<p>A gigantic dinosaur discovered in Australia's outback has been identified as a new species and recognised as one of the largest to ever roam the Earth, according to palaeontologists.</p>.<p>The Australotitan cooperensis, part of the titanosaur family that lived about 100 million years ago, has finally been named and described 15 years after its bones were first uncovered.</p>.<p>It is estimated to have stood at 5-6.5 metres (16-21 feet) high and measured 25-30 metres (82-98 feet) in length — which would make it Australia's biggest dinosaur.</p>.<p>"Based on the preserved limb size comparisons, this new titanosaur is estimated to be in the top five largest in the world," said Robyn Mackenzie, a director of the Eromanga Natural History Museum.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/east-and-northeast/probable-titanosaurus-remnants-found-in-meghalaya-hills-987984.html" target="_blank">Probable Titanosaurus remnants found in Meghalaya hills</a></strong></p>.<p>The fossilised bones were found on Mackenzie's family farm in 2006 about 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) west of Brisbane in the Eromanga Basin and nicknamed "Cooper".</p>.<p>Initially kept secret as scientists painstakingly dug up and studied the bones, the skeleton first went on display to the public in 2007.</p>.<p>Scott Hocknull, a palaeontologist at Queensland Museum, said it had been a "very long and painstaking task" to confirm the Australotitan was a new species.</p>.<p>The research, which relied on 3D scan models of bones to compare the dinosaur with its close relatives, was published in the peer-reviewed PeerJ journal Monday.</p>.<p>Numerous other dinosaur skeletons have been found in the same area, Hocknull said, adding that more work was needed as "discoveries like this are just the tip of the iceberg".</p>
<p>A gigantic dinosaur discovered in Australia's outback has been identified as a new species and recognised as one of the largest to ever roam the Earth, according to palaeontologists.</p>.<p>The Australotitan cooperensis, part of the titanosaur family that lived about 100 million years ago, has finally been named and described 15 years after its bones were first uncovered.</p>.<p>It is estimated to have stood at 5-6.5 metres (16-21 feet) high and measured 25-30 metres (82-98 feet) in length — which would make it Australia's biggest dinosaur.</p>.<p>"Based on the preserved limb size comparisons, this new titanosaur is estimated to be in the top five largest in the world," said Robyn Mackenzie, a director of the Eromanga Natural History Museum.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/east-and-northeast/probable-titanosaurus-remnants-found-in-meghalaya-hills-987984.html" target="_blank">Probable Titanosaurus remnants found in Meghalaya hills</a></strong></p>.<p>The fossilised bones were found on Mackenzie's family farm in 2006 about 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) west of Brisbane in the Eromanga Basin and nicknamed "Cooper".</p>.<p>Initially kept secret as scientists painstakingly dug up and studied the bones, the skeleton first went on display to the public in 2007.</p>.<p>Scott Hocknull, a palaeontologist at Queensland Museum, said it had been a "very long and painstaking task" to confirm the Australotitan was a new species.</p>.<p>The research, which relied on 3D scan models of bones to compare the dinosaur with its close relatives, was published in the peer-reviewed PeerJ journal Monday.</p>.<p>Numerous other dinosaur skeletons have been found in the same area, Hocknull said, adding that more work was needed as "discoveries like this are just the tip of the iceberg".</p>