Where was the Apatosaurus found?

29 Apr.,2024

 

Diplodocus | Natural History Museum

Diplodocus had a long neck that it would have used to reach high and low vegetation, and to drink water. There has been some debate over how such a long neck would have been held.

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Scientists now think that ligaments running from the hip to the back of the neck would have allowed Diplodocus to hold its neck in a horizontal position without using muscles. The vertebrae (back bones) are split down the middle and this space could have held ligaments like these.

Diplodocus may have had narrow, pointed bony spines lining its back.

A Museum icon

In 1905 a cast of a Diplodocus skeleton was donated to the Museum by the wealthy businessman Andrew Carnegie, based on the original specimen in the Carnegie Museum in the USA.

King Edward VII had requested a copy of the newly discovered dinosaur after seeing a picture of it in Carnegie's Scottish castle. From 1979 to early 2017 the cast - known affectionately as Dippy - was on display in the Museum's Hintze Hall.

In 1993, Dippy's tail was lifted from the ground after research revealed that Diplodocus tails would have been raised high to balance the neck.

Every two years or so, our experts used specialist equipment to clean the 292 bones that make up Dippy. It took two staff two days to clean and maintain the cast for future generations to enjoy.

In January 2017, Dippy left the Museum to prepare for a natural history adventure across the UK. After returning in 2022, the famous cast is now on display at the Herbert Art Gallery & Museum in Coventry, on long-term loan from the Museum.

Apatosaurus | Natural History Museum

Apatosaurus was a large sauropod dinosaur. It lived around 150 million years ago in the Late Jurassic Period, in an area that is now North America.

Like all sauropods, Apatosaurus ate plants.

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Young Apatosaurus individuals grew up quickly. They took around 10 years to reach full adult size.

Where did Apatosaurus live?

Apatosaurus lived alongside Stegosaurus, Diplodocus and Allosaurus.

Their fossils were found in the Morrison Formation, a sequence of rocks that covers a huge area spanning several US states, including Wyoming, Colorado and Montana. Many dinosaurs have been discovered there.

During the Late Jurassic the environment was semi-arid, with forests, rivers and floodplains. There were distinct wet and dry seasons.

How did Apatosaurus defend itself from predators?

Apatosaurus had a long, narrow tail that it might have used as a whip.

The animal's huge size would also have helped to protect it from smaller predators, which may have found Apatosaurus too big to take on. Living in herds gave extra protection.

What does Apatosaurus mean?

The name Apatosaurus comes from Greek words meaning 'deceptive lizard'. The scientist who named this dinosaur, Othniel Charles Marsh, felt that some of the fossil bones were confusing to identify. They seemed to resemble the bones of a sea reptile.

Are Apatosaurus and Brontosaurus the same dinosaur?

For more than 100 years, most scientists stopped using the well-known dinosaur name Brontosaurus. They thought that Brontosaurus and Apatosaurus fossils were the same thing.

But based on a study done in 2015, experts now think that the two dinosaurs are separate after all, although they are closely related.

When did Apatosaurus go extinct?

Apatosaurus went extinct 145 million years ago, at the end of the Jurassic Period.

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