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An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/6_E3Vm7U5aYPXO61bTJKrA==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Argentinosaurus was featured in a Walking with Dinosaurs special, Land of Giants, where Nigel Marvin tries to find them and see how they lived and survived from predators like Giganotosaurus. They were also in the BBC documentary Planet Dinosaur, where a herd of them is attacked by a pack of Mapusaurus. It was a main character in the IMAX movie, Dinosaurs, Giants of Patagonia.

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  • Argentinosaurus
  • Argentinosaurus
  • Argentinosaurus
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  • Argentinosaurus was featured in a Walking with Dinosaurs special, Land of Giants, where Nigel Marvin tries to find them and see how they lived and survived from predators like Giganotosaurus. They were also in the BBC documentary Planet Dinosaur, where a herd of them is attacked by a pack of Mapusaurus. It was a main character in the IMAX movie, Dinosaurs, Giants of Patagonia.
  • Argentinosaurus was a huge titanosaur dinosaur, one of the last group of the sauropod dinosaurs that were also the most physically imposing. It lived during the Early to Middle Cretaceous period and was one the largest land animals that ever lived.
  • Argentinosaurus is a genus of titanosaur sauropod dinosaur first discovered by Guillermo Heredia in Argentina. The generic name refers to the country in which it was discovered ("Argentina" is derived from the Latin argentum). The dinosaur lived on the then-island continent of South America somewhere between 97 and 94 million years ago, during the mid Cretaceous Period.
  • The first fossils identified as Argentinosaurus were found in 1987 by a rancher in Argentina, who mistook the leg for a giant piece of petrified wood. A gigantic vertebra was also found, it was almost as tall as a man.[1]
  • Argentinosaurus significa reptil de Argentina. Medía entre 38 y 42 metros de largo y pesaba 80 toneladas, vivió hace 95 millones de años en el Periodo cretácico,en la Patagonia. El Argentinosaurus fue el mayor animal terrestre conocido, una de las vertebras del cuello mide 1,60m. El fémur del Argentinosaurus medía 2,5 m (el doble que un niño de 10 años) al ser tan grande su tamaño lo protegía de los Giganotosaurus así que era casi invencible. Su cuello medía 12m, tan largo como un autobus, ese cuello le permitía comer las hojas de las copas de los árboles, que eran más tiernas. Al ser el más grande goza de fama, pero se han encontrado restos de un dinosaurio que podía ser aún mayor, el Puertasaurus. Categoría:Reptiles Categoría:Dinosaurios Categoría:Saurisquios Categoría:Saurópodos Categor
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