Dinosaur Size Comparison

Compare the sizes of any two dinosaurs side by side with an optional human figure for scale. Visualize length, height, and weight differences between popular species from tiny raptors to massive sauropods — all drawn to the same scale in crisp SVG.

Finder

Quick presets

Longueur

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Height

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Poids

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How to Use

  1. 1
    Pick two dinosaurs

    Select any two dinosaurs from the dropdowns, or tap a preset pairing to load a classic matchup.

  2. 2
    Toggle the human reference

    Turn on the 1.75 m human figure to see how each dinosaur compares to a person standing beside it.

  3. 3
    Read the size ratios

    Use the length, height, and weight ratios below the SVG scale to see exactly how much bigger or smaller each dinosaur is.

About

Dinosaur size has fascinated the public since Richard Owen coined the word "Dinosauria" in 1842, but turning fossil bones into reliable numbers is a surprisingly recent science. Early 19th and 20th century reconstructions often exaggerated length and underestimated weight because paleontologists had only incomplete specimens and compared them to mammals rather than to the reptiles and birds that dinosaurs actually resemble. Modern paleobiology combines detailed skeletal measurements, comparative anatomy with living archosaurs, and computer modelling to produce size estimates that are both more conservative and more defensible than the figures of a century ago.

Body length is the easiest dimension to measure. When a mostly complete skeleton is available, researchers lay the articulated bones flat and measure the midline of the spine from the front of the snout to the tip of the tail. For fragmentary fossils, total length is scaled up from individual elements such as the femur or humerus, using proportions from better preserved relatives. Height is more ambiguous, since it depends on posture — whether a bipedal dinosaur is measured standing upright at the hips or with the neck raised, and whether a sauropod is measured at the shoulder, back, or top of the head. Reputable sources clearly state which definition they use, and this tool uses hip height for bipeds and shoulder height for quadrupeds to allow fair comparisons.

Estimating weight is the hardest problem of all. The two main methods are scaling equations based on limb bone circumference and volumetric models built from 3D scans or digitized skeletons. Circumference methods assume that stronger bones support heavier bodies, following regressions calibrated on living animals. Volumetric models rebuild the body as a series of geometric shapes, assign an average density close to that of a living bird or crocodilian, and calculate mass directly. Modern studies that combine both approaches for well-known species such as Tyrannosaurus rex converge on a body mass around 8,400 kilograms, with published ranges between 6,000 and 10,000 kilograms depending on the specimen and method. These are the kinds of averages used throughout this comparison tool so that popular dinosaurs can be placed side by side with non-dinosaur reference animals like elephants, rhinoceroses, and giraffes without losing scientific credibility.

FAQ

How are dinosaur sizes estimated?
Paleontologists estimate dinosaur size from fossil bones using comparative anatomy with living reptiles and birds. Length is measured from snout to tail tip along the spine. Height is typically reported at the hips for bipedal dinosaurs or at the shoulder for quadrupeds. Weight is calculated from limb bone circumference, 3D volumetric models of the body, or scaling equations derived from modern animals. Because fossils are rarely complete, published values usually represent averages across multiple specimens and confidence ranges rather than exact measurements.
What was the biggest and smallest dinosaur?
The largest dinosaurs were titanosaur sauropods such as Argentinosaurus and Patagotitan, estimated at 30–35 metres long and 60–80 tonnes in mass. The smallest adult non-avian dinosaur currently described is Microraptor at around 77 centimetres including tail, weighing about one kilogram. If modern birds are counted, the bee hummingbird (around 5 cm) is technically the smallest living dinosaur, since birds are classified as surviving theropod dinosaurs.
Why does length not always match weight?
Length and weight are loosely correlated but not proportional. A long, slender sauropod like Diplodocus (27 m) weighed roughly 14 tonnes, while a shorter but much stockier titanosaur like Argentinosaurus (35 m) weighed 70 tonnes — five times heavier for only 30 percent more length. Body shape, bone density, posture, and muscle mass all affect weight independently of length, which is why comparisons using only length can be misleading.
How do paleontologists measure fossils?
Paleontologists measure fossils directly with calipers, tape measures, and laser scanners in the field or laboratory. Where only partial skeletons are available, missing elements are reconstructed by mirroring the opposite side, scaling from related species, or fitting digital 3D models. Bone length ratios established from complete specimens allow total body length to be estimated from a single limb bone. Journal publications report the specimen number, preservation state, and measurement method so other researchers can verify the data.
How accurate are these size estimates?
Published dinosaur sizes are scientific best estimates based on the most complete fossil evidence available, but they carry uncertainty. Length estimates for well-known species are typically accurate to within about 10 percent, while weight estimates can vary by 30 percent or more between methods. Estimates are regularly revised as new fossils are discovered or better modelling techniques are developed. This tool uses widely cited averages from recent peer-reviewed literature, but treat every number as a reasonable approximation rather than an exact measurement.