Discovery of the Gigantic Titanosaur: World’s Largest Dinosaur Measuring 121 Feet with a Heart Heavier Than Three People

An epic tail! David Attenborough follows the story of how experts found the world’s largest dinosaur measuring 121ft – and its heart weighed more than THREE people

Paleontologists recently unearthed a new species of titanosaur that would have measured a staggering 121ft-long (37 metres) when it roamed the Earth 102 million years ago.

The discovery was made in Argentina, and in a forthcoming documentary, naturalist Sir David Attenborough will tell the story of what led experts to make the amazing find.

Paleontologists recently unearthed a species of titanosaur (model shown right) that would have measured a staggering 121ft-long (37 metres) when it roamed Earth 102 million years ago. The discovery was made in Argentina, and in a forthcoming TV show, Sir David Attenborough (left) will tell the story of how it was found

The vegetarian titanosaur is thought to have been the biggest animal ever to have walked the Earth, weighing 70 metric tons – the equivalent of 14 African elephants.

Compared to a large Diplodocus – one of the most easily recognisable dinosaurs – the titanosaur was a whopping 36ft (11 metres) longer.

To put that into perspective, the prehistoric creature would have been the length of four double-decker buses.

In the documentary, due to air on BBC on 25 January, the famous broadcaster and naturalist will tell the tale of how in 2014, a shepherd spotted the tip of a gigantic fossil bone sticking out of a rock in La Flecha Farm in the Chubut Province in the Argentinian desert.

When the news reached palaeontologists at the Egidio Feruglio Palaeontology Museum (MEF) in Trelew, Argentina they set up camp at the discovery site.

In the documentary, due to air on BBC on 25 January, the famous broadcaster and naturalist will tell the tale of how in 2014, a shepherd spotted the tip of a gigantic fossil bone sticking out of a rock in the Argentinian desert. The excavation site is shown

THE ‘NEW’ LARGEST DINOSAUR

Name: Yet to be announced.

Discovery: La Flecha Farm in Argentina, 2014.

Lived: 102 million years ago in the Cretaceous period.

Claim to fame: Largest dinosaur to be discovered – 10 per cent larger than the previous record holder, Argentinosaurus.

Estimated length: 121ft (37 metres)

Estimated weight: 70 metric tons (14 African elephants)

Heart: Weighed as much as three people and measured 6ft (two metres) in circumference.

Diet: Plants

The first bone turned out to be an 8ft-long (2.4metre) thigh bone – the largest ever found.

By the end of the dig they had uncovered more than 220 bones and 80 teeth at the same site.

Analysis of the leg bones show that the vast titanosaurs were young adults, but still growing.

So the fully grown specimen would have been even bigger.

Giant titanosaurs are rare, so the find was exceptional in both the number of bones discovered and the excellent condition they were found in.

As the programme will reveal, these fossils came from not just one dinosaur but seven, all belonging to a new species of the giant plant-eating titanosaur which is yet to be given its own scientific name.

The name will be announced as soon as the scientific paper is published.

‘It was like a palaeontological crime scene, a unique thing that you don’t find anywhere else in the world with the potential of discovering all kinds of new facts about titanosaurs,’ Dr Diego Pol, lead scientist on the excavation at MEF said.

‘According to our estimates this animal weighed 70 tons.

Compared to a large Diplodocus, the titanosaur was a whopping 36ft (11 metres) longer. To put that into perspective, the prehistoric creature would have been the length of four double-decker buses. This graphic shows how Sir Attenborough would have looked stood next to the beast

The first bone turned out to be an 8ft-long (2.4metre) thigh bone – the largest ever found (shown left and right with Sir David Attenborough). By the end of the dig, the paleontologists had uncovered more than 220 bones and 80 teeth at the same site

Analysis of the leg bones show that the vast titanosaurs were young adults, but still growing. So the fully grown specimen would have been even bigger. This dinosaur is able to be much more accurately measured than Argentinosaurus (illustrated) was, because only a dozen of the latter’s bones were ever found

HOW THE NEW SPECIES COMPARES TO ARGENTINOSAURUS

Argentinosaurus was the largest known dinosaur before the new species of titanosaur was discovered in 2014.

It is thought to have measured around 85ft (26 metres) long.

It was originally thought to have weighed 100 tonnes after the initial discovery in 1991, but the estimate was revised to 70 tonnes and below.

Estimates vary because the species was estimated from only a few bones from incomplete skeletons.

Argentinosaurus also lived in Patagonia in the Late Cretaceous, between 94 and 97 million years ago.

‘A comparison of the back bones shows that this animal was 10 per cent larger than Argentinosaurus, the previous record holder.

‘So we have discovered the largest dinosaur ever known.’

This dinosaur is able to be much more accurately measured than Argentinosaurus was, because only a dozen of the latter’s bones were ever found.

Filmed over two years, the documentary, called Attenborough and the Giant Dinosaur follows the twists and turns of this forensic investigation.

He witnesses the uncovering, cleaning and examination of these vast fossils for the first time.

Some of the fossils weigh over half a metric ton, so were hard to move from the remote location, some three hours from the nearest town.

Using state of the art graphics, the programme reveals what scientists think the internal structure of a dinosaur looked like and how it worked.

Using state of the art graphics, the programme will reveal what scientists think the internal structure of a dinosaur looked like and how it worked, as well as shots of the incredible bones (one pictured)

It explained that the animals’ heart would have weighed as much as three people and measured 6ft (two metres) in circumference.

It would have pushed up to 158 pints (90 litres) of blood round with one beat.

The titanosaur would have eaten a skip-full of food a day, using its huge gut to slowly digest its plant-based diet.

The documentary finishes with the unveiling of a massive skeleton built by a Canadian and Argentinian team of model makers, which represents the newly-discovered titanosaur.

It will air on BBC on Sunday January 24 at 6.30pm GMT.

The fossils were discovered at an excavation site in La Flecha Farm in the Chubut Province (shown) in the Argentinian desert

The new species of vegetarian titanosaur is thought to have been the biggest animal ever to have walked the Earth, weighing 70 metric tons, beating the previous record holder, fellow titanosaur Argentinosaurus. This stock image shows a boy looking at a 26ft-tall (eight metre) skeleton