T. rex finds a dangerous meal as
Smithsonian dinosaur hall reopens
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[June 12, 2019]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A dramatic scene
from the twilight of the age of dinosaurs - a T. rex feasting upon a
horned plant-eater named Triceratops - will greet visitors when an
ambitious new fossil hall opens on Saturday at the Smithsonian
Institution's National Museum of Natural History.
Construction of the hall at the federally administered Washington museum
cost $110 million: $70 million in public funds and $40 million in
private funds. It replaces a fossil hall that was last renovated in 1981
and closed in 2014, bringing up-to-date scientific information to an
exhibit that had become out-of-date at one of the world's leading
natural history museums.
The Tyrannosaurus rex, found in Montana in 1988 by amateur fossil hunter
Kathy Wankel, measures 38 feet long (11.5 meters). The Triceratops,
nicknamed Hatcher, is 20 feet (6 meters) long. The skeletons are mounted
with the T. rex, one of the largest meat-eating dinosaurs, standing over
the fallen Triceratops.
"I knew that we needed something dramatic for what would inevitably be a
centerpiece of the hall. And these are two dinosaur species that
co-existed 68-66 million years ago in western North America, so it would
represent a possible real-world interaction," said Matthew Carrano, the
museum's curator of dinosauria.
"But we've deliberately left the scenario open, as to whether this
represents T. rex killing Triceratops or scavenging an already dead
individual. The idea is to better portray the role of an apex predator,
which is often opportunistic. In life, I imagine that even T. rex would
have favored easier meals than a healthy, adult Triceratops – if such
were available: young or sick or elderly individuals, for example,"
Carrano added.
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An Tyrannosaurus Rex skeleton is seen during a media preview for the
reopening of the Smithsonian’s Natural History Museum dinosaur and
fossil hall after undergoing $110-million renovation in Washington,
U.S., June 4, 2019. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Triceratops was among the largest of four-legged horned dinosaurs
called ceratopsians, reaching up to about 30 feet (9 meters) long,
with horns above its eyes and nose, and a bony shield protecting its
neck.
An asteroid impact 66 million years ago doomed the dinosaurs and
many other land and sea creatures.
Other dinosaurs on display include: a rearing Camarasaurus - one of
the long-necked, four-legged sauropods; a 90-foot-long
(27-meter-long) Diplodocus, another sauropod; a meat-eating
Allosaurus sitting, guarding a nest of eggs; and the tank-like
armored Euoplocephalus.
The hall also displays fossils such as mammals and marine reptiles.
Carrano said he hopes visitors will gain "a sense of dinosaurs as
once-living animals, in some ways not all that different from some
animals today: they ate, slept, breathed, et cetera."
"I don't want them to seem entirely alien, even if they are awesome
and bizarre in other ways," Carrano said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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