Titanosaur found in Patagonia may be oldest yet, says study
A colossal dinosaur dug up in the south of the country could be the oldest titanosaur ever found, scientists said Sunday.
A colossal dinosaur dug up in the south of Argentina could be the oldest titanosaur ever found, having roamed what is now Patagonia some 140 million years ago at the beginning of the Cretaceous period, scientists said Sunday.
The 65-foot (20-metre) lizard, Ninjatitan zapatai, was discovered in 2014 in Neuquén Province, the National University of La Matanza reported in an analysis.
"The main importance of this fossil, apart from being a new species of titanosaur, is that it is the oldest recorded for this group worldwide," a statement quoted researcher Pablo Gallina of the Conicet scientific council as saying.
Titanosaurs were members of the sauropod group – gigantic plant-eating lizards with long necks and tails that may have been the largest animals ever to walk the Earth.
The new discovery, the statement said, meant titanosaurs lived longer ago than previously thought – at the beginning of the Cretaceous era that ended with the demise of the dinosaurs some 66 million years ago.
Fossils from 140 million years ago are "really very scarce" said Gallina, main author of a study published in the Argentinian scientific journal Ameghiniana.
The creature was named after Argentine paleontologist Sebastian Apesteguia, nicknamed "El Ninja," and technician Rogelio Zapata.
– TIMES/AFP
related news
-
Fernández de Kirchner accuses Milei of subjecting Argentines to ‘pointless sacrifice’
-
Heker opens Book Fair with strong speech against Milei's austerity
-
Book fair serves as beacon of hope resilience amid economic crisis
-
Milei, indigenous authors and virtual reality at Buenos Aires Book Fair
-
Gaza conflict shows limits of Argentina and Brazil’s influence in Middle East
-
Five dogs and a million reds
-
Missing the point
-
Jorge Lanata: ‘President Milei has the right to speak and criticise, but not to say just anything’
-
Moving Embassy to Jerusalem is 'important step,’ says Israeli vice-ambassador
-
Give us more education