Prehistoric dinosaur footprints on Skye '˜damaged by tourist'

Police are hunting for a tourist suspected of damaging 165 million-year-old dinosaur footprints on Skye.

By The Newsroom Thursday, 29th December 2016, 6:33 pm Updated Monday, 9th January 2017, 12:43 pm

One of the prehistoric dinosaur footprints found at Staffin on the Isle of Skye. Picture: Contributed

Officers on the island confirmed the fossils, which are clearly visible on the coastline at Staffin, were most likely damaged sometime yesterday by an individual who had poured plaster over them.

Police are looking to speak to a male campervan driver who was seen in the area.

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The footprints, the only examples of their kind in the country, were formed in the middle part of the Jurassic period, at a time when Scotland was part of a huge island landmass, partly covered by oceans with lagoons and river deltas in between.

Staffin is the only place in Scotland where dinosaur fossils have been recovered.

“What’s so exciting about them is not just that they are Scottish dinosaurs but that there are very few dinosaurs anywhere in the world from that time,” Steve Brusatte, a paleontologist at the University of Edinburgh, told The Scotsman last year.

“It’s a really dark period for understanding dinosaurs so Scotland has something cool to offer. It’s a unique window into this mysterious era.”

Skye, known as ‘dinosaur isle’ because of its rich fossil heritage, was targeted by thieves in 2011.