Article 667N9 ‘The sheer scale is extraordinary’: meet the titanosaur that dwarfs Dippy the diplodocus

‘The sheer scale is extraordinary’: meet the titanosaur that dwarfs Dippy the diplodocus

by
Robin McKie Science Editor
from Science | The Guardian on (#667N9)

One of the largest creatures to have walked the Earth is to become the Natural History Museum's new star attraction

It will be one of the largest exhibits to grace a British museum. In spring, the Natural History Museum in London will display the full cast of a skeleton of a titanosaur, a creature so vast it will have to be shoehorned into the 9-metre-high Waterhouse gallery.

One of the most massive creatures ever to have walked on Earth, Patagotitan mayorum was a 57-tonne behemoth that would have shaken the ground as it stomped over homelands which now form modern Patagonia. Its skeleton is 37 metres long, and 5 metres in height - significantly larger than the museum's most famous dinosaur, Dippy the diplodocus, which used to loom over its main gallery.

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