This is a land-dwelling herbivore, so the evolutionists wonder how it could have gotten buried at the bottom of a sea. While they are really confused by that, I think I know of a flood situation that was of a great enough magnitude to have swept this fella off the ground and to the bottom.
While it is partially mineralized, they’re calling it a dinosaur mummy because it is so well preserved it looks like he was walking around yesterday. Such statements are remarkably common since they’ve started finding pretty fresh materials for the 110 million years a guy like this is supposed to be — even though chemists have shown such proteins can only last 100,000 years, tops.
Since the early 90s, scientists have been finding un-rotted tissue samples in the remains of dinosaurs in their fossils. Many of these fossils have not been petrified (mineralized) but are just the dried-up pieces of dino-flesh, bone, and various cells that have survived intact for… it depends upon whom you ask how old they actually are.
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