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Brachiosaurus

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Brachiosaurus
Brachiosaurus brancai
Scientific classification
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Brachiosaurus

Riggs, 1903
Species

B. altithorax (type)
B. atalaiensis
B. nougaredi
?B. (Giraffatitan) brancai

The Brachiosaurus was a famous dinosaur that lived during the middle to late part of the dinosaur's existence. One of the largest ever dinosaurs to walk the earth, it has become a famous animal synomonys with dinosaurs, and is widely recognized worldwide.

For many decades, Brachiosaurus (brack-ee-oh-SORE-us) was the largest dinosaur known. It has since been exceeded in sheer mass by a number of giant titanosaurids like the Argentinosaurus and it was finally surpassed in height by another brachiosaurid, Sauroposeidon. It was, however, still the largest dinosaur known from a relatively complete skeleton.

However, even that may no longer be true, since the largest known specimens are now considered by some to be part of the new Giraffatitan genus. This new genus includes the famous mounted Brachiosaurus in the Humboldt Museum of Berlin, which is the tallest mounted skeleton in the world.

Brachiosaurus is estimated to weigh from 30 to 80 tonnes (35 to 90 tons), to reach 13 meters (42 feet) in height, and 25 meters (82 feet) in length. Higher estimates are usually based on the Ultrasauros, which was originally considered to be an extremely large Brachiosaurus. However, Ultrasauros is now believed to be a chimera, composed of neck bones from a Supersaurus, and a shoulder bone (scapulacoracoid) from a Brachiosaurus smaller than the largest Giraffatitan specimens.

Description and environment

Brachiosaurus was a sauropod, one of a group of four-legged, plant-eating dinosaurs with long necks and tails, and tiny brains. Unlike other families of sauropods, it had a giraffe-like build, with long forelimbs and a very long neck, which, as a recent study has argued, it did not raise above its shoulders. It had teeth like chisels (spatulate), and nostrils on the top of its head, which may indicate it had a good sense of smell. It had a number of holes in its skull to reduce weight. The first toe on its front foot, and the first three on its hind feet had claws. They may have traveled in herds.

It used to be theorized that it used the nostrils on the top of its head like a snorkel, and spent most of its time submerged in water to help support its great mass. However, it is now believed that it was a fully terrestrial animal. Studies have shown that the water pressure would be too great for it to breathe while submerged, and its feet are too narrow, and would sink into the mud.

Like other "long-necked" dinosaurs, Brachiosaurus may not have been able to pump sufficient blood to the brain if it held it's head high above it's shoulders - though this is disputed by some researchers. It might have stood at the edge of the forests and waved the head up and down, while it systematically removed all the edible food on the trees.

If the Brachiosaurus was warm-blooded, it is estimated that it would take ten years to reach full size. If it were cold-blooded, then it would take over 100 years to do so. If it were warm-blooded, it would have to eat more than 400 lbs. (200 kg) a day, but a lot less if it were not.

Brachiosaurus was one of the biggest dinosaurs of the Jurassic, the huge sauropod lived on vast prairies filled with ferns, bennetittes, horsetails, there were also huge conifer forests, and groves of cycads, and Seed ferns, and Ginkgoes. Some of it's contemporary species included Stegosaurus, Dryosaurus, Apatosaurus, and Diplodocus. When fully grown, Brachiosaurus had little to fear from the top predator of the time, Allosaurus.

Berlin's brancai and Chicago's high flyer

The mounted skeleton of a B. brancai (or Giraffatitan) in the Humboldt Museum in Berlin is 4 stories tall, reaching 12 meters (39 feet) into the air, and is 23 meters (74 feet) long. It is the tallest mounted skeleton in the world, though the bones come from several different specimens.

A Brachiosaurus is also mounted in the B Concourse of United Airlines' Terminal One in O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, courtesy of the Field Museum of Chicago. It is a model, not a collection of fossils.

Classification

The front leg bone of a Brachiosaurus

Brachiosaurus has three known species:

The best specimens of Brachiosaurus were from the species B. brancai, which was found in the Tendaguru Beds of Tanzania, in Africa. In 1991, George Olshevsky placed them in a new genus, Giraffatitan because they do not sharederived characteristics with Brachiosaurus. Giraffatitan has withers over its shoulder, and a rounded crest over its nostrils.

  • Giraffatitan brancai Janensch, 1914 (formerly B. brancai): The new type species, it is known from five partial skeletons, including at least three skulls, and some limb bones, which were recovered in Mtwara, Tanzania, in Africa. It lived from 145 to 150 million years ago, during the Kimmeridgian to Tithonian ages of the late Jurassic period.

Discovery

The first Brachiosaurus was discovered in 1900 by Elmer S. Riggs, in the Grand River Canyon of western Colorado, in the United States. He named the new species and genera in 1903 after its long front limbs — Brachiosaurus means "arm lizard", from the Greek brachion ("arm") and sauros ("lizard").

Starting in 1909, Werner Janensch found many new specimens in Tanzania, Africa, including some nearly complete skeletons, which were widely used in Brachiosaurus reconstructions. These are now considered to be Giraffatitan fossils.