Scientists in Australia have announced the discovery of what’s believed to be the world’s largest dinosaur footprint, measuring 5 feet, 7 inches long ― meaning it’s practically as long as the average American man is tall.

The massive print, left by a long-necked sauropod, was uncovered along a Walmadany beach in the Kimberley region of Western Australia, researchers at the University of Queensland said in a study published Friday.

“Probably the next biggest footprints are just over a meter,” Dr. Steve Salisbury, a paleontologist and lead author of the peer-reviewed study, told Australia’s ABC News.

To better emphasize the print’s size, a photo shared by Salisbury on Twitter shows a man identified as Richard Hunter lying next to the print while holding a 15.7-inch scale bar.

Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology Richard Hunter is seen lying next to the dinosaur print, which measures 5 feet 7 inches.

In comparison, a dinosaur print measuring about 42 inches (3 feet, 6 inches) in length was found in Mongolia’s Gobi Desert last year. It was thought to be the largest of its kind at the time.

That’s big, but still 27 inches shorter than the print found in what Salisbury calls “Australia’s Jurassic Park.”

“This area preserves one of the most diverse dinosaur track faunas anywhere in the world. Nowhere else has this many of dinosaurs represented by tracks than Walmadany does,” he said in a video released by the university.

The University of Queensland Paleontologists from the University of Queensland have been studying dinosaur footprints along this coast in Western Australia.

Between 2011 and 2016, the researchers examined thousands of tracks along the coastal site ― 150 of which Salisbury said can be “confidently” assigned among 21 specific track types that represent four main groups of dinosaurs.

“Some of them are so big we didn’t really notice them for some time because they’re sort of beyond your search image for a dinosaur track,” he told ABC News.

Many of the tracks are tricky to find because they are only exposed when the tide recedes, the researchers noted in their report ― meaning the scientists would have to wait for ideal beach conditions and in some cases even search for the prints by drone.

Though Salisbury’s team reported spending more than 400 hours surveying the rocky terrain, they said there’s likely a wealth of treasures yet to be found in the area, which at one point was nearly developed into a gas processing facility.

“Although every effort was made to locate as many tracksites and tracks in the study area as possible, it is expected that some were not exposed at the time of our surveys,” the study says. “We also know that at least some of the tracksites that we documented in 2011 were buried by shifting sands following the 2011–2012 cyclone season, and it is not known when they will be exposed again (if ever).”

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