Gargantuavis Gargantuavis
"gargantuan bird"
- Length
- 5 m (16.4 ft)
- Period
- Late Cretaceous (73.5–71.5 Mya)
- Place
- Europe · Mexico · France · Spain
- Food
- Herbivore
- Clade
- Gargantuaviidae
Gargantuavis (meaning ‘gargantuan bird’) is an extinct genus of large, primitive bird containing the single species Gargantuavis philoinos. It is the only member of the monotypic family Gargantuaviidae. Its fossils were discovered in several formations dating to 73.5 and 71.5 million years ago in what is now northern Spain, Southern France, and Romania. Gargantuavis is the largest known bird of the Mesozoic, a size ranging between the cassowary and the ostrich, and a mass of 141 kg like modern ostriches, exemplifying the extinction of non-avian dinosaurs was not a necessary condition for the emergence of giant terrestrial birds. It was once thought to be closely related to modern birds, but the 2019 discovery of a pelvis identified as cf. Elopteryx nopcsai from what was Hațeg Island (present-day Romania) shows several primitive features.
What we know
- Named by Buffetaut & Le Loeuff, 1998.
- Fossils found in Europe and Mexico.