Dinosaur Discovered in Australia Identified as New Species, Could Be One of the Largest of Its Kind

The Australotitan cooperensis has finally been named and described 15 years after its bones were first uncovered.

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By Agence France-Presse | Updated: 8 June 2021 11:10 IST
Highlights
  • The fossilised bones were found on Mackenzie's family farm in 2006
  • Scientists painstakingly dug up and studied the bones
  • The research relied on 3D scan models of bones

A rendering of the Australotitan cooperensis, a new species of dinosaur

Photo Credit: Eromanga Natural History Museum

A gigantic dinosaur discovered in Australia's outback has been identified as a new species and recognised as one of the largest to ever roam the Earth, according to palaeontologists.

The Australotitan cooperensis, part of the titanosaur family that lived about 100 million years ago, has finally been named and described 15 years after its bones were first uncovered.

It is estimated to have stood at 5-6.5 metres (16-21 feet) high and measured 25-30 metres (82-98 feet) in length - which would make it Australia's biggest dinosaur.

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"Based on the preserved limb size comparisons, this new titanosaur is estimated to be in the top five largest in the world," said Robyn Mackenzie, a director of the Eromanga Natural History Museum.

The fossilised bones were found on Mackenzie's family farm in 2006 about 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) west of Brisbane in the Eromanga Basin and nicknamed "Cooper".

Initially kept secret as scientists painstakingly dug up and studied the bones, the skeleton first went on display to the public in 2007.

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Scott Hocknull, a palaeontologist at Queensland Museum, said it had been a "very long and painstaking task" to confirm the Australotitan was a new species.

The research, which relied on 3D scan models of bones to compare the dinosaur with its close relatives, was published in the peer-reviewed PeerJ journal Monday.

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Numerous other dinosaur skeletons have been found in the same area, Hocknull said, adding that more work was needed as "discoveries like this are just the tip of the iceberg".

 

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