All Todays Giraffe

All Todays Giraffe is a species of formerly fictional sauropod-like herbivorous giraffes.

All Todays Giraffe's Description
Giraffes were a group of tall herbivores that lived everywhere across the planet, except Antarctica. They were most likely browsing herbivores that fed on leaves of many species of trees. The fossils of giraffes are incomplete, for example, the two holes on their heads suggested that a large carnivore (possibly sharks) attacked them. Their tails are likely incomplete, so it is possible that they had long whip-like tails as defense against predators such as sharks, bears, predatory dylanuses, and among other carnivores. They likely had foot pads very much like sauropods in which they probably resembled, in appearance, diet, niche, etc. The largest species of giraffe was likely the largest land animal of the Holocene, with some incomplete skeletons suggesting they reached about 45-50 feet long, 22-26 feet tall, and weighed about 15 tons, even bigger than elephants that shared the same world at the same time. They probably had very thick skin as protection against sharp claws and teeth of most animals and even for insulation against the cold in parts of the world like North America, where they probably had blubber as extra protection from the cold. They had only two toes, but they were probably covered in strong muscles around them and had hoof-like toes which like elephants. They probably had the ability to rear on their hind legs and use their front legs and weight to crush their attackers to death. No one knows why the giraffes became extinct at the end of the Holocene period.

Introduction to real life North America
Ever since that all todays giraffes were brought to real life North America, they now flourish alongside all species/beings in modern/real North America, even in cities across the continent.