Australia’s most complete sauropod skull tells an intercontinental story

Palaeontologists have unearthed a fossil skull from a prehistoric Australian titan that lived 95 million years ago.

The Diamantinasaurus matildae specimen has been nicknamed Ann. The skull is the most complete of a sauropod – long-necked dinosaur – found in Australia.


Read more: Waiter! There’s a sauropod in my soup! Dinosaur footprints in Chinese restaurant confirmed


Found in Winton in western-central Queensland, Ann’s skull tells us about how this subadult and its species ate and lived, but also about connections between Australian titanosaurs – a group of sauropods that grew to massive sizes, some up to 100 tonnes – and their South American cousins.

Lead researchers Dr Steven Poropat speaks with Cosmos about the significance of Ann’s skull.

Please login to favourite this article.