A newly discovered fossil reveals what may turn out to be the largest land mammal ever to walk the earth.
The colossal rhinoceros was more than 26 feet long, 16 feet tall, and weighed 24 tons.
The following written content from Carly Cassella
A 26.5 million-year-old skull found in northwest China has been identified as another extinct species of giant rhino, one of the largest mammals to ever roam the land.
The fossil is remarkably well-preserved, and after close analysis, scientists have named it Paraceratherium linxiaense, the sixth species of this hornless rhino genus to be uncovered in Eurasia.
It’s hard to infer the exact size of the beast from its skull alone, but other Paraceratherium fossils suggest these creatures once stood on four surprisingly skinny legs at a shoulder height of about 4.8 meters (15.7 feet), which is roughly the size of the largest modern giraffes. Today, modern rhinos stand barely two meters tall (10 feet).
Still, it’s the beast’s mass that makes it stand out as a true land behemoth. While a lack of complete fossils makes it hard to pin down, estimates vary anywhere from 11 to 20 tonnes – roughly the same as three to five African elephants combined.
Judging from the skull of this big fella, researchers think P. linxiaense could be the largest giant rhino in its genus (although the team doesn’t give any objective dimensions).
Compared to other giant rhino fossils found, the newly discovered species has a relatively short nose trunk and a long neck, with a deeper nasal cavity.
Together, the features more closely resemble the giant rhino, P. lepidum, which has been found in Kazakhstan and other regions of northwest China. Another species found further south, called P. bugtiense, is smaller with a shallower nasal cavity.
The trail of fossils has scientists thinking giant rhinos once migrated from the Mongolian Plateau, into northwest China and Kazakhstan, and down into Pakistan, likely via Tibet.
At each location, the genus appears to have become highly specialized to its environment, leading to the branching of various species during the Oligocene between 34 and 23 million years ago.
The team’s phylogenetic analysis places P. linxiaense somewhere in the middle of this transition, right before giant rhinos made their way through Tibet.
During this time, it’s possible the Tibetan plateau might have hosted a mosaic of forests and open landscapes. In such an environment, giant rhinos would have had no problem finding the huge volume of leaves and scrub they likely had to eat to maintain their massive frames.
“These findings raise the possibility that the giant rhino could have passed through the Tibetan region before it became the elevated plateau it is today,” the team hypothesizes.
“From there, it may have reached the Indian-Pakistani subcontinent in the Oligocene epoch, where other giant rhino specimens have been found.”
Today, rhinos are known for their horns (perhaps too much so), but it actually took a while for these prehistoric-looking appendages to evolve. Most rhino ancestors don’t have them. In fact, for the longest time, early rhinos resembled tapirs, which themselves look somewhat like wild hogs with stumpy trunks. Read more from Science Alert