That is 4,000 times bigger than the estimated 45 kilogram Pakicetus, and 30 times bigger than the current largest land animal, the African Elephant, which weighs around 6,000 kilograms.
So when did whales lose their legs? Well, over the 15 million years following Pakicetus, they transitioned to a solely aquatic lifestyle and their limbs slowly became smaller and smaller.
As fish-eaters, this walking monstrosity would need to reside near coastlines or riverbeds so it could spend its days fishing in the water, similar to Pakicetus who ate fish as well as small land animals.
Pakicetus, which is an extinct genus of amphibious cetacean of the family Pakicetidae, was endemic to the Eocene of Pakistan. The vast majority of paleontologists regard it as the most basal whale.