About: Aegyptosaurus   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Aegyptosaurus was described by German paleontologist Ernst Stromer in 1932.[1] Its fossils have been found in Egypt, Niger and in several different locations in the Sahara Desert. All known examples were discovered before 1939. The fossils were stored together in Munich, but were obliterated when an Allied bombing raid destroyed the museum where they were kept in 1944, during World War II. It is possible that Aegyptosaurus was common prey for large predatory dinosaurs, such as Carcharodontosaurus and Spinosaurus.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Aegyptosaurus
  • Aegyptosaurus
rdfs:comment
  • Aegyptosaurus was described by German paleontologist Ernst Stromer in 1932.[1] Its fossils have been found in Egypt, Niger and in several different locations in the Sahara Desert. All known examples were discovered before 1939. The fossils were stored together in Munich, but were obliterated when an Allied bombing raid destroyed the museum where they were kept in 1944, during World War II. It is possible that Aegyptosaurus was common prey for large predatory dinosaurs, such as Carcharodontosaurus and Spinosaurus.
  • Little is known about the real Aegyptosaurus baharijensis, since the only known remains of this dinosaur, discovered by the German paleontologist Ernst Stromer, were destroyed in World War II. However, they were much larger than Tute seems to be, at about fifty feet long. Also unlike Tute, they could not stand on two legs. Aegyptosaurus was probably common prey for large meat-eating dinosaurs like Spinosaurus. It lived 95 million years ago, during the Cretaceous period. Its name means "Egypt lizard", after the area of the world where it was found.
  • Aegyptosaurus (« lézard égyptien ») est un genre de dinosaure sauropode qui vivait en Égypte au cours du Crétacé supérieur, il y a 99-93 Ma. C'était un énorme herbivore qui avait un long cou, une longue queue et une petite tête. Il existait un seul fossile d’Aegyptosaurus, décrit par Ernst Stromer en 1932. Il était conservé à Munich mais fut détruit durant la seconde guerre mondiale, en 1944. Seule l'espèce type était décrite : Aegyptosaurus baharijensis.
sameAs
dbkwik:resource/gHYRkss48LeafiN1P7AFeA==
  • Aegyptosaurus baharijensis
dcterms:subject
taille
  • 16 m
Classe
  • Reptile
dbkwik:resource/S8uUzKysKbelvFFxlW9E4w==
  • -144(xsd:integer)
dbkwik:resource/Wog5C5BlSOEYCrpWnR-10w==
  • Titanosauridé
dbkwik:resource/x1hV1fmma381l2zRPcSVQw==
  • Saurischien
poids
  • 15.0
dbkwik:fr.dinosaur...iPageUsesTemplate
localisation
  • Afrique
dbkwik:resource/4pzwfVKMFjmhMVvixAZXIQ==
  • «Reptile d’Égypte»
Title
  • Aegyptosaurus
Image
  • Aegyptosaurus.jpg
dbkwik:resource/8QR9WBnmNv-FUSmxxsW7JA==
  • Sauropodomorphe
dbkwik:resource/Hvj8guvDYnZ7sz_CzcUpNg==
  • Animal
dbkwik:resource/b0zy_jwZeHvELut9Zd9gvw==
  • Vertebré
dbkwik:resource/ea5sjgKW-WvIW10LeVcGhA==
  • Chordé
dbkwik:resource/gQ_fCPk5mPY4UNZ2nF8PyQ==
  • Sauropode
dbkwik:resource/B_drKMV74sZZdpq_vekMZQ==
  • Dinosaure
abstract
  • Aegyptosaurus (« lézard égyptien ») est un genre de dinosaure sauropode qui vivait en Égypte au cours du Crétacé supérieur, il y a 99-93 Ma. C'était un énorme herbivore qui avait un long cou, une longue queue et une petite tête. Il existait un seul fossile d’Aegyptosaurus, décrit par Ernst Stromer en 1932. Il était conservé à Munich mais fut détruit durant la seconde guerre mondiale, en 1944. Seule l'espèce type était décrite : Aegyptosaurus baharijensis. * Son nom signifie « reptile d’Égypte » * Époque : Crétacé (- 144 Ma à - 65 Ma) * Taille : 16 m de long, 6,4 m de haut, 15 tonnes * Habitat : Afrique * Régime alimentaire : herbivore
  • Aegyptosaurus was described by German paleontologist Ernst Stromer in 1932.[1] Its fossils have been found in Egypt, Niger and in several different locations in the Sahara Desert. All known examples were discovered before 1939. The fossils were stored together in Munich, but were obliterated when an Allied bombing raid destroyed the museum where they were kept in 1944, during World War II. It is possible that Aegyptosaurus was common prey for large predatory dinosaurs, such as Carcharodontosaurus and Spinosaurus.
  • Little is known about the real Aegyptosaurus baharijensis, since the only known remains of this dinosaur, discovered by the German paleontologist Ernst Stromer, were destroyed in World War II. However, they were much larger than Tute seems to be, at about fifty feet long. Also unlike Tute, they could not stand on two legs. Aegyptosaurus was probably common prey for large meat-eating dinosaurs like Spinosaurus. It lived 95 million years ago, during the Cretaceous period. Its name means "Egypt lizard", after the area of the world where it was found.
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