Chicago Sun-Times

Newly discovered dinosaur is the heftiest land animal ever

- TraciWatso­n Special for USA TODAY

It’s official: An Argentine dinosaur as heavy as a Boeing 737 is the biggest ever discovered.

The behemoth weighed more than 65 tons and perhaps as many as 77, a new study says. That makes the animal not just the biggest known dinosaur but also the biggest known land animal ever. Only a few whale species are heftier — and this dinosaur’s bones show it was still growing.

Scientists have christened the gigantic vegetarian Patagotita­n mayorum in honor of the Argentine region of Patagonia and the Mayo family, owners of the Patagonian farm where a worker stumbled on the fossil in 2010.

The titan of Patagonia is described in detail for the first time in this week’s Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. The study also sheds light on how and when dinosaurs went from big to truly gargantuan.

Patagotita­n, which was about 120 feet long, has some competitio­n as the world’s biggest dinosaur. Tantalizin­g scraps of bone hint at species that are more massive still.

“I don’t think the record we have now will hold forever,” says study co- author Diego Pol of Argentina’s Egidio Feruglio Museum of Paleontolo­gy. But “so far, out of the dinosaurs … we can recognize as valid species, we don’t have any ( others) as big as Patagotita­n.”

Pol and his colleagues excavated fossils of six different Patagotita­n speci- mens from the Mayo family farm. The 150 bones include examples of 30% of the animal’s skeleton, which to scientists is almost as mind- boggling as the animal’s weight. Many other dinosaurs in the so- called Titanosaur group are known from mere scraps of bone. “This is clearly a very, very large animal, and there’s a lot of it, and that’s an extremely rare thing as these animals go,” says Matthew Lamanna of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History, who was not involved in the find. “Patagotita­n is going to continue to yield insights into anatomy and biology and even the size of these giant titanosaur­s for years to come.”

The finding also suggests “they could be hanging around in groups,” perhaps to look after their young, says Roger Benson of Britain’s University of Oxford, who wasn’t involved with the study. But how animals as long as aircraft maneuvered around each other “is really hard to imagine,” he

said.

 ?? G. LIO ?? Scientists christened the dinosaur Patagotita­n mayorum.
G. LIO Scientists christened the dinosaur Patagotita­n mayorum.

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