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Sunday, October 17, 2010

T. rex may have been a cannibal, says study

PTI
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This June 28, 2005 photo shows the skeletal remains of Jane, the prized juvenile T. rex on exhibit at the Burpee Museum of Natural History in Rockford, Illinois. Palaeontologists have found evidence that the ancient giants the ancient giants might have cannibalised one another.
AP This June 28, 2005 photo shows the skeletal remains of Jane, the prized juvenile T. rex on exhibit at the Burpee Museum of Natural History in Rockford, Illinois. Palaeontologists have found evidence that the ancient giants the ancient giants might have cannibalised one another.
Palaeontologists have found evidence that Tyrannosaurus rex, the largest and most dreaded dinosaur that roamed North America 66 million years ago, might have been a cannibal which sometimes devoured its own species.
The scientists, who based their study on the bite marks on the carnivores’ bones, believe the marks were made by other T. rexes.
The marks suggest that the giants were killed and then eaten out by victorious T. rexes, the researchers reported in the journal PLoS ONE.
While searching through dinosaur fossil collections for another study on dinosaur bones with mammal tooth marks, Nick Longrich, a researcher from Yale University, discovered a bone with especially large gouges in them.
Given the age and location of the fossil, the marks had to be made by T. rex, Mr. Longrich said. “They’re the kind of marks that any big carnivore could have made, but T. rex was the only big carnivore in western North America 65 million years ago,” Mr. Longrich said.
It was only after discovering the bite marks were from a T. rex that Mr. Longrich realised the bone itself also belonged to the behemoth.
After searching through a few dozen T. rex bones from several different museum fossil collections, he discovered a total of three foot bones (including two toes) and one arm bone that showed evidence of T. rex cannibalism, representing a significant percentage.
“It’s surprising how frequent it appears to have been,” Mr. Longrich said. “We’re not exactly sure what that means.”
The marks are definitely the result of feeding. If two T. rex fought to the death, the victor might have made a meal out of his adversary, said Mr. Longrich.
He said: “Modern big carnivores do this all the time. It’s a convenient way to take out the competition and get a bit of food at the same time.”
However, the marks appear to have been made some time after death, Mr. Longrich said, meaning that if one dinosaur killed another, it might have eaten most of the meat off the more accessible parts of the carcass before returning to pick at the smaller foot and arm bones.
While only one other dinosaur species, Majungatholus, is known to have been a cannibal, Mr. Longrich said the practice was likely more common than we think and a closer examination of fossil bones could turn up more evidence that other species also preyed on one another.
The finding is a big clue into the obscure eating habits of these enormous predators. While today’s large carnivores often hunt together in packs, T. rex likely acted on their own, Mr. Longrich said.
“These animals were some of the largest terrestrial carnivores of all time. There’s a big mystery around what and how they ate, and this research helps to uncover one piece of the puzzle.”

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