Happy Feet? More like STOMP! The 6ft 6in prehistoric penguins that would tower over most men today

Palaeontologists discovered fossils of the flightless bird in Antarctica

New find beats previous record for biggest penguin by a foot and a half

The biggest penguins today are Emperor penguins, which reach four foot



The biggest penguins alive today: An Emperor Penguin stands on sea ice near McMurdo Station, Antarctica. They can reach heights of 3ft 11in tall

A penguin that stood taller than most men waddled across the southern hemisphere millions of years ago, scientists say.

Argentine experts have discovered the fossils of a 6ft 6in (2m) tall penguin that lived in prehistoric Antarctica 34million years ago.

Paleontologists with the Natural Sciences Museum of La Plata province, near the capital Buenos Aires, said the remains were found on the icy southern continent.

'This is the largest penguin known to date in terms of height and body mass,' said researcher Carolina Acosta.

The modern day record is held by emperor penguins, which reach heights of about 3ft 11in.

Lead researcher Marcelo Reguero added that the find will 'allow for a more intensive and complex study of the ancestors of modern penguins.'

The previous record for the tallest prehistoric penguins had been held by a five foot tall bird discovered in Peru two years ago and nicknamed the Water King.

The Water King , which lived more than 36million years ago, was found by a Peruvian student in the Paracas Reserve on Peru's eastern coastline.

Like the latest find, it lived at a time half way between the end of the dinosaurs and the modern day when the Earth was much warmer than now and when when gigantic prehistoric birds and mammals roamed the world.

NATURE'S MOST LOYAL LOVERS

As the UK divorce rate continues to soar, a new study has today shown how marital harmony is thriving in the penguin world.

Research has revealed a pair of Magellanic penguins as among the most faithful in the animal kingdom.

The couple have remained loyal to each other over a 16-year period, in spite of spending thousands of miles apart during their winter trips.

The findings come after a 30-year study of the breed where researchers placed metal identity bands on the flippers of 50,000 birds on the southern coast of Argentina.

But unlike the Antarctic bird, and their modern day descendants, the flightless bird lived in the tropics - where it dived into warm seas using a seven-inch long spear-like beak to hunt for fish.

In its next expedition to Antarctica, during the region’s summer, the Argentine team will hunt for more fossils of the newly discovered species.

They hope to gather more information about its anatomy and how the giant penguin might have moved.

All the giant penguins that once roamed the prehistoric earth died out, leaving behind the smaller varieties which are today found only on the Antarctic.