In Morocco and France, paleontologists have also found footprints more than a yard long. "However the Mongolian one is very well preserved," Ishigaki said, "with three clear claw marks." The size of the dinosaur cannot be determined easily from the footprints, but Ishigaki and his colleagues estimate it was 22-33m long.
Paleontologists have been hunting for dino prints in Mongolia since 1957, when a researcher stumbled upon dozens of tracks in the cold, dry desert. As Ishigaki and his colleagues reported in the journal Geological Quarterly in 2009, the Gobi is something of a fossilised footprint mother lode: Between 1995 and 2008, the scientists found more than 20,000 preserved tracks belonging to a variety of dinosaur species.
This titanosaur print was special, as nothing quite of this scale had been found in the area before. Based on the geologic layers of nearby rock, the researchers determined the print to be from the Upper Cretaceous period, about 70 million to 90 million years old. Ishigaki and the other scientists hope that the fossil cast will shed light on the way that these massive creatures walked.
Although paleontologists have found titanosaur fossils on every continent, including Antarctica, the titanosaur remains shrouded in mystery. It is not considered to be a specific dinosaur but a sort of catchall term for a group of four-legged, long-necked herbivores.
All of the titanosaurs lived in the Cretaceous. And they were all, as a rule, giants. Dreadnoughtus, hailed as one of the biggest dinos around when its discovery was announced in 2014, may have tipped the scales at 80 tons. (That weight is debated, however.) Among the other titanosaurs were the 70tonne Argentinosaurus, and a yet unnamed dino whose model skeleton was too big to fit in one room at New York's American Museum of Natural History.
What type of titanosaur left these tracks was not yet determined, but the Mongolian desert is also known for its rich fossil beds - perhaps the sand holds even more clues about these humongous animals.