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RE: Dwarf quadruped dinosaurs



OK, my first attempt was to write 'no larger than elephant size', but watching the collections of the Lillo Institute, La Plata and Cinco Saltos materials you would easily realize that most saltasaurines, and especially Neuquensaurus, had humerii lenght ranging from 45 to 60 cm, and femora close to 1 m in length. Do you want them to reach 10 m? So add them a long tail and neck, but their bodies and their mass are between a horse and an elephant, no more. Actually even with tail and neck they probably not exceded 6 m. Believe me, thay are really small.

ps: Oh, by the way, argentinian horses, extant and fossils (Hippidion) are specially low, but this has probably nothing to do with sauropod history.

From: "Tim Williams" <twilliams_alpha@hotmail.com>
Reply-To: twilliams_alpha@hotmail.com
To: dinosaur@usc.edu
Subject: RE: Dwarf quadruped dinosaurs
Date: Tue, 13 Apr 2004 13:28:28 -0500

Sebastian Apesteguia

However, some lineages, such as dwarf horse-sized saltasaurine titanosaurs (e.g. Neuquensaurus, Saltasaurus)

Horse-sized!!?? These saltasaurines were still over 10m long and weighed around 12 tonnes. Exactly how big are the horses in your neck of the woods?


Still, 10-12m adult body length is very modest for a sauropod. Several hadrosaur and theropod species were larger.

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