The type species, A. bauri, was named by Robert Broom in 1904 from a dorsal vertebra, femur and an ungual phalanx. The fossils were recovered in 1903 from a quarry by workmen who did not recognize them as dinosaur specimens, so many of the samples were made into bricks and thus destroyed.[5] The animal may have been around 9 m (30 ft) long when it died.[6]
References
^ Romer, A.S. (1956). Osteology of the Reptiles. University of Chicago Press:Chicago, 1-772. ISBN 0-89464985-X.
^ Steel, R. (1970). Saurischia. Handbuch der Paläoherpetologie/Encyclopedia of Paleoherpetology. Part 14. Gustav Fischer Verlag:Stuttgart p. 1-87.
^ McIntosh, J.S. (1990). Sauropoda. In: Weishampel, D.B., Dodson, P., and Osmólska, H. (eds.). The Dinosauria. University of California Press:Berkeley, 345-401. ISBN 0-520-06727-4.
^ Upchurch, P.M., Barrett, P.M., and Dodson, P. (2004). Sauropoda. In: Weishampel, D.B., Dodson, P., and Osmólska, H. (eds.). The Dinosauria (2nd edition). University of California Press:Berkeley, 259-322. ISBN 0-520-24209-2.
^ Broom, R. (1904). On the occurrence of an opisthocoelian dinosaur (Algoasaurus bauri) in the Cretaceous beds of South Africa. Geological Magazine, decade 5, 1(483):445-447.
^ Lessem, D., and Glut, D.F. 1993. The Dinosaur Society Dinosaur Encyclopedia. Random House, Inc.:New York, p. 16. ISBN 0-679-41770-2.