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World's heaviest dinosaur not as huge as previously believed

A giant 60-tonne sauropod dinosaur discovered in South America last year and believed to be the largest known creature that ever walked the Earth may not have been as huge as previously thought, scientists have found.

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Dr. Kenneth Lacovara with the 30-foot tail of Dreadnoughtus schrani, stretching along the length of the wall and around the corner in his lab. Image credit: Drexel University
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A giant 60-tonne sauropod dinosaur discovered in South America last year and believed to be the largest known creature that ever walked the Earth may not have been as huge as previously thought, scientists have found.

Discovered in Patagonia, the huge fossil, Dreadnoughtus, had almost all of the major bones intact, allowing scientists to confidently estimate its overall size - measuring in at 26 metres long.

Preserved in rock, it is thought that the animal was close to maturity but not fully grown when it died, and may have grown to be even larger.

The long-necked, plant-eating dinosaur was believed to be the biggest to ever walk the earth. To estimate the mass of Dreadnoughtus scientists originally used a scaling equation that predicts body mass based on the size of thigh and arm bones. This method produced a range of estimates with the average being a colossal 60 tonnes.

Scientists at the University of Liverpool, in collaboration with researchers from Liverpool John Moores University, the University of Manchester, and Imperial College, re-evaluated this estimate after it became clear that other sauropod dinosaurs, only marginally smaller than the giant, weighed considerably less than 60 tonnes.

The team used a three-dimensional skeletal modelling technique to examine body mass more directly. This method involves mathematically reconstructing a 'skin' volume around bones of Dreadnoughtus on a computer and then expanding that skin outline to account for muscle, fat and other tissues.

The size of expanded skin outline is based on similar data from living animals. By exploring a range of expansions the team could more accurately predict how heavy Dreadnoughtus could realistically have been.

The team found that the mass of the Dreadnoughtus was more likely to be between 30 and 40 tonnes, considerably less than originally thought. "Estimating the body mass of an extinct animal from approximately 77 million years ago of this size from only its fossilised bones is extremely challenging and relies on the availability of certain data from living animals and modelling techniques," said Dr Karl Bates, from the University of Liverpool's Institute of Ageing and Chronic Disease.

"The original method used to calculate the mass of the animal is a common one and has been used successfully on many specimens. The highest estimates produced for this particular giant, however, didn't quite match up. Using digital modelling and a dataset that took in species, alive and dead, we were able to see that the creature couldn't be as large as originally estimated. Our analysis suggests that only the lower estimates produced by previous methods are plausible. Estimates of 60 tonnes and above do not fit with our current understanding of the mass characteristics of living land animals," Bates said.

The research is published in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters

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