Ultimate Dinos Sneak Peek: Biggest of the Big
March 24, 2012
Saturday morning, we made a brief stop at the Museo Carlos Amhegino in Cipolletti, only 10 minutes from Neuquen City. We stopped here to see the original fossil skeleton of Buitreraptor, a relative of Velociraptor. You see, not all of the dinosaurs in the Ultimate Dinosaurs exhibition are giants. In fact the vast majority of dinosaurs from that period were smaller than an elephant. Buitreraptor is the smallest dinosaur in the Exhibition, and is representative of a strange, long-faced group of ‘raptor’ dinosaurs known only from Gondwana, or the southern hemisphere. Buitreraptor and other Velociraptor-type dinosaurs are very close relatives of the earliest birds. The skeleton of Buitreraptor is very bird-like, and it was almost certainly covered in feathers in life.
![fossil-skull-of-Buitreraptor Fossil lying on a table](http://blog.rom.on.ca/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/fossil-skull-of-Buitreraptor1.jpg)
Fig. The original fossil skull of Buitreraptor, a relative of Velociraptor
After lunch, we headed to Plaza Huincul to meet with renowned paleontologist Dr. Rodolfo Coria. We met him at the Museo Carmen Funes, the largest museum in Neuquen Province, Patagonia. Inside the museum are mounted two of the largest dinosaurs ever found, which were revealed to the world by Dr. Coria and his colleagues. The titanosaurian sauropod Argentinosaurus is the largest herbivore currently known. Unfortunately, it is known from only a handful of massive bones, but enough to build a hypothetical reconstruction of the animal at full scale.
![Argentinosaurus Picture of dinosaur skeleton on wall](http://blog.rom.on.ca/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Argentinosaurus1.jpg)
fig: original fossil bones of Argentinosaurus, the largest known dinosaurs.
In the same exhibit hall, the skeleton of the giant carnivore Giganotosaurus looks small in comparison, but it rivaled T. rex in size. Visitors to the Ultimate Dinosaurs exhibition will see a dramatic face-off between these two mega-predators, and get to decide for themselves which is bigger while learning about the differences between northern and southern dinosaur ecosystems at the end of the Age of Dinosaurs.
![Dr.-Rodolpho-Coria Man standing in front of dinosaur skeleton](http://blog.rom.on.ca/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Dr.-Rodolpho-Coria1.jpg)
Fig. Dr. Rodolpho Coria with his giants.
After a tour of the museum, Dr. Coria took us into the field near Plaza Huincul to an area of badlands that has produced a number of important dinosaur finds. He explained to us how Giganotosaurus was discovered, the process of field paleontology, and the importance of Giganotosaurus for understanding the evolution and ecology of the giant southern meat-eating dinosaurs.
So far it’s been a great trip! Stay tuned for more.
![Dr.-Coria-in-the-badlands Man kneeling on the ground looking on into desert and surrounded by rocks](http://blog.rom.on.ca/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Dr.-Coria-in-the-badlands1.jpg)
Fig. Dr. Coria in the badlands near Plaza Huincul
Follow the #ultimatedinos adventure on twitter with @ROMPalaeo and @davide_rom.