News

And, as the legend goes, it all started with a lost cow. The Arkansaurus fridayi was discovered in 1972 by a man named Joe Friday who was reportedly searching for the missing bovine when he ...
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (KNWA/KFTA) — Arkansas has had a state dinosaur for almost six years now, and its name is Arkansaurus fridayi. If you are picturing a creature similar to T. rex, then you may ...
The Arkansas legislature resolved last year that Arkansaurus Fridayi was the state’s official dinosaur and that was good. But now the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology has announced the newly ...
Arkansas has had a state dinosaur for nearly six years: Arkansaurus fridayi. Unlike the massive T. rex, Arkansaurus fridayi was only slightly larger than a human and looked more like an ostrich.
LITTLE ROCK (KUAR) — A pair of Arkansas legislators wants to make Arkansaurus fridayi the official dinosaur of the state of Arkansas. Arkansas isn't particularly known as a hot bed for ...
His resolution (not a bill, so would have no power of law) to make Arkansaurus Fridayi the state’s official dinosaur passed the House unanimously this afternoon by voice vote. Joe B. Friday disc ...
Arkansaurus fridayi lived during the Early Cretaceous and not much is known about the dinosaur since "minimal information can be learned from foot bones," according to the Arkansas Geological Survey.
The Arkansaurus fridayi, discovered in 1972 by a man named Joe Friday as he searched for a missing cow in Lockesburg, was submitted in a paper to the journal in early 2017. It was accepted in ...
Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson on Friday signed a resolution designating the Arkansaurus fridayi as the state's official dinosaur. The move makes Arkansas the 10th state to have its own official ...
Details about the Arkansaurus fridayi (ar-kan-SAW’-rus fry-day-YEYE’) were published Monday in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. Joe Friday discovered the bones near Lockesburg in 1972 ...
Arkansaurus fridayi was named by a team originating at the University of Arkansas, led by paleontologist ReBecca Hunt-Foster, a University of Arkansas alumna who now works as a Bureau of Land ...