Sahara yields second-largest dinosaur.Excavations near an Egyptian oasis have unearthed Unearthed is the name of a Triple J project to find and "dig up" (hence the name) hidden talent in regional Australia. Unearthed has had three incarnations - they first visited each region of Australia where Triple J had a transmitter - 41 regions in all. the bones of an animal that probably could rank as the second-most-massive dinosaur known. Fossils found nearby indicate that the four-legged behemoth behemoth (bē`hĭmŏth, bĭhē`–) [Heb.,=plural of beast], large, fanciful primeval monster, like Leviathan, evoking the hippopotamus mentioned in the Book of Job. roamed through shallow mangrove mangrove, large tropical evergreen tree, genus Rhizophora, that grows on muddy tidal flats and along protected ocean shorelines. Mangroves are most abundant in tropical Asia, Africa, and the islands of the SW Pacific. swamps similar to those found today along the western edge of Florida's Everglades. The long-necked herbivore's humerus--the bone that connects the animal's shoulder to its front knee--was more than 5 1/2 feet long, says Joshua B. Smith, a paleontologist at the University of Pennsylvania (body, education) University of Pennsylvania - The home of ENIAC and Machiavelli. http://upenn.edu/. Address: Philadelphia, PA, USA. in Philadelphia. The new dinosaur, dubbed Paralititan stromeri, may have measured up to 100 feet long and weighed as much as 80 tons. That would make it second in weight only to Argentinosaurus, also a long-necked, four-legged herbivore herbivore: see carnivore. herbivore Animal adapted to subsist solely on plant tissues. Herbivores range from insects (e.g., aphids) to large mammals (e.g., elephants), but the term is most often applied to ungulates. . Smith and his colleagues discovered the 90-million-year-old fossils at the Bahariya Oasis, about 200 miles southwest of Cairo. The species name, which translates as "Stromer's tidal giant," honors Ernst Stromer, a Bavarian geologist who unearthed a diverse group of fossils near the oasis in the early 20th century. Those fossils were largely destroyed when the Allies bombed Munich during World War II, Smith notes. |
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