Predator or Putz?
By Kate Lunau - Thursday, November 12, 2009 - 3 Comments
New evidence suggests that the famous T. Rex wasn’t so scary after all
With its bone-crushing teeth and monstrous proportions, there’s no creature more fearsome in the public imagination than the mighty Tyrannosaurus rex. Sixty-five million years after it went extinct, though, T. Rex is having an identity crisis: in recent months, much of what we know about this iconic monster has been “flipped on its ear,” says Stephen Brusatte, a vertebrate paleontologist at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. Indeed, the tyrannosaur’s size, speed and eating habits have all been thrown into question, leaving dino lovers wondering if the T. Rex really was so fearsome after all.
The North American T. Rex and its Asian cousin, the Tarbosaurus, are two of about 10 dinosaurs that fall into the tyrannosaur family, Brusatte says. Because tyrannosaurs were at the top of the prehistoric food chain, paleontologists long believed different members of this family couldn’t coexist. But a newly described fossil has challenged that assumption. With its thin teeth, horns, and hollow bones, Alioramus altai was a “ballerina” compared to T. Rex, says Brusatte, lead author of the study. Unearthed in Mongolia’s Gobi Desert, Alioramus lived side by side with the Asian Tarbosaurus, suggesting not all tyrannosaurs were “top chiefdom brutes,” he notes. Perhaps because Alioramus wasn’t viewed as competition, Tarbosaurus didn’t seem to mind this smaller, daintier relative. Continue…
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The quest to build a dinosaur
By Kate Lunau - Thursday, August 20, 2009 at 10:00 AM - 52 Comments
Scientists are working to bring dinosaurs back to life. They think they’re getting close.
Jack Horner has a vision. A world-famous paleontologist who gives “an awful lot of lectures,” Horner pictures himself strolling out on stage before a crowd, just as he’s done countless times before. Instead of carrying the standard sheaf of notes or dusty slides, though, he has with him the ultimate prop: a real live dinosaur on a leash. “It’s small, but bigger than a chicken,” he writes in his new book, How to Build a Dinosaur. “Let’s say the size of a turkey, one day maybe even the size of an emu.” The emu-size dinosaur, he adds, “might have a muzzle or a couple of handlers.”If it sounds straight out of Jurassic Park, it’s no coincidence: Horner served as scientific advisor on all three films, and is said to be an inspiration for the rugged protagonist, Alan Grant. Unlike in the movie, though, Horner thinks he can bring back a dinosaur without using its DNA—a crucial difference, because in real life, dino DNA hasn’t been recovered. Horner has a different plan. By making a few genetic tweaks to its modern-day ancestor, the bird, he wants to hatch a dinosaur straight from a chicken egg. Continue…














