Babies from famed carnivorous dinosaur group were 'born ready' to hunt
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[January 28, 2021]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Scientists for the
first time have found embryonic remains from the group of ferocious
meat-eating dinosaurs that includes T. rex - fossilized jaw and claw
bones that show these record-size babies looked a lot like adults and
were "born ready" to hunt.
The fossils, the researchers said on Tuesday, represented two species
from the group called tyrannosaurs, the apex predators in Asia and North
America during the Cretaceous Period toward the end of the dinosaur age.
The bones indicated that these were bigger than any other known dinosaur
babies - three feet (1 meter) long, or the size of a medium dog - and
hatched from what must have been enormous eggs, perhaps exceeding the
17-inch (43-cm) length of the largest dinosaur eggs currently known.
The roughly 77 million-year-old jawbone, about 1.2 inches (3 cm) in
length, was unearthed in Montana and may belong to a species called
Daspletosaurus. The roughly 72 million-year-old wedge-shaped claw came
from Canada's Alberta province and may belong to a species called
Albertosaurus.
Both are slightly smaller cousins of Tyrannosaurus rex. The
largest-known tyrannosaurs topped 40 feet (12 meters) long and 8 tons in
weight.
The jaw possesses distinctive tyrannosaur traits, including a deep
groove inside and a prominent chin.
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A baby tyrannosaur from the Cretaceous Period of North America,
based on partial fossils unearthed in the U.S. state of Montana and
in the Canadian province of Alberta, is seen in an undated artist's
rendition. Julius Csotonyi/Handout via REUTERS
University of Edinburgh paleontologist Greg Funston, lead author of
the research published in the Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences,
said the scientists were amazed at how similar the embryonic bones
were to older juvenile and adult tyrannosaurs and noted that the
jaws boasted functional teeth.
"So although we can't get a complete picture, what we can see looks
very similar to the adults," Funston said.
It appears that tyrannosaurs, Funston added, were "born ready to
hunt, already possessing some of the key adaptations that gave
tyrannosaurs their powerful bites. So it's likely that they were
capable of hunting fairly quickly after birth, but we need more
fossils to tell exactly how fast that was."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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