The Borneo Post (Sabah)

New Patagonian dinosaur may be largest yet — Scientists

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BUENOS AIRES: Scientists have unearthed massive, 98-millionyea­r-old fossils in southwest Argentina they say may have belonged to the largest dinosaur ever discovered.

Human-sized pieces of fossilized bone belonging to the giant sauropod appear to be 10-20 percent larger than those attributed to Patagotita­n mayorum, the biggest dinosaur ever identified, according to a statement Wednesday from the National University of La Matanza’s CTYS scientific agency.

Sauropods were enormous long-necked, long-tailed, planteatin­g dinosaurs – the largest terrestria­l creatures to ever have lived.

Among them, Patagotita­n mayorum, also from Argentina, weighed in at about 70 tonnes and was 40 metres long, or about the length of four school buses.

Alejandro Otero of Argentina’s Museo de La Plata is working on piecing together a likeness of the new dinosaur from two-dozen vertebrae and bits of pelvic bone uncovered so far.

He has published a paper on the unidentifi­ed dinosaur for the scientific journal Cretaceous Research, according to the university statement.

The quest for more body parts, buried deep in rock, continues. For scientists, the holy grail will be the large femur or humerus bones, which are helpful in estimating a long-extinct creature’s body mass.

The massive fossils were discovered in 2012 in the Neuquen River Valley, but excavation work only began in 2015, according to palaeontol­ogist Jose Luis Carballido of the Museo Egidio Feruglio.

“We have more than half the tail, a lot of hip bones,” said Carballido, who also worked on the classifica­tion of Patagotita­n a few years ago.

“It’s obviously still inside the rock, so we have a few more years of digging ahead of us.”

The massive skeleton was found in a layer of rock dated to some 98 million years ago during the Upper Cretaceous period, added geologist Alberto Garrido, director of the Museum of Natural Sciences of Zapala.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Handout picture showing palaeontol­ogists during an excavation in which 98 million-year-old fossils were found, at the Candeleros Formation in the Neuquen River Valley, in southwest Argentina.
— AFP photo Handout picture showing palaeontol­ogists during an excavation in which 98 million-year-old fossils were found, at the Candeleros Formation in the Neuquen River Valley, in southwest Argentina.

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