• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

New Smallest Jurassic Sauropod Weighed Less Than Most Humans

June 15, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

While its relatives were making the earth shake, one South African sauropod barely made a ripple with a body mass of around just 75 kilograms (165 pounds). That wouldn’t even put it in the top weight class for women’s wrestling at the Olympics, let alone men’s. If it was an asteroid we might say it weighed as much as 50 (male) ferrets. 

A new analysis has revealed a fossil previously thought to be the arm of a young Massospondylus carinatus is actually the bone of a fully grown adult and most likely comes from a previously unknown species of sauropod. 

Advertisement

Sauropods famously include the largest land animals of all time, including giants like Mamenchisaurus, Diplodocus, Titanosaur and the back from categorization-exile Brontosaurus. However, like most animal families, they didn’t start out big. Instead, the first sauropodomorphs weighed less than 15 kilograms (33 pounds) and are thought to have been omnivorous.

By the Jurassic some members of the family were giants, but others maintained that size isn’t everything. The study of the humerus found in South Africa’s Elliot Formation reveals what a new paper calls the smallest sauropomorph “ever reported from a Jurassic stratum.”

There are usually many more examples of small species than large ones, but if that was the case for the sauropods then the small ones didn’t fossilize well. From every continent, we have remains of members of the family that would have pushed 90 tonnes, which is around 15 bull African elephants. The smaller end of the family is thought to have been represented in the Jurassic by Massospondylus carinatus, weighing in at around 550 kilograms (1,200 pounds), typical for a modern cow. 

It’s likely other herbivorous dinosaur families were just better at being small, and those long necks didn’t provide the same advantage at this scale. Nevertheless, it seems some petit sauropods found a niche.

Advertisement

Dr Kimberley Chapelle of the American Museum of Natural History and co-authors studied a bone labeled BP/1/4732. This was, they conclude, the humerus (front lower leg bone) of a bipedal sauropod that would have weighed a precisely estimated 73.35 kg. Rather than being from a juvenile, as previously assumed, the bone had stopped growing well before death, indicating it was from an adult.

Eleven

Eleven “lines of arrested growth” reveal the owner of the bone had long since stopped growing

Image Credit: Chapelle et al./Royal Society Open Science

“Until now, we didn’t know that early sauropodomorphs could get this small, so the smallest skeletons were assumed to be babies,” Chapelle told the Natural History Museum. 

We can’t know whether BP/1/4732 came from an individual typical of the species, or it had some form of dwarfism. However, with M. carinatus usually weighing about eight times as much, this is clearly a different species. The shape of the bone also does not match any named sauropod.

The only Adeopapposaurus whose weight we have been able to estimate was smaller still (55 kilograms) but that is thought to have been an immature individual, and the adults were probably much heavier than BP/1/4732’s owner.

Advertisement

It will take more than one leg bone to allow the new species to be described and named, but at least now we know the bones of a small sauropod are out there, waiting to be found. Chapelle thinks there may be other bones wrongly classified as juveniles that may deserve reassessment.

The study is Open Access In Royal Society Open Science 

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Delta causes jump in U.S. workers sidelined in recent weeks, survey shows
  2. Dollar edges higher with focus on Fed for taper clues
  3. Police Claim Woman Attacked Them With Angry Bees During An Eviction
  4. Why Do Airplane Window Shades Have To Be Up During Takeoff And Landing?

Source Link: New Smallest Jurassic Sauropod Weighed Less Than Most Humans

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Watch Orcas Use “Tonic Immobility” To Suck An Enormous Liver Out Of The World’s Deadliest Shark
  • Ancient Micronesians Hunted Sharks 1,800 Years Ago, And Now We Know Which Species
  • World’s First Plasma “Fireballs” Help Explain Supermassive Black Hole Mystery
  • Why Do We Eat Chicken, And Not Birds Like Seagull And Swan?
  • How To Find Fossils? These Bright Orange Organisms Love Growing On Exposed Dinosaur Bones
  • Strange Patterns In Ancient Rocks Reveal Earth’s Tumbling Magnetic Field, Not Speeding Continents
  • Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Can Now Be Seen From Earth – Even By Amateur Telescopes!
  • For 25 Years, People Have Been Living Continuously In Space – But What Happens Next?
  • People Are Not Happy After Learning How Horses Sweat
  • World’s First Generational Tobacco Ban Takes Effect For People Born After 2007
  • Why Was The Year 536 CE A Truly Terrible Time To Be Alive?
  • Inside The Myth Of The 15-Meter Congo Snake, Cryptozoology’s Most Outlandish Claim
  • NASA’s Voyager Spacecraft Found A 30,000-50,000 Kelvin “Wall” At The Edge Of Our Solar System
  • “Dueling Dinosaurs” Fossil Confirms Nanotyrannus As Own Species, Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Is Back From Behind The Sun, And Much More This Week
  • This Is What Antarctica Would Look Like If All Its Ice Disappeared
  • Bacteria That Can Come Back From The Dead May Have Gone To Space: “They Are Playing Hide And Seek”
  • Earth’s Apex Predators: Meet The Animals That (Almost) Can’t Be Killed
  • What Looks And Smells Like Bird Poop? These Stinky Little Spiders That Don’t Want To Be Snacks
  • In 2020, A Bald Eagle Murder Mystery Led Wildlife Biologists To A Very Unexpected Culprit
  • Jupiter-Bound Mission To Study Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS From Deep Space This Weekend
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version