Aegyptosaurus
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Aegyptosaurus
Summary
Aegyptosaurus is a fossil taxon[1]. Aegyptosaurus ranks in the top 4% of fossil_taxon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (63 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Aegyptosaurus's image is recorded as Aegyptosaurus LM.png[3].
- Aegyptosaurus's image is recorded as Aegyptosaurus.png[4].
- Aegyptosaurus's instance of is recorded as fossil taxon[5].
- Aegyptosaurus's taxon rank is recorded as genus[6].
- Egypt is named after Aegyptosaurus[7].
- Aegyptosaurus's parent taxon is recorded as Titanosauria[8].
- Aegyptosaurus's location of discovery is recorded as Bahariya Formation[9].
- Aegyptosaurus's location of discovery is recorded as Egypt[10].
- Aegyptosaurus's taxon name is recorded as Aegyptosaurus[11].
- Aegyptosaurus's Commons category is recorded as Aegyptosaurus[12].
- Aegyptosaurus's taxonomic type is recorded as Aegyptosaurus baharijensis[13].
- Aegyptosaurus's start time is recorded as -95000000-00-00T00:00:00Z[14].
- Aegyptosaurus's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/08m1gk[15].
- Aegyptosaurus's Encyclopedia of Life ID is recorded as 4658363[16].
- Aegyptosaurus's Fossilworks taxon ID is recorded as 38681[17].
- Aegyptosaurus's GBIF taxon ID is recorded as 4822768[18].
- Aegyptosaurus's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Aegyptosaurus[19].
- Aegyptosaurus's main food source is recorded as herbivore[20].
- Aegyptosaurus's taxon common name is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': "Egypt's lizard"}[21].
- Aegyptosaurus's length is recorded as {'unit': 'Q11573', 'amount': '+15.0'}[22].
- Aegyptosaurus's time period is recorded as Late Cretaceous[23].
- Aegyptosaurus's Wolfram Language entity code is recorded as Entity["Dinosaur", "Genus:Aegyptosaurus"][24].
- Aegyptosaurus's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2777279335[25].
- Aegyptosaurus's Open Tree of Life ID is recorded as 4129302[26].
- Aegyptosaurus's Paleobiology Database taxon ID is recorded as 38681[27].
Why It Matters
Aegyptosaurus ranks in the top 4% of fossil_taxon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (63 views/month).[2] Aegyptosaurus has Wikipedia articles in 19 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Aegyptosaurus is known by 14 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]