Rare species of Dinosaur found in Australia!

What is all this noise about Cash’s Dinosaur Themed Personalised products and gifts?

Why choose Cash’s Dinosaur themed personalised products and gifts?

Well, kids everywhere are ROOAARRING for more after the release of the Cash’s Dinosaur product range.

Are you aware of the recent discovery of a new species of dinosaur, up to 30m long, confirmed as largest ever found in Australia?

The massive Titanosaur, which lived more than 90 million years ago, was discovered in south-west Queensland and has been officially recognised as the largest ever dinosaur found in Australia and among the biggest in the world.

The Australotitan cooperensis, a plant-eating dinosaur of the family known as titanosaurs, likely lived between 92 and 96 million years ago, during the Cretaceous period.

It was between 25 and 30 metres long, stood between 5 and 6.5 metres from the ground to its hip and had a very long neck and tail, making it similar in appearance to well-known dinosaurs such as Brachiosaurus and Apatosaurus.

Nicknamed Cooper, the Australian dinosaur was first uncovered near Cooper Creek in the Eromanga Basin in 2007 but has only now been described scientifically by Queensland Museum and Eromanga Natural History Museum paleontologists.

They found the dinosaur’s shoulder blades, limb, and pelvic bones, many of them largely intact. The remote location, size and fragility of the dinosaur bones contributed to a delay in officially determining that the remains belonged to a previously unknown species, said Robyn Mackenzie, a field paleontologist.

“Such big, fragile bones literally took years to prepare and clean,” she said.

Mackenzie co-founded the Eromanga Natural History Museum with her husband, Stuart, after dinosaur bones were first discovered on their family property in 2006. The remains of about 15 dinosaurs have since been found on the property, she said.

She said based on the lengths and circumferences of Cooper’s limbs the dinosaur would have weighed about 67 tonnes, although figures can vary widely depending on the method of estimation used.

A second Australotitan specimen has also been discovered at Eromanga. George, as it has been nicknamed, was significantly larger than Cooper: the estimated length of its femur was 2.2 metres, compared with Cooper’s at 1.9 metres. However, George’s bones were more fragmented, making them more difficult to study.

The world’s largest known titanosaur is Patagotitan, found in South America. Analysis showed Australotitan was closely related to three other Australian sauropods, a group of dinosaurs that includes the titanosaurs. The three other species were found further north, in Winton.

Dr Scott Hocknull, a palaeontologist at the Queensland Museum, said it was possible the four species evolved from each other, and into different habitats.

“At the time the dinosaurs were moving around in this Eromanga area, it was the last of the great inland sea, which had covered parts of Australia for tens of millions of years,” he said.

“New land was being developed. The expectation that dinosaurs would fill up this land would also mean that different habitats would evolve.”

The researchers estimated the age of the dinosaur based on geological dating of surrounding sediments, as well as by studying the depth of where it was fossilised in the Winton Formation. The rock formation covers large swathes of central-western Queensland and is more than 1km thick in some areas.

Earlier this month, a dig on the Eromanga property uncovered dozens of new bones from another dinosaur, and investigations are under way to determine whether they belong to a new species.

‘That’s a lot of teeth’: 2.5 billion T rex walked the earth, researchers find

They found the dinosaur’s shoulder blades, limb, and pelvic bones, many of them largely intact. The remote location, size and fragility of the dinosaur bones contributed to a delay in officially determining that the remains belonged to a previously unknown species, said Robyn Mackenzie, a field palaeontologist.

Cash’s The Best Personalised Gifts Australia Has To Offer. We love dinosaurs……If you’re looking for dinosaur based personalised gifts in Australia, then look no further than Cash’s! They look cool to carry around. The designs are here to last. What more they are dishwasher proof, scrub proof, waterproof. Go for dinosaur themed based set comprising of bento box, lunch bag, Water bottle, Name labels, Backpack, Bagtag

With over 100 years in the business, Cash’s understands just how excited you are for your personalised gift ideas to come to life. That’s why we take special care to ensure your ideas come to life exactly the way you picture them!

Ready to enter the Jurassic Park with Cash’s Dinosaur Themed Personalised Products and Gifts? Then contact us today for more information! Please call 1800 020 204 or email: [email protected] or

visit : https://cashs.net.au Courtesy: ” The Guardian” June 2021 Edition.

Share This Story, Choose Your Platform!

2 Comments

  1. Ayush 29 November 2022 at 2:30 am - Reply

    Good Blog

  2. Ayush Nanda 1 December 2022 at 9:35 am - Reply

    Wow, whatta discovery

Leave A Comment