Found in North America, the Brontosaurus is known to us as one of the biggest dinosaurs ever to walk the planet.\n
Throughout history, it has been a mysterious species of discovery.\n
With its tiny head and long neck, the beefy Brontosaurus had a large, sturdy body and long tail.\n
Its appearance and name have been disputed over many years, and new elements are still being unraveled.\n
Here are nine beefy facts about the Brontosaurus that you should know.\n
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The Brontosaurus was first discovered in 1879 by a professor of paleontology at Yale University.\n
Professor Othniel Charles Marsh made the discovery after finding an almost complete skeleton of a sauropod at the Morrison Formation Rocks in Wyoming. \n
However, they did use bones from other species, too, to fill in the missing parts.\n
Initially, it was thought that the Brontosaurus was part of the Apatosaurus family.\n
The two species were very similar, but an easy way to define the two was through its neck.\n
The Brontosaurus had a higher and less wide neck compared to the Apatosaurus.\n
At the time of Marsh’s discovery, the “bone wars” were taking place.\n
The name translates from Greek as “thunder lizard,” “bronte” means “thunder,” and “Saurus” means “lizard.”\n
Marsh gave the name after the discovery of a much larger Apatosaurus.\n
His first discovery of an Apatosaurus, which means deceptive lizard, was in found 1877.\n
It would have stood around 15 feet (4.6 m) tall and 70-90 feet (21-27 m) in length.\n
Sauropods were a type of dinosaur that was a herbivore, eating a diet of only plants.\n
A common trait amongst sauropods was a long neck with a small head.\n
The Brontosaurus is a member of the Diplodocidae family, which is a group of sauropod species.\n
The lifespan of a brontosaurus was similar to that of tortoises today.\n
On average, they could live up to 100 years, making them one of the longest living dinosaurs.\n
It took the average Brontosaurus ten years from birth to reach adulthood and its full size.\n
Although the Brontosaurus was one of the tallest of all dinosaurs, it had the smallest brain.\n
They were excellent hunters, but they sometimes lacked intelligence.\n
It is unknown why the species had nostrils on its head, but it is thought to be related to eating.\n
The brontosaurus will remain one of the world\u2019s most famous dinosaurs to have lived.\n