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Showing posts with label T Rex. Show all posts
Showing posts with label T Rex. Show all posts

Saturday, May 10, 2014

"Pinocchio Rex": T. rex's long-snouted cousin discovered

Dead men tell no lies, but perhaps dead dinosaurs do. A new dinosaur species found in China and nicknamed "Pinocchio Rex" was a long-snouted cousin of Tyrannosaurus rex.

The narrow-nosed beast was slightly smaller and more slender than T. rex, but was still a top predator, researchers say. It roamed the Earth more than 66 million years ago during the Late Cretaceous period, just before the space-rock impact that is believed to have wiped out the dinosaurs.
The new creature heralds the existence of a new clade, or group, of dinosaurs, according to the study detailed May 7 in the journal Nature Communications.

"People have a picture of tyrannosaurus apex predators -- the biggest, baddest, meanest dinosaurs," said study researcher Steve Brusatte, a paleontologist at the University of Edinburgh, in Scotland.

The new dinosaur fits that image in some ways, but not quite as closely as T. rex does. Although big and at the top of the food chain, the long-nosed dino wouldn't have been able to "crunch through bone" like T. rex, Brusatte told Live Science. [Image Gallery: The Life of T. Rex]

Long-nosed dinos

Researchers previously found the complete skull and parts of the neck, back, hind limbs and tail of the new dinosaur, Qianzhousaurus sinensis, at a construction site in the Nanxiong Formation in southeastern China. Brusatte and his colleagues then analyzed the fossils, which are now housed at the Ganzhou Museum in Ganzhou City, China.

The new specimen had a long snout with many teeth, and horns on its nose. The creature probably weighed a little less than a ton and was probably 25 to 30 feet (7.5 to 9 meters) long, compared with a full-grown T. rex, which weighed about 5 tons and was about 40 feet (12 m) long, the researchers said.

"It really is a beautiful specimen," Brusatte said.

Previously, scientists had discovered two other long-snouted tyrannosaur fossils, from the Alioramus genus, in Mongolia, but researchers had debated whether these represented a new class of dinosaur or merely juveniles of a known tyrannosaur.

'Pinocchio Rex,' which is twice the size of these other dinosaurs and was close to adulthood when it perished, offers "pretty clear evidence" that these long-snouted fossils represent a new group of tyrannosaurs, Brusatte said. The fact that specimens have been found from Mongolia to southeastern China suggests the animals were fairly widespread, he added.

Top predator?

The long-muzzled beast likely lived alongside other tyrannosaurs, such as Tarbosaurus, the Asian equivalent of T. rex. But "Pinnochio Rex" didn't compete with those species directly, because it probably hunted other, smaller prey, researchers said.

"It's a cool specimen," said Thomas Holtz, a vertebrate paleontologist at the University of Maryland, in College Park, who was not involved in the study but was a reviewer on the paper. "It helps show that tyrannosaurs were pretty diverse and weren't all the big bruisers that Tyrannosaurus or Tarbosaurus were."

Brusatte and colleagues said Pinocchio Rex was a "top predator" in its ecosystem, likely feeding on small, feathered dinosaurs or lizards.

David Burnham, a paleontologist at the University of Kansas, in Lawrence, said the description of the specimen's long snout and tiny front teeth more resembles a fish-eating creature such as a crocodile than a top predator.

Though that idea is interesting, Brusatte said, there are many anatomical differences between long-snouted, fish-eating crocodiles and the long-snouted tyrannosaurs.

Mark Norell, a paleontologist at the American Museum of Natural History, in New York, agreed with Brusatte's interpretation. "I think [the new specimen is] fairly closely related to Alioramus," the previously discovered long-snouted dinosaurs, Norell told Live Science.

The study researchers say they expect more specimens from this species and others will be discovered in Asia in the coming years.

"People are finding new species of dinosaur about once a week," Brusatte said. "China is the frontier in paleontology now."

Source: Here
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Friday, December 6, 2013

T. Rex Predecessor Ruled Before Popular Dino Became King


Paleontologists have discovered a new apex predator dinosaur so large, it may just be the largest species of carnivorous dinosaur to have ever lived in North America.

The dinosaur, named Siats meekerorum a.k.a. "Man Eating Monster,” made its debut on the newest issue of Nature Communications. The fossil specimen of Siats was that of a juvenile, but even then, it’s estimated to measure at least 30 feet long, weighing in at around 9,000 pounds.
The dino’s name Siats is a tribute to the legends of the local Ute native tribe of Utah that tell of a man-eating monster. According to the study’s lead author Lindsay Zanno, Siats, being a juvenile still had plenty of room to grow. In fact, the juvenile Siats and an adult Acrocanthosaurus  only had a femur length difference of 4 inches.

Zanno, director of the Paleontology and Geology Research Laboratory at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, added that their upper estimates of Siats’ body size gives it a body mass larger than T. rex, which occupies the number 1 spot in the ‘man-eater’ list. Siats is classified as a carcharodontosaur, a type of carnivorous dinosaur that’s not only enormous, but also had huge, jagged teeth.

He adds that the existence of an apex predator like Siats prevented T. rex from growing to become the monster that it was. It was only when the large beasts of the time mysyeriously died out that tyrannousaur-type dinos were able to flourish and occupy the spot of apex predator.

Read the full story on Discovery News.





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Saturday, November 9, 2013

Predatory 'king of gore' dinosaur discovered

A new super-predator dinosaur that roamed the Earth 80 million years ago has been discovered in southern Utah.
Predatory 'king of gore' dinosaur discovered
It was closely related to its slightly larger relative, Tyrannosaurus rex, but lived earlier, making it the largest living land predator of its time.

Source: Here
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Monday, July 9, 2012

Tyrannosaurus Rex


If you grew up in the 90s, you’ve probably seen one of the most epic movies to ever hit the big screen. In 1993, Steven Spielberg directed the movie Jurassic Park, a film that tells the story of an island with a dinosaur theme park that houses real dinosaurs, cloned from DNA found in mosquitoes trapped in amber and brought back to life. John Hammond, the parks owner, invites four individuals, together with his grandchildren, to check the park out for the first time. However, a worker from the park tries to take the dinosaur embryos in a bid to sell it on the black market, causing the whole electricity system to shut off. It then becomes a survival game for everyone on the island as the dinosaurs break free of their enclosures.
Tyrannosaurus Rex
One of the most remembered scenes from the movie was when the Tyrannosaurus Rex walked across the electric fence while the people hid inside the car.  Tyrannosaurus is Greek for tyrant and lizard, which perfectly describes what a T-Rex. This dinosaur can grow to about 12.3 m or 40 feet tall and once roamed parts of western North America. These giant bipedal carnivores walked on two legs and had short arms and fed off smaller dinosaurs such as the ceratopsians and hadrosaurs. However, many studies also support the theory that these dinosaurs were also scavengers and searched other dead dinosaurs for food. They have large skulls that house powerful, bone crushing jaws and sharp teeth. Their large skulls paint the image of an animal capable of making very loud roars that can e heard a mile away.

Contrary to popular belief, a Tyrannosaurus Rex does not have the brain the size of a walnut. Tyrannosaurus Rexes are actually very intelligent dinosaurs, with their brains much bigger then a human brain.
Tyrannosaurus Rex image

Tyrannosaurus Rex pictures

Tyrannosaurus Rex picture

Tyrannosaurus Rex
 Tyrannosaurus Rex Video
 

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