A journey that began with a little boy finding what he thought was a rock on his family’s outback property has ended in a major scientific breakthrough. The “Southern тιтan” is as long as a basketball court and as high as a two-storey building, and has been officially recognised as Australia’s largest known dinosaur. The mammoth creature’s discovery in outback Queensland marks the first time an Australian dinosaur can be ranked among the world’s true giants, a rare space previously occupied exclusively by the giant тιтanosaurs of South America.
“The discovery of Australia’s largest dinosaur was totally unexpected and, as it has turned out, was just the tip of the iceberg of numerous significant dinosaur discoveries that has come since and continue to be made,” Eromanga Natural History Museum and field palaeontologist Robyn Mackenzie said. “These dinosaur discoveries have opened a whole new world, not just to our family, but to people throughout Australia. It has been the most enriching journey.” The remains of the giant тιтanosaurian sauropod, known as “Cooper” for short, were found in 2007 east of Cooper Creek in south-west Queensland, near what’s now known as the Eromanga Natural History Museum.