Science Magazine

A New Tyrannosaur Named King of Gore Discovered

Posted on the 08 November 2013 by Ningauble @AliAksoz

Researchers discovered a new tyrannosaur named ”King of Gore” pushes back the origins of T. rex‘s terrifying family tree to at least 80 million years ago. Lythronax argestes (which literally means “Gore King from the Southwest”) once stalked the shores of western North America in search of prey. It had the same short snout, broad teeth, front-facing eye, and unimpressive forearms as Tyrannosaurus rex, which lived around 68 million years ago.

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At 7.3 meters (24 feet) long and weighing about 2.5 tons, the 80-million-year-old Lythronax was smaller than a T. rex, says the University of Utah’s Mark Loewen, who headed the team reporting the dinosaur’s discovery in PLOS One. T. rex was about 12 meters (40 feet) long and about 4.6 to 6 meters  (15 to 20 feet) tall.

“Obviously we wanted to get ‘king’ in the name,” Loewen says. “Lythronax wasn’t a direct ancestor of T. rex, but they clearly shared a common ancestor, [one] who lived even longer ago.”

That means that western North America, then a separate continent called Laramidia that stretched from Alaska to Mexico, was an original home of the tyrannosaurs.

“Until recently, it looked as if the truly giant, thick-toothed, rounded-snout tyrant dinosaurs appeared really late in dinosaur history,” says dinosaur expertThomas Holtz, Jr., of the University of Maryland in College Park, who was not involved in the study. “The discovery of Lythronax pushes this body form back,” he says.

Loewen also points to the way that evolution isolates some species on separate continents. That allows them to develop advantageous features, such as the powerful jaws of tyrannosaurs. Giants such as T. rex and Tarbosaurus spread across Asia and all of North America during epochs of continental connections, such as the end of the Age of Dinosaurs, which climaxed around 66 million years ago.

A similar pattern seems to have followed for the plant-eating, horned “ceratops” dinosaurs, such as the 80-million year-old Diabloceratops, which are thought to have been prey for tyrannosaurs, say the paleontologists.

“So the style of predation and combat famous in Tyrannosaurus and Triceratops was played out 14 million years earlier in the form of Lythronax and Diabloceratops,” Holtz says.

 

The Lythronax skull and related fossils reported in the study were first spotted by U.S. Bureau of Land Management officials at the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in Kanab, Utah. It required a year of careful excavation in 2010, Loewen says.

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Via: NatGeo


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