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I recently asked how big a giant pig would need to be in order to carry a 10 foot tall (3.0 meters) and 272 kilogram (599.66 pounds) humanoid (wearing plate armour or an ankle-length cuirass with parapleuridia made of interlaced narrow plates) on its back. I learnt that said pig would weigh approximately 1 metric ton and after doing some detective work, I theorised that this pig would stand around 12 feet tall and have a 11 foot long body.
Now here's the tricky bit.
This type of pig has a physiology akin to that of Entelodonts (prehistoric omnivorous pig-like mammals related to hippos and whales) and are ridden by mentioned 10 foot tall humanoids acting as cataphracti (heavily armored cavalry) using horned saddles similar to those used by the Sarmatians. This animal obviously needs to be able to move quickly in short bursts and support its massive weight in order to function effectively as a battle charger. What sort of leg structure would this pig need to fulfil both functions?
In Latin and if you insist on ending with -ii, cataphractarii; or, if you Latinize the Greek word directly, cataphracti. In any case, not **cataphractii, which looks like the plural of a non-existent **cataphractius. – AlexP – 2018-04-07T10:39:06.177
1I love how the closest living equivalents of pigs are horses and rhinos and elephants – Adi219 – 2018-04-07T15:55:56.143
1@Adi219 : I love how a quadruped ends up 12 feet tall yet only 11 feet long (especially one supposedly based on an animal that we can clearly see from the fossil record is longer than it's tall) :) – Pelinore – 2018-04-08T10:51:19.830
1@Pelinore I think the OP might want to recheck their calculations – Adi219 – 2018-04-08T10:59:28.910
I would say to look at hippos. Is it just me or do hippos look like some kind of pork? – monsto – 2018-04-09T21:44:52.470