• NEW! LOWEST RATES EVER -- SUPPORT THE SHOW AND ENJOY THE VERY BEST PREMIUM PARACAST EXPERIENCE! Welcome to The Paracast+, eight years young! For a low subscription fee, you can download the ad-free version of The Paracast and the exclusive, member-only, After The Paracast bonus podcast, featuring color commentary, exclusive interviews, the continuation of interviews that began on the main episode of The Paracast. We also offer lifetime memberships! Flash! Take advantage of our lowest rates ever! Act now! It's easier than ever to susbcribe! You can sign up right here!

    Subscribe to The Paracast Newsletter!

Stanford's Dino Track Find at Goddard Verified, plus there's more!

Free episodes:

Christopher O'Brien

Back in the Saddle Aginn
Staff member
[Ray continues to dazzle science! For any naysayers who might think that Stanford is off his rocker and not the dino track expert the Smithsonian and academia believes him to be, here is official USGS confirmation of his sensationally-ironic track find at Goddard Space Flight Center in MD. The man's level of observational acuity is off-the-charts! And there is even more sensational Stanford news soon-to-follow -- pending his permission to publish, of course-- and we ain't talking earthbound dinos either! :) lol --chris]

Article HERE:

[More] Cretaceous Footprints Found at Goddard

NASA's Nodosaur Footprint Verified – Perhaps with Baby Nodosaur in Tow

Not one, but two nodosaurs passed through the campus of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., between 110 and 112 million years ago, a U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) paleontologist confirmed.

The second track, overlapping the first, looks to be a young version of the same creature, perhaps following and sniffing along after, said Rob Weems, emeritus paleontologist and stratigrapher with the USGS, from Reston, Va. "It's definitely a track.”

[Weems] confirmed the track to be a nodosaur footprint while visiting NASA Goddard on Aug. 23 at the invitation of center officials. He also discovered the second track while clearing and excavating the stone plate that contained the first print. Nodosaurs are a type of heavily-armored plant eater, as heavy as small elephants. The name is derived from the many spikes or nodes in their armor.

"It looks to be a manus print of a much smaller dinosaur than the first one, but it looks to be the same type," Weems said of the second track. The manus is the front foot of a quadrupedal animal, while the pes is the back foot. "If the one that came through was a female, it may have had one or more young ones following along. If you've seen a dog or cat walking with it's young, they kind of sniff around and may not go in the same direction, (as the adult) but they end up in the same place."

The tracks had to have been made around the same time, at least within the same day, said Ray Stanford, an amateur dinosaurtracker who discovered the "momma" track during the summer of 2012. The smaller track shows signs of pushing up the still-wet mud, that the larger footprint had hollowed out.

NASA Goddard facilities director Alan Binstock said the next steps will be to have the site analyzed to determine whether further excavation is called for, and to extract and preserve the existing footprints.

Dinosaur tracker Ray Stanford describes the cretaceous-era nodosaur track he found on the Goddard Space Flight Centercampus this year.

"About 110 million light years away, the bright, barred spiral galaxy NGC 3259 was just forming stars in dark bands of dust and gas. Here on the part of the Earth where NASA’s Goddard SpaceFlight Center would eventually be built, a plant-eating dinosaur sensed predators nearby and quickened its pace, leaving a deep imprint in the Cretaceous mud."

On Friday, Aug. 17, 2012, noted dinosaur hunter Ray Stanford shared the location of that footprint with Goddard’s facility management and the Washington Post newspaper.

“This was a large, armored dinosaur,” Stanford said. “Think of it as a four-footed tank. It was quite heavy, there’s a quite a ridge or push-up here. … Subsequently the sand was bound together by iron-oxide or hematite, so it gave us a nice preservation, almost like concrete.”

He had material from the same Cretaceous-era sedimentary rock dated, with help from the US Geological Survey, to approximately 110- to 112-million years old, by analyzing pollen grains sealed in the stone. The Cretaceous Period ran between 145.5 and 65.5 million years ago, and was the last period of the Mesozoic Era.

Goddard Facilities Manager Alan Binstock said the agency considers the footprint and its location “sensitive but unclassified.”

The footprint is on federal land, so improperly removing it could potentially violate three laws: the Antiquities Act, the Archaeological Resources Protection Act and the Paleontological Resources Preservation Act.

NASA officials will next consult with the State of Maryland and paleontologists to form a plan for documenting and preserving the find, Binstock said.

Stanford also identified and presented several smaller footprints – three-toed, flesh-eating therapods – to Goddard officials from the same site.

He called the location of the find “poetic.”

“Space scientists may walk along here, and they’re walking exactly where this big, bungling heavy armored dinosaur walked, maybe 110 to 112-million years ago,” Stanford said. SNIP
 
Who says that he can't be both? What's the old saying, "Genius and madness are often two sides of the same coin" or something like that? His work with dino tracks is amazing and I'm looking forward to the other information you've been alluding to as well. That being said, anyone who has claimed to channel Jesus and space brothers has to be just a tiny bit off his rocker, imo. There's nothing wrong with that and it certainly doesn't invalidate his work. He obviously has a very high level of observational acuity, as you stated in your post. I'm looking forward to the day when he finally decides to release that film he talked about on the show.
 
Hmm... I know someone who probably knows Stanford and would love to hear his take. But I haven't touched bases in years.

The bona fides for this look pretty good. Stanford likely just has a gift for seeing what others do not. Or I will toss out a really weird one: Is Stanford physically creating these things from zero point whole cloth? Not sure I believe this is possible. But there seems to be evidence some individuals have an innate talent for warping or manifesting physical objects.

Note the term "seems" in an effort to cover my own behind. ;)
 
Is Stanford physically creating these things from zero point whole cloth? Not sure I believe this is possible. But there seems to be evidence some individuals have an innate talent for warping or manifesting physical objects.
Yeah, in theory that may be possible, but in Ray's case, he just knows where and how to look. Observational acuity only works when you LOOK. Plain and simple. Combine visual acuity with an uncanny analytical ability and voila--meet Ray Stanford! Finding dino tracks is cool and impressive, but you should see his meteorite and Indian/paleo artifact collection! Off the freak'in charts... and I grind my teeth in envy :mad:
 
Back
Top