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Who is the biggest dinosaur in the world?

Who is the biggest dinosaur in the world?

Argentinosaurus
The heaviest dinosaur was Argentinosaurus at 77 tonnes. It was the equivalent to 17 African Elephants. Argentinosaurus is a double award winner being also the longest dinosaur. It is also the largest land animal to have ever lived.

Is there a dinosaur bigger than Argentinosaurus?

The biggest land creatures are believed to have been the dinosaurs—of them, the titanosaur (as their name suggests) is believed to be the largest. The huge size of each suggests the dinosaur was a very large titanosaur—one that might be bigger than Argentinosaurus.

How big is a Argentinosaurus?

110,000 – 220,000 lbs
Argentinosaurus/Mass

What dinosaur is bigger than Brachiosaurus?

Several of these (Argentinasaurus and Amphicoelias) might have been one and a half to two times larger than Brachiosaurus. The smallest dinosaurs were just slightly larger than a chicken; Compsognathus (“pretty jaw”) was 1 m (3 ft) long and probably weighed about 2.5 kg (about 6.5 lb).

How tall is a dinosaur?

Ultrasauros – 100+ feet long (30 m), +80 tons. Diplodocus – grew up to 90 feet long (28 m). Brachiosaurus – about 85 feet long (26 m), 40 feet tall, and weighed 70-80 tons….

INFRA- ORDER Coelurosauria
DINOSAUR FAMILY Avimimids (bird mimics)
SOME GENERA Avimimus
TIME RANGE Late Cretaceous
SIZE RANGE 5 feet (1.5 m) long

What is the largest animal to ever exist?

the blue whale
Far bigger than any dinosaur, the blue whale is the largest known animal to have ever lived. An adult blue whale can grow to a massive 30m long and weigh more than 180,000kg – that’s about the same as 40 elephants, 30 Tyrannosaurus Rex or 2,670 average-sized men.

Who is bigger argentinosaurus or blue whale?

Yes, while the Argentinosaurus (Argentinosaurus huinculensis) is longer at 115 feet (compared to the blue whales ruler-stretching 89 feet), the long-necked dinosaur of the Late Cretaceous is a lightweight at just a mere 80 or so tons.

Are dinosaurs alive today?

Other than birds, however, there is no scientific evidence that any dinosaurs, such as Tyrannosaurus, Velociraptor, Apatosaurus, Stegosaurus, or Triceratops, are still alive. These, and all other non-avian dinosaurs became extinct at least 65 million years ago at the end of the Cretaceous Period.