Meet the Blikanasaurus! This dinosaur is considered a Sauropod dinosaur, who is from the late Triassic period. Also Fun fact Blikanasaurus had legs that could rival tree trunks. Well, almost.
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from China

seen from Sweden

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Sweden
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from India

seen from Poland
seen from United States
seen from United States
Meet the Blikanasaurus! This dinosaur is considered a Sauropod dinosaur, who is from the late Triassic period. Also Fun fact Blikanasaurus had legs that could rival tree trunks. Well, almost.
An important time in the history of life, the triassic boasts a greater diversity in life than most people realize and it’s much more than just the rise of the dinosaurs.
Blikanasaurus cromptoni
Source: eomao! He does an amazing amount of art, including an ongoing webcomic that sometimes does dinosaurs! It is extremely well done, long, and intricate, so I recommend checking it out. Also, he’s a saint, as he’s not in my paleo-tumblr friend circle, but still sent me a message offering to do any dinosaur I needed the day of (usually this sort of favor is restricted to my friend-circle). I gave him warning for this one, but still, go check out his blog!
Name: Blikanasaurus cromptoni
Name Meaning: Blikana Lizard
First Described: 1985
Described By: Galton & van Heerden
Classification: Dinosauria, Saurischia, Eusaurischia, Sauropodomorpha, Plateosauria, Massopoda, Sauropodiformes, Anchisauria, Sauropoda?, Blikanasauridae
Apparently Blikanasaurus has its own clade... there aren’t any other genera in Blikanasauridae. At any rate, Blikanasaurus was a sauropodomorph very closely related to sauropods, if not a true sauropod itself. It is only known from a single portion of the left lower hind leg; still, there’s a lot we can glean from this. It was probably quadrupedal, and definitely a more derived sauropodomorph; however, whether or not it is a true sauropod is unclear. It was found in the - you guessed it - Lower Elliot Formation of South Africa, near Eastern Cape Province. It lived in the Late Traissic, probably sometime between 228 and 206 million years ago (in the Norian age) like other genera from that formation; however, this is still fairly uncertain. It was an herbivore, like all later members of the Sauropodomorph group.
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blikanasaurus
http://www.prehistoric-wildlife.com/species/b/blikanasaurus.html
Shout out goes to bookoisseur!