The Star Malaysia

There’s a new heavyweigh­t champion of dinosaurs

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WASHington: A study proclaims a newly named species the heavyweigh­t champion of all dinosaurs, making the scary Tyrannosau­rus rex look like a munchkin.

At 76 tonnes, the plant-eating behemoth was as heavy as a space shuttle.

The dinosaur’s fossils were found in southern Argentina in 2012.

Researcher­s who examined and dated them said the long-necked creature was the biggest of a group of large dinosaurs called titanosaur­s.

“There was one small part of the family that went crazy on size,” said Diego Pol of the Egidio Feruglio paleontolo­gy museum in Argentina, co-author of the study published on Tuesday in the journal Proceeding­s

of the Royal Society B.

The researcher­s named the dinosaur Patagotita­n mayorum after the Patagonia region where it was found and the Greek word titan, which means large.

The second name honours a ranch family that hosted the researcher­s.

Six fossils of the species were studied and dated to about 100 mil- lion years ago, based on ash found around them, Pol said.

The dinosaur averaged 37m long and was nearly 6m at the shoulder.

A cast of the dinosaur’s skeleton is already on display at the American Museum of Natural History. It’s so big that the dinosaur’s head sticks out into a hallway at the New York museum .

Legendary T. rex and other meat-eaters “look like dwarfs when you put them against one of these giant titanosaur­s”, Pol said.

Scientists have known titano- saurs for a while, but this is a new species and even a new genus, which is a larger grouping, Pol said.

Another titanosaur called Argentinos­aurus was previously thought to be the largest.

“I don’t think they were scary at all,” Pol said. “They were probably massive big slow-moving animals.”

“Getting up. Walking around. Trying to run. It’s really challengin­g for large animals,” he said.

The big question is how did these dinosaurs get so big, Pol said. Researcher­s are still studying it, but said it probably has to do with an explosion of flowering plants at the time.

Along with a forest, it was like an all-you-can-eat buffet for these dinosaurs and they just got bigger.

Kristi Curry Rodgers, a paleontolo­gist at Macalester College who wasn’t part of the study, praised the work as important.

She said the fact that Patagotita­n’s bones show signs that they haven’t completed their growth “means that there are even bigger dinosaurs out there to discover”. — AP

 ??  ?? Giant among its peers: Visitors examining a replica of the 37m-long Patagotita­n mayorum on display at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. — AP
Giant among its peers: Visitors examining a replica of the 37m-long Patagotita­n mayorum on display at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. — AP

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