Slow and steady or a big spurt? How to grow a ferocious dinosaur
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[November 30, 2020]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Large meat-eating
dinosaurs attained their great size through very different growth
strategies, with some taking a slow and steady path and others
experiencing an adolescent growth spurt, according to scientists who
analyzed slices of fossilized bones.
The researchers examined the annual growth rings - akin to those in tree
trunks - in bones from 11 species of theropods, a broad group spanning
all the big carnivorous dinosaurs including Tyrannosaurus rex and even
birds. The study provides insight into the lives of some of the most
fearsome predators ever to walk the Earth.
The team looked at samples from museums in the United States, Canada,
China and Argentina and even received clearance to cut into bones from
one of the world's most famous T. rex fossils, known as Sue and housed
at the Field Museum in Chicago, using a diamond-tipped saw and drill.
Sue's leg bones - a huge femur and fibula - helped illustrate that T.
rex and its relatives - known as tyrannosaurs - experienced a period of
extreme growth during adolescence and reached full adult size by around
age 20. Sue, measuring about 42 feet (13 metres), lived around 33 years.
Sue inhabited South Dakota about a million years before dinosaurs and
many other species were wiped out by an asteroid impact 66 million years
ago.
Other groups of large theropods tended to have more steady rates of
growth over a longer period of time. That growth strategy was detected
in lineages that arose worldwide earlier in the dinosaur era and later
were concentrated in the southern continents.
Examples included Allosaurus and Acrocanthosaurus from North America,
Cryolophosaurus from Antarctica and a recently discovered as-yet-unnamed
species from Argentina that rivaled T. rex in size. The Argentine
dinosaur, from a group called carcharodontosaurs, did not reach its full
adult size until its 40s and lived to about age 50.
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Geologist Bill Simpson uses a feather duster to clean the
Tyrannosaurus rex fossil known as "Sue" at the Field Museum in
Chicago, Illinois, United States, June 11, 2015. REUTERS/Jim
Young/File Photo
Big theropods share the same general body design, walking on two
legs and boasting large skulls, strong jaws and menacing
teeth.
"Prior to our study, it was known that T. rex grew very quickly, but
it was not clear if all theropod dinosaurs reached gigantic size in
the same way, or if there were multiple ways it was done," said
paleontologist and study lead author Tom Cullen of the North
Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences and North Carolina State
University, also affiliated with the Field Museum.
The research was published this week in the journal Proceedings of
the Royal Society B.
"Theropod dinosaurs represent the largest bipedal animals to have
ever lived and were also the dominant predators in terrestrial
ecosystems for over 150 million years - more than twice as long as
mammals have been dominant," added University of Minnesota
paleontologist and study co-author Peter Makovicky.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Peter Cooney)
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