Brachiosaurus (IPA: /ˌbɹækiəˈsɔɹəs/) meaning "Arm Lizard", from the Greek brachion/βραχιων
meaning 'arm' and sauros/σαυρος meaning 'lizard', was a genus of sauropod
dinosaur which lived during the Late Jurassic
Period. It was thus named because its forelimbs were longer than its hind limbs. One of
the largest animals ever to walk the earth, it has become one of the most famous of all dinosaurs and is widely recognised
worldwide.
For many decades, Brachiosaurus was the largest dinosaur known. It has since
been discovered that a number of giant titanosaurians (Argentinosaurus, for example) surpassed Brachiosaurus in terms of sheer mass. More recently,
another brachiosaurid, Sauroposeidon, has
also been discovered; based on incomplete fossil evidence, it too is likely to have outweighed
Brachiosaurus.
Brachiosaurus is often considered to be the largest dinosaur known from a relatively
complete fossilized skeleton. However, the most complete specimens, including the Brachiosaurus in the Humboldt Museum of Berlin (excavated in Africa, the tallest
mounted skeleton in the world), are members of the species B. brancai which some scientists consider to be part of a
separate genus, Giraffatitan. The holotype material of the type species, B.
altithorax. includes a sequence of seven posterior dorsal vertebrae, sacrum, proximal caudal vertebra, coracoid, humerus,
femur and ribs: enough from which to estimate size. Based on a complete composite skeleton, Brachiosaurus attained 25
metres (82 feet) in length and was probably able to
raise its head about 13 metres (42 ft) above ground level. Fragmentary material from larger specimens indicates that it could
grow 15% longer than this. Such material includes an isolated fibula HMN XV2 1340 cm in length and the brachiosaurid
scapulocoracoid referred to Ultrasauros.
Brachiosaurus has been estimated to have weighed anywhere between 15 tonnes
(Russell et al., 1980) and 78 tonnes.[1] These extreme estimates can be discarded as that of Russell et al. was based on limb-bone
allometry rather than a body model, and that of Colbert on an outdated and overweight model. More recent estimates based on
models reconstructed from osteology and inferred musculature are in the range 32 tonnes[2] to 37 tonnes (Christiansen 1997). The 15% longer specimens hinted at above would
have massed 48 to 56 tonnes.
Discovery and species
The first Brachiosaurus was discovered in 1900 by Elmer S. Riggs, in the Grand River
Canyon of western Colorado, in the United States.
Brachiosaurus species
The front leg bone of a
Brachiosaurus.
Brachiosaurus includes at least two known species, and possibly a third:
- B. altithorax Riggs, 1903: The type species is
known from two partial skeletons recovered in Colorado and Utah in the United States. It lived from 145 to 150 million years
ago, during the Kimmeridgian to Tithonian ages.
- ?B. nougaredi de Lapparent, 1960: While it may not be a distinct species (nomen dubium?) it is known from
set of fused bones over the hip (sacrum) and parts of a forelimb, which were recovered in
Wargla, Algeria in Africa. It
lived 100 to 110 million years ago, during the Albian to Cenomanian ages of the middle Cretaceous period.
- B. brancai Janensch, 1914 is known from five partial skeletons, including at
least three skulls and some limb bones, which were recovered near Lindi, Tanzania, in Africa in the early 1900s. It lived from 145 to 150 million
years ago, during the Kimmeridgian to Tithonian ages of the Late Jurassic period.
Giraffatitan
Illustration of a
Giraffatitan
Skeleton of
Brachiosaurus brancai in
Berlin.
In 1988, Gregory S. Paul noted that the African form (on which most popular
depictions of Brachiosaurus are based) showed significant differences from the North American form (B. altithorax),
especially in the proportions of its trunk vertebrae and in its more gracile build. Paul used these differences to create a
subgenus he named Brachiosaurus (Giraffatitan) brancai. In 1991, George Olshevsky asserted that these differences are
enough to place the African brachiosaurid in its own genus, simply Giraffatitan. Although this name has frequently
appeared on the Internet, it has rarely been used in the scientific literature outside of Paul (1988) and Olshevsky (1991). B.
brancai has withers over its shoulder, and a rounded crest over its nostrils.
Possibly adding further differences between the two species was the description in 1998 of a North American brachiosaurid
skull (Carpenter & Tidwell, 1998). This skull, which had been found nearly a century earlier (it is the skull
Marsh used on his early reconstructions of Brontosaurus), is identified as "Brachiosaurus sp." and may well belong to B. altithorax.
The skull is more camarasaur-like than the distinctive high-crested skull of B.
brancai/Giraffatitan, so if it does belong to Brachiosaurus, it would lend a great deal of support to the
existence of Giraffatitan as a distinct genus.
Removed species
B. alataiensis de Lapparent & Zbyszewski, 1957 has been referred to the new genus Lusotitan (Antunes and Mateus 2003). It is known from back bones (vertebrae), and parts of the hip and limbs, which were recovered in
Estremadura, Portugal. It lived about 150 million years ago, during the Kimmeridgian age of the Late Jurassic period.
Description and environment
Size comparison between
Brachiosaurus and a human
Brachiosaurus was a sauropod, one of a group of four-legged, plant-eating dinosaurs with long necks and tails and relatively small brains. Unlike
other families of sauropods, it had a giraffe-like
build, with long forelimbs and a very long neck. Brachiosaurus had spatulate teeth
(resembling chisels), well-suited to its herbivorous diet. Its skull featured a number of holes, probably aiding
weight-reduction. The first toe on its front foot and the first three toes on its hind feet were
clawed.
Skull
Brachiosaurus has traditionally been characterised by its distinctive high-crested skull, though this may have been
unique to B. brancai.
Another complete Brachiosaurus skull is known, which Marsh used for his
early reconstructions of Brontosaurus. Carpenter and Tidwell studied this skull in
1998 and found that it belonged to one of the North American Brachiosaurus species. The skull of this North American
Brachiosaurus is more camarasaur-like than the distinctive high-crested skull
of B. brancai.
Metabolism
If the Brachiosaurus was endothermic (warm-blooded), it would have taken an
estimated ten years to reach full size. If it were instead poikilothermic (cold-blooded),
then it would have required over 100 years to reach full size. As a warm-blooded animal, the daily energy demands of
Brachiosaurus would have been enormous; it would probably have needed to eat more than 400 lb. (~182 kg) of food per day.
If Brachiosaurus was fully cold-blooded or was a passive bulk endotherm, it would
have needed far less food to meet its daily energy needs. Scientists now believe that like most large dinosaurs, it was a
gigantotherm.[citation needed]
Environment and behaviour
Brachiosaurus was one of the largest dinosaurs of the Jurassic era; it lived on
prairies filled with ferns, bennettites and horsetails, and it moved through vast conifer forests and groves of
cycads, seed ferns and ginkgos. Some of its contemporary genera included Stegosaurus,
Dryosaurus, Apatosaurus and
Diplodocus. While it is speculated that groups of Brachiosaurus moved in herds,
fully grown individuals had little to fear from even the largest predators of the time, Allosaurus and Torvosaurus, on account of their sheer
size.
Brachiosaurus nostrils, like the huge corresponding nasal openings in its skull, were
long thought to be located on the top of the head. In past decades, scientists theorised that the animal used its nostrils like a
snorkel, spending most of its time submerged in water in order to support its great mass. The
current consensus view, however, is that Brachiosaurus was a fully terrestrial
animal. Studies have demonstrated that water pressure would have prevented the
animal from breathing effectively while submerged and that its feet were too narrow for efficient aquatic use. Furthermore, new
studies by Larry Witmer (2001) show that, while the nasal openings in the skull were placed high above the eyes, the nostrils
would still have been close to the tip of the snout (a study which also lends support to the idea that the tall "crests" of
brachiosaurs supported some sort of fleshy resonating chamber).
Popular culture
- See also: Biological issues in
Jurassic Park
Brachiosaurus is one of the most well-known dinosaurs amongst both paleontologists and the general public. As such, the
genus has appeared in many films and television programmes, most notably Jurassic
Park, Jurassic Park III and Walking with Dinosaurs. It also appeared briefly at the end of Walking With Monsters. A main belt asteroid, 1991 GX7, has been named 9954 Brachiosaurus in honor of the genus.[3][4]
Brachiosaurus has also made an appearance in several computer games, including Jurassic Park: Operation Genesis, Turok:
Evolution and for the SEGA consoles.
Berlin's B. brancai and Chicago's high flyer
A Brachiosaurus skeleton is mounted in the B Concourse of United Airlines'
Terminal One in O'Hare International Airport in Chicago, courtesy of the Field Museum of
Natural History of Chicago. It is a model, not a collection of fossils.
A famous specimen of Brachiosaurus brancai mounted in Berlin is one of the largest mounted skeletons in the world.
Beginning in 1909, Werner Janensch found many additional B. brancai specimens in Tanzania, Africa, including some nearly
complete skeletons.
Footnotes
References
- Colbert, E. H. (1962). "The Weights of Dinosaurs". American Museum Novitiates (2076):
p. 1–16.
- Paul, G. S. (1988). "The brachiosaur giants of the Morrison and Tendaguru with a description
of a new subgenus, Giraffatitan, and a comparison of the world's largest dinosaurs". Hunteria 2 (3):
1–14.
- Kenneth Carpenter and Virginia Tidwell. (1998). "Preliminary description of a Brachiosaurus skull from Felch Quarry 1,
Garden Park, Colorado." In: The Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation: An Interdisciplinary Study. Kenneth Carpenter, Danial Chure
and James Kirkland eds. Modern Geology Vol. 23 No 1-4. pp. 69-84.
- Olshevsky, George. 1991. A Revision of the Parainfraclass Archosauria Cope, 1869, Excluding the Advanced Crocodylia. Mesozoic
Meanderings #2 (1st printing): iv + 196 pp.
- Brachiosaurus at DinoData
- dB Brachiosaurus (Natural History Museum)
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
- Dinosaurier-Web, Description and printable fact-sheet with picture (in German and English)
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)