Ekrixinatosaurus is perhaps the largest abelisaurid known to date, estimated as 10 to 11 metres (33 to 36 ft) long. It was also particularly robust and had a relatively large head, suggesting that it was a powerful predator or scavenger, able to scare other predators away from their kills.[3] A new and as yet unnamed Abelisaurid taxon from northwestern Turkana's Lappur Sandstone ( dating to Maastrichtian stage) in Kenya however may surpass it in size, having been estimated to be 11-12 meters in length.
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