Brachiosaurus: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox Species | {{Infobox Species | ||
| image = | | image = Dr Who and a Brachiosaurus.jpg | ||
| aka = | | aka = | ||
| type = [[Dinosaur]] | | type = [[Dinosaur]] | ||
| affiliation = | | affiliation = | ||
| origin = [[Earth]] | | origin = [[Earth]] | ||
| first | | first cs = The Doctor Who Dinosaur Book (novel) | ||
| appearances = [[AUDIO]]: | | appearances = [[AUDIO]]: {{cs|The Curator's Egg (audio story)}} | ||
| individuals = | | individuals = | ||
}} | }}{{wikipediainfo}} | ||
{{wikipediainfo}} | |||
The '''Brachiosaurus''' was a species of [[Dinosaur]] with a claim to being the largest such animal in history, according to the [[Fourth Doctor]]. Meeting one, he estimated that its head, at the top of its nearly vertical [[neck]], must be about [[12 (number)|12]] [[metre]]s from the ground. He also highlighted the peculiarty of its front legs being longer than its hind legs to his [[Companion (The Doctor Who Dinosaur Book)|companion]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Doctor Who Dinosaur Book (novel)|The Doctor Who Dinosaur Book]]'') | The '''Brachiosaurus''' was a species of [[Dinosaur]] with a claim to being the largest such animal in history, according to the [[Fourth Doctor]]. Meeting one, he estimated that its head, at the top of its nearly vertical [[neck]], must be about [[12 (number)|12]] [[metre]]s from the ground. He also highlighted the peculiarty of its front legs being longer than its hind legs to his [[Companion (The Doctor Who Dinosaur Book)|companion]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Doctor Who Dinosaur Book (novel)|The Doctor Who Dinosaur Book]]'') | ||
[[Category:Sauropods]] | [[Category:Sauropods]] | ||
[[Category:Species from the real world]] | [[Category:Species from the real world]] |
Latest revision as of 00:06, 22 October 2024
The Brachiosaurus was a species of Dinosaur with a claim to being the largest such animal in history, according to the Fourth Doctor. Meeting one, he estimated that its head, at the top of its nearly vertical neck, must be about 12 metres from the ground. He also highlighted the peculiarty of its front legs being longer than its hind legs to his companion. (PROSE: The Doctor Who Dinosaur Book)