Argentinosaurus huinculensis, named in 1993, is a huge titanosaur from the Upper Cretaceous Río Limay Formation of Argentina: it was perhaps 30 m long. From Wordnik.com. [Biggest…. sauropod…. ever (part…. I)] Reference
Grouping: Macronaria/Titanosauria/basal titanosaur. From Wordnik.com. [Life's Time Capsule: MORE Sauropods in Art!] Reference
Grouping: Macronaria/Titanosauria/basal titanosaur ?. From Wordnik.com. [Life's Time Capsule: MORE Sauropods in Art!] Reference
Grouping: Macronaria/Titanosauria/basal titanosaur or possibly Andesauridae. From Wordnik.com. [Life's Time Capsule: MORE Sauropods in Art!] Reference
Paralititan stromeri is another massive titanosaur, this time from the Upper Cretaceous of Egypt. From Wordnik.com. [Biggest…. sauropod…. ever (part…. I)] Reference
P. becklesii, named for tremendously short and robust forelimb elements and skin, is clearly a titanosaur. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2006-02-01] Reference
Prehistoric snake gobbled-up dinosaur babies: A fossilized snake has been discovered inside a titanosaur nest in India, leading researchers to conclude that the snake fed on newly-hatched dinosaur babies, rather than their eggs like modern snakes. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2010-02-28] Reference
Also I'd like to know what everyone here thinks of Andrey Atuchin and Stephen O'Connor, I haven't seen anyone else tackle as many titanosaur paintings as these two, and they both have a lot of talent for creative color schemes and anatomical accuracy. From Wordnik.com. [Life's Time Capsule: MORE Sauropods in Art!] Reference
Diamantinasaurus as a derived lithostrotian titanosaur. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Apesteguia S (2005) Evolution of the titanosaur metacarpus. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
The Abelisaur Aucasaurus raids a titanosaur nest by John Sibbick. From Wordnik.com. [Life's Time Capsule: MORE Sauropods in Art!] Reference
Wintonotitan as a basal titanosauriform and Diamantinasaurus as a lithostrotian titanosaur. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Later other sauropod bones were found, those belonging to the giants of the titanosaur group. From Wordnik.com. [FOXNews.com] Reference
Previous studies of titanosaur relationships have proposed lists of synapomorphies for defined clades. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
The two herbivore dinosaurs were different kinds of titanosaur, the largest type of dinosaur ever to have lived. From Wordnik.com. [Clipmarks | Live Clips] Reference
Finally, it can be considered a derived lithostrotian titanosaur by possessing the following synapomorphies found in. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
This 3. 5m fossil snake is believed to have fed on the hatchlings of sauropods, as it was found wrapped around a baby titanosaur. From Wordnik.com. [BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition] Reference
The findings-along with two other similar snake-egg pairings, suggest that snakes fed on titanosaur hatchlings when they emerged from their eggs. From Wordnik.com. [Scientific Blogging] Reference
The other two finds - 52-foot - (16-meter -) long herbivores - were previously unknown types of titanosaur, the largest dinosaurs that ever lived. From Wordnik.com. [Long Island Press] Reference
The other two finds -- 52-foot - (16-meter -) long herbivores -- were previously unknown types of titanosaur, the largest dinosaurs that ever lived. From Wordnik.com. [China Post Online - Taiwan , News , Taiwan newspaper] Reference
Magyarorsaurus dacus, an ethnic Hungarian dinosaur from Transylvania, was recently downgraded from being an impressive titanosaur to a measly dwarf dino following an exhaustive study. From Wordnik.com. [Pestiside.hu] Reference
But it was a immense work from home based business prodigally the logginess guarnerius and ciliophora egon and i successfully cystopteris to extrovert up and titanosaur distinctive barany at one pollyannaish. From Wordnik.com. [Rational Review] Reference
titanosaurs, the only extant group of Late Cretaceous sauropods, are now known to eat grass thanks to a recent find of what are presumed to be titanosaur coprolites that contained silicates diagnostic of grass. From Wordnik.com. [CreationWiki - Recent changes [en]] Reference
Wintonotitan as a basal titanosauriform and Diamantinasaurus as a derived lithostrotian titanosaur illustrates the diversity of Cretaceous sauropods in Australia as similar to that found on any other continent. From Wordnik.com. [PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles] Reference
Its body was found in a dinosaur nest coiled around a recently hatched and crushed egg, and next to it was an 18in fossil hatchling titanosaur - an edibly small version of a plant-eating giant that as an adult weighed up to 100 tonnes. From Wordnik.com. [Independent.ie - Frontpage RSS Feed] Reference
Naish & Martill (2001) and Naish (2005) thought that sauropod diversity here was quite high, with a possible camarasaurid (Chondrosteosaurus), a few brachiosaurids, a titanosaur (Iuticosaurus valdensis), and an unnamed diplodocoid (represented by a chevron as well as isolated teeth and other elements). From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2006-02-01] Reference
That’s not bad in terms of diversity (adjacent picture shows diplodocoid and titanosaur). From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2006-02-01] Reference
Finally, Turiasaurus riodevensis is a gigantic Spanish form, and it’s not a titanosaur, belonging instead to a hitherto unrecognised clade termed Turiasauria. From Wordnik.com. [Biggest…. sauropod…. ever (part…. I)] Reference
To remind you, in the older Hastings Beds Group we have a basal titanosauriform (and possible brachiosaurid), a titanosaur, a diplodocid, and a new and unusual taxon that isn’t any of these. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2006-02-01] Reference
It doesn’t seem that any of these animals can be conspecific, so, we have: a basal titanosauriform (and possible brachiosaurid), a good titanosaur, a diplodocid, and a new taxon that isn’t any of these. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2006-02-01] Reference
I’ll put spines on a Diplodocus neck, but not a Brachiosaur neck (for lack of direct evidence) and DEFINITELY not a titanosaur (unless for some reason I feel VERY tempted that it would look artistically good). From Wordnik.com. [Life's Time Capsule: Member Bio: Nima Sassani] Reference
Evolution of the titanosaur metacarpus. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2006-04-01] Reference
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