Largest plant-eating dinosaur unearthed
Scientists have unearthed what they say are the remains of one of the largest ever plant-eating dinosaurs that roamed the world some 90 million years ago. An international team of researchers, which found the fossils of the giant animal from a region in Angola, believe the creature was a long-necked plant eater and could be bigger than T.Rex — the largest land-based carnivores of all time.
Dubbed the Angolatitan adamastor, or Angolan giant, it is believed to be part of a previously unknown dinosaur, the Daily Mail reported.
The skeletons of the creature were found in an area that would have been underwater when the dinosaur was alive 90 million years ago, the researchers said.
It is believed that the remains, found with fish and shark teeth, might have been washed into the sea and torn apart by ancient sharks.
Matthew Bonnan, a sauropod expert at Western Illinois University, said he believed the team’s claim to have discovered a new dinosaur is genuine. “I think they’ve been very careful,” he said, adding the find could add to knowledge about how sauropods, or the lizard-hipped dinosaurs, adapted to different environments. Dr Bonnan said it was “really cool” to see research coming out of Angola and the “neat thing about dinosaur palaeontology is that it’s becoming more global”.
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