The world’s biggest dinosaur footprint — measuring almost 5 feet, 9 inches — has been discovered in what researchers are calling “Australia’s Jurassic Park.”

A sauropod, a long-necked herbivore, left the gargantuan footprint in the Walmadany area of the Dampier Peninsula in Western Australia, CNN reported.

The behemoth would have stood about 17 feet, 9 inches high at its hips.

“The giant footprints are no doubt spectacular,” Steve Salisbury, the lead author of the study that examined nearly two dozen tracks along the coastline of the peninsula, told the network. “There’s nothing that comes close [to this length].”

A team of paleontologists found the “most diverse assemblage of dinosaur tracks in the world” in 127- to 140 million-year-old rocks, the University of Queensland said in a press release.

Salisbury, a professor at the University of Queensland, told CNN that the conditions on the peninsula are ideal for the creation of these tracks and their preservation. His team worked in the area for more than five years.

“This is the most diverse dinosaur track fauna ever recorded,” Salisbury said. “If we went back in time 130 million years ago, we would’ve seen all these different dinosaurs walking over this coastline. It must’ve been quite a sight.”

Prior to this finding, the largest discovered dinosaur footprint was a 3-foot-9 track left by a carnivorous dinosaur, found last July in Bolivia, CNN reported.

The researchers also found the only confirmed evidence for stegosaurs in Australia, the release said.

The research has been published as the 2016 Memoir of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology.