'''' A less-famous branch of sauropods — The Titanosauria — rewrote what scientists thought about how giant dinosaurs lived. Rather than fading away early, titanosaurs thrived for tens of millions of years and occupied ecosystems on all seven continents until The Asteroid impact 66 million years ago. ''''
Titanosaurs first appear in the fossil record by the Early Cretaceous, about 126 million years ago. Over the next 75–80 million years, continental drift helped distribute them worldwide.
Nearly 100 species are now recognized — more than 30% of known sauropod diversity — and they ranged from elephant-sized forms to giants exceeding 60 tons ( 54 metric tonnes ) such as Argentinosaurus, Patagotitan and Futalognkosaurus.
Titanosaurs were plant specialists with diverse feeding habits. Microscopic wear patterns on teeth from Argentina indicate consumption of gritty, low-growing vegetation, while coprolites (fossilized dung) from India show they could feed from ground-level plants up into tree branches — a broad feeding envelope.
Like other dinosaurs, titanosaurs continuously replaced their teeth; analyses suggest an extraordinary replacement rate of about every 20 days for individual teeth, among the fastest known for dinosaurs.
'''' Titanosaurs hatched from relatively small eggs — no larger than grapefruits. The richest nesting evidence comes from Auca Mahuevo in Argentina, where hundreds of nests and thousands of eggs ( about 75 million years old ) include exceptionally preserved embryos and even skin impressions.
The dense clustering of nests suggests repeated use of the same sites and a largely hands-off reproductive strategy: many eggs, little parental care.
Hatchlings were small by adult standards — roughly 1 ft (30 cm) tall, 3 ft (1 m) long and weighing only a few kilograms — and evidence from juvenile bones (for example, Rapetosaurus from Madagascar) shows they were presumed to be precocial, foraging and moving more independently at an early age....
For a long time paleontologists modeled titanosaur growth using slow, reptile-like rates that implied decades-long juvenescence. High-resolution studies of bone microstructure and vascular spaces tell a different story: titanosaurs grew rapidly, with growth rates comparable to large mammals such as whales.
Instead of taking a century to mature, many titanosaurs likely reached adult size within a few decades. Chemical analyses of fossil teeth and eggshells indicate titanosaurs maintained relatively high body temperatures — about 95–100.5 °F (35–38 °C) — warmer than modern crocodilians, roughly similar to many mammals, and slightly cooler than many birds.
Higher body temperatures and dense bone vascularization together helped sustain fast growth.... ''''