etwa 100 Demonstranten fest.

    ] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS) *** Local Caption *** 22207520

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Proteste gegen Kohle-Energie in Welzov Deutschland
    DUK10024423_021
    NEWS - Proteste gegen Kohle-Energie in Welzov Deutschland
    Aktivisten stürmen das Vattenfall Kohle-Kraftwerk im Rahmen der Proteste gegen Kohle-Energie in Welzow / 140516

    [Welzow, Brandenburg, Germany - 14.05.2016

    At least four activists chained themselves to the tracks. More than 1000 climate protection activist block the coal delivery tracks of the Vattenfall Coal power plant "Schwarze Pumpe" near Welzow on the 2nd protest day of the anti-coal ”Ende Gelaende”-Camp. From rail blockades starting, stormed hundreds of protesters during the day the power plant site. About 100 people were arrested.

    Mindestens vier Aktivistinnen ketteten sich selbst an den Gleisen fest. Mehr als 1000 Klimaschutz-Demonstranten blockierten, am zweiten Protesttag des Anti-Kohleprotest-Camps ”Ende Gelaende” die Schienen zum Vattenfall Kohlekraftwerk ”Schwarze Pumpe. Aus den Blockaden heraus stuermten viele hundert Demonstranten das Kraftwerksgelaende, die Polizei nahm etwa 100 Demonstranten fest.

    ] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS) *** Local Caption *** 22207499

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Proteste gegen Kohle-Energie in Welzov Deutschland
    DUK10024423_020
    NEWS - Proteste gegen Kohle-Energie in Welzov Deutschland
    Aktivisten stürmen das Vattenfall Kohle-Kraftwerk im Rahmen der Proteste gegen Kohle-Energie in Welzow / 140516

    [Welzow, Brandenburg, Germany - 14.05.2016

    Some activists removed gravel from the tracks, the action was controversial among the blockade participants. More than 1000 climate protection activist block the coal delivery tracks of the Vattenfall Coal power plant "Schwarze Pumpe" near Welzow on the 2nd protest day of the anti-coal ”Ende Gelaende”-Camp. From rail blockades starting, stormed hundreds of protesters during the day the power plant site. About 100 people were arrested.

    Einige Aktivisten entfernten Schotter aus dem Gleisbett, die Aktion war unter den Blockadeteilnehmern umstritten. Mehr als 1000 Klimaschutz-Demonstranten blockierten, am zweiten Protesttag des Anti-Kohleprotest-Camps ”Ende Gelaende” die Schienen zum Vattenfall Kohlekraftwerk ”Schwarze Pumpe. Aus den Blockaden heraus stuermten viele hundert Demonstranten das Kraftwerksgelaende, die Polizei nahm etwa 100 Demonstranten fest.

    ] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS) *** Local Caption *** 22207541

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Proteste gegen Kohle-Energie in Welzov Deutschland
    DUK10024423_017
    NEWS - Proteste gegen Kohle-Energie in Welzov Deutschland
    Aktivisten stürmen das Vattenfall Kohle-Kraftwerk im Rahmen der Proteste gegen Kohle-Energie in Welzow / 140516

    [Welzow, Brandenburg, Germany - 14.05.2016

    At least four activists chained themselves to the tracks. More than 1000 climate protection activist block the coal delivery tracks of the Vattenfall Coal power plant "Schwarze Pumpe" near Welzow on the 2nd protest day of the anti-coal ”Ende Gelaende”-Camp. From rail blockades starting, stormed hundreds of protesters during the day the power plant site. About 100 people were arrested.

    Mindestens vier Aktivistinnen ketteten sich selbst an den Gleisen fest. Mehr als 1000 Klimaschutz-Demonstranten blockierten, am zweiten Protesttag des Anti-Kohleprotest-Camps ”Ende Gelaende” die Schienen zum Vattenfall Kohlekraftwerk ”Schwarze Pumpe. Aus den Blockaden heraus stuermten viele hundert Demonstranten das Kraftwerksgelaende, die Polizei nahm etwa 100 Demonstranten fest.

    ] (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS) *** Local Caption *** 22207498

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS: Flüchtlinge in Griechenland
    DUK10002266_014
    NEWS: Flüchtlinge in Griechenland
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Intime/Ath/REX Shutterstock (5053087d)
    Migrants crossing the railway tracks in Idomeni on the border with Macedonia
    Migrants in Idomeni, Greece - 08 Sep 2015

    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Britney Spears still has poorly done extentions
    DUKAS_14456808_X17
    Britney Spears still has poorly done extentions
    Britney Spears has very badly down hair extentions in her hair with very long roots. June 4, 2010 X17online.com exclusive (FOTO:DUKAS/X17)
    DUKAS/X17

     

  • Munich Neuperlach Zentrum Metro Station
    DUKAS_185509775_NUR
    Munich Neuperlach Zentrum Metro Station
    A woman descends an escalator toward the platform at Neuperlach Zentrum metro station in Munich, Bavaria, Upper Bavaria, Germany, on May 30, 2025. Other passengers stand on the platform between the train tracks in this modern underground station. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • ZOB Munich And Hackerbruecke Train Station At Sunset
    DUKAS_185292323_NUR
    ZOB Munich And Hackerbruecke Train Station At Sunset
    The Central Bus Station (ZOB) and the adjacent Hackerbrucke regional train station are seen during sunset in Munich, Bavaria, Upper Bavaria, Germany, on May 25, 2025. The area serves as a major intermodal transport hub connecting long-distance buses with regional and S-Bahn rail lines. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Warsaw Daily Life
    DUKAS_185211533_NUR
    Warsaw Daily Life
    Train tracks are seen in Warsaw, Poland on 22 May, 2025. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto)

     

  • Warsaw Daily Life
    DUKAS_185211505_NUR
    Warsaw Daily Life
    A passenger is seen waiting at the Warszawa Pludy train station in Warsaw, Poland on 22 May, 2025. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto)

     

  • Warsaw Daily Life
    DUKAS_185211502_NUR
    Warsaw Daily Life
    A passenger is seen waiting at the Warszawa Pludy train station in Warsaw, Poland on 22 May, 2025. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto)

     

  • Warsaw Daily Life
    DUKAS_185211500_NUR
    Warsaw Daily Life
    A passenger is seen waiting at the Warszawa Pludy train station in Warsaw, Poland on 22 May, 2025. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto)

     

  • Metro Station Muzeum Prague
    DUKAS_184980723_NUR
    Metro Station Muzeum Prague
    Passengers wait on the platform at the Muzeum metro station on Line A of the Prague Metro, known for its distinctive geometric tile design, in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The station serves as a major public transportation hub in the city's underground network. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Senior Citizen On The Platform Of A Railway Station
    DUKAS_184974611_NUR
    Senior Citizen On The Platform Of A Railway Station
    A senior man in a brown jacket stands on the platform at Munich Central Station while an Intercity Express (ICE) train is parked on the opposite track in Munich, Germany, on May 9, 2025. The station is one of Germany’s busiest railway hubs, connecting national and international routes. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Riding The Red Carpet
    DUKAS_184873429_NUR
    Riding The Red Carpet
    A man rides a bicycle along a narrow path beside a railway line where thousands of red chili peppers are sun-dried in Panchagarh, Bangladesh, on May 10, 2025. During the harvest season, local farmers use the open spaces near the tracks to dry chilies under the sun. The path, bordered by bright red peppers, is used by villagers for daily commuting, adding to the contrast between rural life and agricultural activity. (Photo by Pinu Rahman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Riding The Red Carpet
    DUKAS_184873423_NUR
    Riding The Red Carpet
    A freight train stands on the railway line beside fields where red chili peppers are sun-dried in Panchagarh, Bangladesh, on May 10, 2025. Local farmers use the space next to the tracks to dry harvested chilies under the sun, turning the area into a vivid red landscape. The presence of the cargo train highlights the intersection of rural agriculture and national transport infrastructure in northern Bangladesh. (Photo by Pinu Rahman/NurPhoto)

     

  • Tracking the 120 million year old steps of a dinosaur
    DUKAS_184805099_FER
    Tracking the 120 million year old steps of a dinosaur
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Dino tracks 1
    Ref 16826
    16/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Dr A. Romillo/University of Queensland
    A two-legged dinosaur’s 40-second journey more than 120 million years ago has been brought back to life using advanced digital modelling techniques.
    It was made by analysing the longest documented set of footprints made by a bi-pedal predator.
    It left behind a sequence of 80 consecutive footprints extending for 70 metres in Sichuan Province, China and frozen in stone known as the Phoenix Trackway.
    A team from Australia’s University of Queensland revealed the dinosaur stood 1.13 metres tall at the hip and weighed up to 292 kg.
    Local folklore once attributed the footprints to a mythical phoenix giving the site its name.
    But scientific analysis reveals it was an ancient predator from the early Cretaceous period.
    The team said that for the first time this dinosaur’s movements have been reconstructed step by step using digital animation.
    This reveals how it walked, changed pace and responded to its environment.

    OPS: The digital reconstruction of the dinosaur's tracks.Breaking out briefly into a trot by widening its stride.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Tracking the 120 million year old steps of a dinosaur
    DUKAS_184805097_FER
    Tracking the 120 million year old steps of a dinosaur
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Dino tracks 1
    Ref 16826
    16/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Dr A. Romillo/University of Queensland
    A two-legged dinosaur’s 40-second journey more than 120 million years ago has been brought back to life using advanced digital modelling techniques.
    It was made by analysing the longest documented set of footprints made by a bi-pedal predator.
    It left behind a sequence of 80 consecutive footprints extending for 70 metres in Sichuan Province, China and frozen in stone known as the Phoenix Trackway.
    A team from Australia’s University of Queensland revealed the dinosaur stood 1.13 metres tall at the hip and weighed up to 292 kg.
    Local folklore once attributed the footprints to a mythical phoenix giving the site its name.
    But scientific analysis reveals it was an ancient predator from the early Cretaceous period.
    The team said that for the first time this dinosaur’s movements have been reconstructed step by step using digital animation.
    This reveals how it walked, changed pace and responded to its environment.

    OPS: The digital reconstruction of the dinosaur's tracks.Walking

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Tracking the 120 million year old steps of a dinosaur
    DUKAS_184805095_FER
    Tracking the 120 million year old steps of a dinosaur
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Dino tracks 1
    Ref 16826
    16/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Dr A. Romillo/University of Queensland
    A two-legged dinosaur’s 40-second journey more than 120 million years ago has been brought back to life using advanced digital modelling techniques.
    It was made by analysing the longest documented set of footprints made by a bi-pedal predator.
    It left behind a sequence of 80 consecutive footprints extending for 70 metres in Sichuan Province, China and frozen in stone known as the Phoenix Trackway.
    A team from Australia’s University of Queensland revealed the dinosaur stood 1.13 metres tall at the hip and weighed up to 292 kg.
    Local folklore once attributed the footprints to a mythical phoenix giving the site its name.
    But scientific analysis reveals it was an ancient predator from the early Cretaceous period.
    The team said that for the first time this dinosaur’s movements have been reconstructed step by step using digital animation.
    This reveals how it walked, changed pace and responded to its environment.

    OPS: The digital reconstruction of the dinosaur's tracks. Walking

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Tracking the 120 million year old steps of a dinosaur
    DUKAS_184805093_FER
    Tracking the 120 million year old steps of a dinosaur
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Dino tracks 1
    Ref 16826
    16/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Dr A. Romillo/University of Queensland
    A two-legged dinosaur’s 40-second journey more than 120 million years ago has been brought back to life using advanced digital modelling techniques.
    It was made by analysing the longest documented set of footprints made by a bi-pedal predator.
    It left behind a sequence of 80 consecutive footprints extending for 70 metres in Sichuan Province, China and frozen in stone known as the Phoenix Trackway.
    A team from Australia’s University of Queensland revealed the dinosaur stood 1.13 metres tall at the hip and weighed up to 292 kg.
    Local folklore once attributed the footprints to a mythical phoenix giving the site its name.
    But scientific analysis reveals it was an ancient predator from the early Cretaceous period.
    The team said that for the first time this dinosaur’s movements have been reconstructed step by step using digital animation.
    This reveals how it walked, changed pace and responded to its environment.

    OPS: The digital reconstruction of the dinosaur's tracks. The dinosaur stationary

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Tracking the 120 million year old steps of a dinosaur
    DUKAS_184805091_FER
    Tracking the 120 million year old steps of a dinosaur
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Dino tracks 1
    Ref 16826
    16/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Dr A. Romillo/University of Queensland
    A two-legged dinosaur’s 40-second journey more than 120 million years ago has been brought back to life using advanced digital modelling techniques.
    It was made by analysing the longest documented set of footprints made by a bi-pedal predator.
    It left behind a sequence of 80 consecutive footprints extending for 70 metres in Sichuan Province, China and frozen in stone known as the Phoenix Trackway.
    A team from Australia’s University of Queensland revealed the dinosaur stood 1.13 metres tall at the hip and weighed up to 292 kg.
    Local folklore once attributed the footprints to a mythical phoenix giving the site its name.
    But scientific analysis reveals it was an ancient predator from the early Cretaceous period.
    The team said that for the first time this dinosaur’s movements have been reconstructed step by step using digital animation.
    This reveals how it walked, changed pace and responded to its environment.

    OPS: The digital reconstruction of the dinosaur's tracks.Walking with a human figure for size comparison

    Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    DUKAS_184764142_FER
    Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Tracks 1
    Ref 16822
    15/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: John Eason/Flinders University
    Fossil tracks have been discovered that show reptiles appeared on Earth up to 40 million years earlier than previously thought,
    The evidence was discovered at an Australian fossil site that represents a critical time period.
    Professor John Long and colleagues from Australia’s Flinders University identified the tracks of an early animal with clawed feet – most probably a reptile.
    They date from the Carboniferous period of about 350 million years ago.
    They were uncovered in the Mansfield district of northern Victoria and were made by an animal that would have looked like a small, stumpy, reptile-like creature.
    Fossil records of mammals, birds and reptiles begin in the Late Carboniferous period of about 318 million years old.
    Previously the earliest body fossils were from about 334 million years ago, and the oldest trackways about 353 million years.
    This had suggested the modern tetrapod group originated in the early Carboniferous period, with the modern amniote group appearing in the early part of the Late Carboniferous period.
    But the new find has now completely re-written the timeline.

    OPS: Fossil team (left to right): Andrew Crockett, Craig Eury, Jeremy Madin, Jenny Delaforce, John Long

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    DUKAS_184764134_FER
    Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Tracks 1
    Ref 16822
    15/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Flinders University
    Fossil tracks have been discovered that show reptiles appeared on Earth up to 40 million years earlier than previously thought,
    The evidence was discovered at an Australian fossil site that represents a critical time period.
    Professor John Long and colleagues from Australia’s Flinders University identified the tracks of an early animal with clawed feet – most probably a reptile.
    They date from the Carboniferous period of about 350 million years ago.
    They were uncovered in the Mansfield district of northern Victoria and were made by an animal that would have looked like a small, stumpy, reptile-like creature.
    Fossil records of mammals, birds and reptiles begin in the Late Carboniferous period of about 318 million years old.
    Previously the earliest body fossils were from about 334 million years ago, and the oldest trackways about 353 million years.
    This had suggested the modern tetrapod group originated in the early Carboniferous period, with the modern amniote group appearing in the early part of the Late Carboniferous period.
    But the new find has now completely re-written the timeline.

    OPS: An imagining of the reptile making the tracks some 350 million years ago.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    DUKAS_184764127_FER
    Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Tracks 1
    Ref 16822
    15/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Flinders University
    Fossil tracks have been discovered that show reptiles appeared on Earth up to 40 million years earlier than previously thought,
    The evidence was discovered at an Australian fossil site that represents a critical time period.
    Professor John Long and colleagues from Australia’s Flinders University identified the tracks of an early animal with clawed feet – most probably a reptile.
    They date from the Carboniferous period of about 350 million years ago.
    They were uncovered in the Mansfield district of northern Victoria and were made by an animal that would have looked like a small, stumpy, reptile-like creature.
    Fossil records of mammals, birds and reptiles begin in the Late Carboniferous period of about 318 million years old.
    Previously the earliest body fossils were from about 334 million years ago, and the oldest trackways about 353 million years.
    This had suggested the modern tetrapod group originated in the early Carboniferous period, with the modern amniote group appearing in the early part of the Late Carboniferous period.
    But the new find has now completely re-written the timeline.

    OPS: An imagining of the type of reptile that made the tracks.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    DUKAS_184764118_FER
    Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Tracks 1
    Ref 16822
    15/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Flinders University
    Fossil tracks have been discovered that show reptiles appeared on Earth up to 40 million years earlier than previously thought,
    The evidence was discovered at an Australian fossil site that represents a critical time period.
    Professor John Long and colleagues from Australia’s Flinders University identified the tracks of an early animal with clawed feet – most probably a reptile.
    They date from the Carboniferous period of about 350 million years ago.
    They were uncovered in the Mansfield district of northern Victoria and were made by an animal that would have looked like a small, stumpy, reptile-like creature.
    Fossil records of mammals, birds and reptiles begin in the Late Carboniferous period of about 318 million years old.
    Previously the earliest body fossils were from about 334 million years ago, and the oldest trackways about 353 million years.
    This had suggested the modern tetrapod group originated in the early Carboniferous period, with the modern amniote group appearing in the early part of the Late Carboniferous period.
    But the new find has now completely re-written the timeline.

    OPS: An imagining of the type of reptile that made the tracks.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    DUKAS_184764110_FER
    Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Tracks 1
    Ref 16822
    15/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit:Traci Klarenbeek/ Flinders University
    Fossil tracks have been discovered that show reptiles appeared on Earth up to 40 million years earlier than previously thought,
    The evidence was discovered at an Australian fossil site that represents a critical time period.
    Professor John Long and colleagues from Australia’s Flinders University identified the tracks of an early animal with clawed feet – most probably a reptile.
    They date from the Carboniferous period of about 350 million years ago.
    They were uncovered in the Mansfield district of northern Victoria and were made by an animal that would have looked like a small, stumpy, reptile-like creature.
    Fossil records of mammals, birds and reptiles begin in the Late Carboniferous period of about 318 million years old.
    Previously the earliest body fossils were from about 334 million years ago, and the oldest trackways about 353 million years.
    This had suggested the modern tetrapod group originated in the early Carboniferous period, with the modern amniote group appearing in the early part of the Late Carboniferous period.
    But the new find has now completely re-written the timeline.

    OPS: Professor John Long comparing the trackways with a modern Iguana foot

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    DUKAS_184764102_FER
    Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Tracks 1
    Ref 16822
    15/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Flinders University
    Fossil tracks have been discovered that show reptiles appeared on Earth up to 40 million years earlier than previously thought,
    The evidence was discovered at an Australian fossil site that represents a critical time period.
    Professor John Long and colleagues from Australia’s Flinders University identified the tracks of an early animal with clawed feet – most probably a reptile.
    They date from the Carboniferous period of about 350 million years ago.
    They were uncovered in the Mansfield district of northern Victoria and were made by an animal that would have looked like a small, stumpy, reptile-like creature.
    Fossil records of mammals, birds and reptiles begin in the Late Carboniferous period of about 318 million years old.
    Previously the earliest body fossils were from about 334 million years ago, and the oldest trackways about 353 million years.
    This had suggested the modern tetrapod group originated in the early Carboniferous period, with the modern amniote group appearing in the early part of the Late Carboniferous period.
    But the new find has now completely re-written the timeline.

    OPS: The fossil trackway with different tracks on it highlighted

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    DUKAS_184764095_FER
    Fossil tracks rewrite reptile history by 40 million years
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Tracks 1
    Ref 16822
    15/05/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Flinders University
    Fossil tracks have been discovered that show reptiles appeared on Earth up to 40 million years earlier than previously thought,
    The evidence was discovered at an Australian fossil site that represents a critical time period.
    Professor John Long and colleagues from Australia’s Flinders University identified the tracks of an early animal with clawed feet – most probably a reptile.
    They date from the Carboniferous period of about 350 million years ago.
    They were uncovered in the Mansfield district of northern Victoria and were made by an animal that would have looked like a small, stumpy, reptile-like creature.
    Fossil records of mammals, birds and reptiles begin in the Late Carboniferous period of about 318 million years old.
    Previously the earliest body fossils were from about 334 million years ago, and the oldest trackways about 353 million years.
    This had suggested the modern tetrapod group originated in the early Carboniferous period, with the modern amniote group appearing in the early part of the Late Carboniferous period.
    But the new find has now completely re-written the timeline.

    OPS: Professor John Long with the fossil trackway

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660855_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors sit at Kavarna Fantova in the historic counter hall of Prague Central Station, an Art Nouveau masterpiece, in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660850_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors sit at Kavarna Fantova in the historic counter hall of Prague Central Station, an Art Nouveau masterpiece, in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660845_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660840_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660835_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors sit at Kavarna Fantova in the historic counter hall of Prague Central Station, an Art Nouveau masterpiece, in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660834_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660833_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660825_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660823_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    The historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. The interior is part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660821_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    DUKAS_184660819_NUR
    Art Nouveau Hall At Prague Central Station
    Passengers and visitors are in the historic Art Nouveau counter hall of Prague Central Station in Prague, Czech Republic, on May 9, 2025. The interior, part of the original station building designed by architect Josef Fanta, features sculptural details, vibrant ornamentation, and high arched windows characteristic of early 20th-century design. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

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