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Examples

  • Paralititan stromeri is another massive titanosaur, this time from the Upper Cretaceous of Egypt.

    Archive 2007-01-01 Darren Naish 2007

  • While you might have heard of Supersaurus, Seimosaurus or Argentinosaurus – and perhaps even Turiasaurus and Paralititan – have you heard of … Amphicoelias fragillimus?

    Archive 2007-01-01 Darren Naish 2007

  • While you might have heard of Supersaurus, Seimosaurus or Argentinosaurus – and perhaps even Turiasaurus and Paralititan – have you heard of … Amphicoelias fragillimus?

    Biggest…. sauropod…. ever (part…. I) Darren Naish 2007

  • Paralititan stromeri is another massive titanosaur, this time from the Upper Cretaceous of Egypt.

    Biggest…. sauropod…. ever (part…. I) Darren Naish 2007

  • I once heard something (I think on the DML) about the giant titanosaurs (Argentinosaurus, Argyrosaurus, Paralititan, etc.) all being below 28 m. or so in length.

    Biggest…. sauropod…. ever (part…. I) Darren Naish 2007

  • This makes it quite bigger than ‘Angloposeidon’ and in fact one of the biggest sauropods in the world, almost on par with immense titanosaurs like Argentinosaurus and Paralititan.

    Happy Christmas, from gigantic Spanish sauropods... or, alas, poor ‘Angloposeidon’ Darren Naish 2006

  • The researcher who discovered Paralititan stromeri, one of the most massive animals ever to walk the Earth, now is "picture-positive" about another dinosaur fossil find by a famous German researcher, Ernst Stromer.

    Books -- Morris Dance, Gypsies 2006

  • This makes it quite bigger than ‘Angloposeidon’ and in fact one of the biggest sauropods in the world, almost on par with immense titanosaurs like Argentinosaurus and Paralititan.

    Archive 2006-12-01 Darren Naish 2006

  • And the cameras are rolling as Smith's team unearths the remains of Paralititan Stromeri, the second-largest dinosaur ever discovered.

    Archive 2004-06-20 Michael Evans 2004

  • And the cameras are rolling as Smith's team unearths the remains of Paralititan Stromeri, the second-largest dinosaur ever discovered.

    View from the Northern Border Michael Evans 2004

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