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Just When You Thought Dinosaurs Couldn't Get Any Bigger

An artist rendering of the newly named dinosaur, <em>Dreadnoughtus schrani</em>. (Illustration by Jennifer Hall via WHYY)
An artist rendering of the newly named dinosaur, Dreadnoughtus schrani. (Illustration by Jennifer Hall via WHYY)

Move over Brontosaurus. There’s a new — and bigger — dinosaur on the block. Scientists from the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University have just named the enormous beast Dreadnougtus shrani. It measured 85 feet long and two and a half stories high, and weighed 65 tons.

The Dreadnoughtus skeleton is the most complete ever found for a dinosaur of its size. The 77-million-year-old bones were unearthed in southern Patagonia during excavations that began in 2005.

From the Here & Now Contributors Network, Carolyn Beeler has more.

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Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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