'Mamenchisaurus hochuanensis' — a long-necked sauropod


Object Description

‘Mamenchisaurus hochuanensis’ belonged to the group sauropod dinosaurs which were large four legged herbivores with small heads, teeth shaped for cropping plants, long necks and roomy bodies for digesting plant food.  Its name (mah-men-chee-sore-us) means Mamenchi lizard. 

These fossils of 'Mamenchisaurus' were discovered in China. 'Mamenchisaurus' was a herbivore measuring 25 metres. 'Mamenchisaurus' lived 145–160 million years ago in the Late Jurassic.

Website

Educational Value Statement

'Mamenchisaurus' was a giant sauropod with a very long neck — amongst the longest of any animal that has ever lived. Measuring up to 11 metres, the neck was almost half the overall length of the animal. Its long neck and its tail were held in position by a series of ligaments anchored at the hip — a bit like a suspension bridge. 'Mamenchisaurus' would have walked with its stiff neck held almost horizontal. All the vertebrae of its neck, body and tail were hollow and light, while its leg bones were quite solid. This kept its centre of gravity low, which helped the animal maintain its balance.

Like all sauropods, 'Mamenchisaurus' was a plant-eater. Its spoon-shaped teeth were not for chewing, but were used like a rake to strip leaves off plants. These were swallowed into its huge vat-like stomach. Its long neck allowed it to reach food otherwise inaccessible to an animal with such a huge body.

'Mamenchisaurus', like all herbivores, would have had to eat continuously to get enough nutrition to sustain its massive body.

Catalogue Record


Format

Website

Contributor

Creator:

Museum Victoria



Subject

Reptiles, 3965
Fossils, 5127
Dinosaurs, 5118


Mamenchisaurus hochuanensis
Sauropod
Jurassic period 



Coverage

2009
Russia