{
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    "results": [
        {
            "id": 12838,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/12838/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2018-01-31T08:15:00-05:00",
            "title": "Dinosaur Age Meets the Space Age at NASA Goddard",
            "description": "In 2012, local dinosaur track expert Ray Stanford discovered a nodosaur track from the Cretaceous era on the campus of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, in Greenbelt, Maryland. After the slab on which Stanford found the track was excavated, Stanford, paleontologist Martin Lockley, of University of Colorado at Denver, and others documented more than 70 dinosaur and mammal tracks imprinted in the sandstone. Their paper documenting the discovery was published January 31, 2018 in the journal Scientific Reports. The 8-foot by 3-foot slab contains at least 26 mammal tracks.Click for more about this unique DISCOVERY.Click for FLICKR gallery of images.Click HERE for original NASA feature story. || ",
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        {
            "id": 11074,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/11074/",
            "result_type": "Produced Video",
            "release_date": "2012-08-23T12:00:00-04:00",
            "title": "Crestaceous Footprint Found at Goddard",
            "description": "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 Space Flight Center would eventually be built, a plant-eating dinosaur sensed predators nearby and quickened its pace, leaving a deep imprint in the Cretaceous mud.Noted dinosaur hunter Ray Stanford discovered that fossilized footprint one afternoon this summer after noticing an unusual rock formation jutting out ever-so-slightly from a hillside on campus. Authorities at Goddard Space Flight Center called in Dr. Robert Weems, emeritus paleontologist for the USGS to come look at the track. On Thursday Aug. 23rd Weems confirmed that is it in fact a footprint that was made by a nodosaur, a large plant-eating dinosaur that lived approximately 110-to 112-million years ago during the Cretaceous Period. || ",
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        }
    ]
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