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Dinosaur species among largest in the world is found in Australia

- Asha C. Gilbert

Adding to the list of recent dinosaur discoverie­s, a new species of dinosaur – almost two times the size of the Hollywood sign – has been found, according to a new report.

In a report published in the journal PeerJ on Monday, scientists confirmed the finding of new dinosauria­n fossils that came from a titanosaur­ian sauropod.

The Australoti­tan cooperensi­s is the largest species of dinosaur to be found in Australia and similar in size to the giant titanosaur­ians from South America. It is estimated to have weighed 70 tons and measured between 82 and 98 feet.

The sauropod, nicknamed Cooper after Cooper Creek near the fossil discovery, is believed to have lived during the Cretaceous period between 92 million to 96 million years ago.

Sauropods were plant eaters and include the largest animals to have ever lived on land.

The fossils were discovered over a decade ago in southwest Queensland by two property owners who later opened the Eromanga Natural History Museum after discoverin­g a number of titanosaur fossil sites.

“Discoverie­s like this are just the tip of the iceberg,” Queensland Museum

curator and paleontolo­gist Scott Hocknullto­ld Reuters.

Because of the location of the fossils and their large size, scientists ran into difficulti­es studying them. That’s when the Eromanga Natural History Museum and the Queensland Museum decided to use 3-D imaging to compare them to other fossils around the globe.

Hocknull told The New York Times that in Australia, the flat terrainmak­es it more difficult to find fossils.

Cooper joins the oldest titanosaur discovered in Argentina and the ‘monkeydact­yl’ with the oldest recorded opposing pollex in recent discoverie­s.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER/AP ?? Trenton Duerksen cleans Titanosaur, a 122-foot-long replica in 2018 at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. Scientists reportedly have found fossils from a titanosaur­ian sauropod.
MARY ALTAFFER/AP Trenton Duerksen cleans Titanosaur, a 122-foot-long replica in 2018 at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. Scientists reportedly have found fossils from a titanosaur­ian sauropod.

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