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  • Taller than a six-story building.

  • Longer than three school busses.

  • Ten times as heavy as an elephant.

  • The largest dinosaur ever

  • is coming back from extinction.

  • In 1987,

  • a farmer in south western Argentina

  • made a discovery

  • that shook the paleontology

  • world to the bones.

  • Six bones, to be more precise.

  • And they seemed to come

  • from the largest dinosaur

  • to have ever existed.

  • Argentinosaurus, or Argentine lizard,

  • lived during the middle Cretaceous period

  • about 90 million years ago.

  • They were herbivorous sauropods.

  • That means that they subsisted

  • on a diet of plants

  • and their bodies had distinctly long,

  • massive necks and tails.

  • And when I say massive,

  • I mean massive.

  • Though they’d start their lives

  • as small as 5 kg (11 lb),

  • over 40 years,

  • they would grow to be around

  • 75,000 kg (165,000 lb).

  • At the peak of their growth,

  • they could have gained around

  • 40 kilograms (88 lb) every day.

  • Whoa.

  • That means these dinos likely

  • had a never-ending appetite

  • that required 100,000 calories daily.

  • So if they were alive today,

  • would they eventually eat

  • every plant and crop on the planet?

  • If the Argentinosaurus

  • managed to stage a comeback,

  • they'd discover that

  • their old stomping grounds

  • in South America

  • would look very different than they did

  • so many millions of years ago.

  • The ecosystems that exist

  • in this part of the world

  • are completely different

  • than they were then.

  • This would pose a problem

  • for the voracious leafy appetite

  • that the Argentinosaurus had.

  • And they wouldn't be the only ones

  • with an ecosystem headache.

  • You would too.

  • They would eat so many of our trees

  • that they could completely alter

  • the world as we know it.

  • Along with their eating habits,

  • these creatures would bring chaos

  • and destruction everywhere they went.

  • Paleontologists suggest

  • that these dinosaurs

  • were a towering

  • 17 m (57 ft) tall

  • and spanned 35 m (115 ft) in length.

  • Which is a size that continues

  • to baffle scientists,

  • who wonder how the creatures

  • could have managed to hold up their own

  • giant necks.

  • It's estimated that their hearts

  • would have needed to be able

  • to pump blood

  • as far as 12 m (40 ft)

  • about 50 to 60 times every minute.

  • Combine their stature

  • with their astounding weight,

  • and they’d destroy

  • just about everything in their path.

  • Homes, infrastructure, people.

  • It would be kind of like Godzilla,

  • only more by accident.

  • Especially if there were more

  • than one Argentinosaurus.

  • And you’d better believe there would be.

  • With these dinosaurs roaming around,

  • you could expect

  • to come across one of their nesting sites

  • on your next hike.

  • Argentinosaurus was an egg-laying species

  • and females could have laid anywhere

  • from 10 to 15 eggs at a time.

  • And these wouldn't be anything

  • like your average chicken eggs.

  • They'd be as large

  • as 30 cm (1 ft) in diameter.

  • It's likely that you'd need

  • to come up with some ways to contain

  • their growing population size.

  • Soon enough,

  • they could lay so many eggs that

  • all of South America

  • would be overrun by big dinos.

  • If only there were a way

  • that we could tame them

  • like elephants

  • and use them to our advantage.

  • But this would be a pretty dangerous task,

  • considering their size.

  • And not to mention

  • our lack of knowledge

  • about how temperamental

  • they could have been.

  • Besides,

  • the conditions we'd need to keep them in

  • would likely be inhumane.

  • It would involve

  • keeping them in contained areas

  • that aren't large enough to sustain them.

  • But of course,

  • we couldn't let them wildly roam

  • the planet wherever they wanted.

  • I mean, that is if you

  • wanted to keep living on this planet too.

  • You'd hopefully see conservation efforts

  • to provide an area for them

  • to wander about

  • and live peacefully.

  • Though coming up with a system

  • to actually contain them

  • would be a tough task.

  • Electric fences could be effective

  • as the Argentinosaurus lacked

  • natural body armor.

  • So they'd be vulnerable

  • to shocks or injuries.

  • But if they gathered in herds,

  • as paleontologists suggest they would,

  • then even more space

  • and kilometers of electric fences

  • could be necessary.

  • But this would also help

  • to protect them from poachers

  • looking to hunt down

  • the biggest game known to man.

  • It would especially protect the babies

  • who would be left

  • to fend for themselves

  • as soon as they were born.

  • Sadly, reintroducing the largest dinosaurs

  • to ever exist

  • would ultimately lead to yet

  • another attempt by humans

  • to conquer everything in nature.

  • So maybe we'd meet our match

  • with a dino

  • that has a little more of a craving

  • for our tasty human flesh.

  • Like if the T.rex

  • suddenly came back from extinction.

  • Well, that’s a story for another WHAT IF.

Taller than a six-story building.

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What If the Argentinosaurus Was Alive Today?(What If the Argentinosaurus Was Alive Today?)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2022 年 08 月 18 日
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