Amargasaurus uh-mɑːrɡuh-SORRUHS
"Etymology TBD"
- Length
- 13 m (43 ft)
- Period
- Early Cretaceous (130–120 Mya)
- Place
- Argentina
- Food
- Herbivore
- Clade
- Dicraeosauridae
Amargasaurus (; “La Amarga lizard”) is a genus of sauropod dinosaur from the Early Cretaceous epoch (130–120 mya) of what is now Argentina. The only known skeleton was discovered in 1984 and is virtually complete, including a fragmentary skull, making Amargasaurus one of the best-known sauropods of its epoch. Amargasaurus was first described in 1991 and contains a single known species, Amargasaurus cazaui. It was a large animal, but small for a sauropod, reaching 9 – 13 m in length. Most distinctively, it sported two parallel rows of tall spines down its neck and back, taller than in any other known sauropod. In life, these spines could have stuck out of the body as solitary structures that supported a keratinous sheath. An alternate hypothesis, now more favored, postulates that they could have formed a scaffold supporting a skin sail.
What we know
- Named by Salgado & Bonaparte, 1991.
- Body length estimated at about 13 m.
- Fossils found in Argentina.