The Subeng dinosaur footprints
The dinosaur footprints at Subeng are among the most significant sites of their kind in the nation. They are carved into a sandstone slab in a tiny creek. Paleontologists and archeologists will find Lesotho to be a utopia, as it is home to numerous dinosaur fossils and other prehistoric monuments. Follow the footprints of dinosaurs as you get ready to travel back in time. The world's largest dinosaur footprint sites can be found in this unknown nation. The Subeng dinosaur footprints, which are made up of many prehistoric animal prints from about 200 million years ago, are preserved in sandstone.
If you look closely, you can also detect mud fissures and fossilized worm traces on other riverbed slabs. To the north of Hlotse are the footprints (some of the prominent locations are Morija, Subeng Stream, and Tsikoane). Subeng, which was found in 1955, has the footprints of at least three and potentially as many as six different dinosaur species, some of which had five toes and others had three. When you get there, unofficial local guides will be ready to direct you.