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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Science
Hayden Vernon

Dinosaur remains in Portuguese garden could be Europe’s largest ever find

Researchers excavate the fossilised ribs of a sauropod at the Monte Agudo paleontological site in Pombal, Portugal.
Researchers excavate the fossilised ribs of a sauropod at the Monte Agudo paleontological site in Pombal, Portugal. Photograph: Instituto Dom Luiz (Faculty of Sciences of the University of Lisbon, Portugal)

The remains of what could be the largest dinosaur ever found in Europe have been uncovered in a back garden in Portugal.

Excavation work began in the garden in the city of Pombal in 2017, when the owner of the property noticed fragments of fossilised bone and contacted researchers from the University of Lisbon.

Earlier this month, Spanish and Portuguese palaeontologists working at the site began unearthing the vertebrae and ribs of what they think is a brachiosaurid sauropod.

Sauropods were the biggest of all dinosaurs and the largest land animals ever to have lived.

“It is not usual to find all the ribs of an animal like this, let alone in this position, maintaining their original anatomical position,” Elisabete Malafaia, post-doctoral researcher at the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Lisbon, told the Phys.org website.

Part of the sauropod’s fossilised skeleton uncovered.
Part of the sauropod’s fossilised skeleton uncovered. Photograph: Instituto Dom Luiz (Faculty of Sciences of the University of Lisbon, Portugal)

The sauropod group – which includes the brontosaurus and diplodocus – were herbivores, had long necks and walked on four legs.

The size of the bones found in the garden suggests that the dinosaur was 12 metres high and 25 metres long.

Because of the natural position that the skeleton was found in, researchers are hopeful that further excavation may uncover more parts of the same dinosaur.

The skeleton was found in Upper Jurassic sedimentary rocks, suggesting it is about 150m years old.

“[This discovery] confirms that the region of Pombal has an important fossil record of Late Jurassic vertebrates, which in the last decades has provided the discovery of abundant materials very significant for the knowledge of the continental faunas that inhabited the Iberian Peninsula at about 145m years ago,” Malafaia added.

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