Hadrosaur Hightails It Titelbild

Hadrosaur Hightails It

Hadrosaur Hightails It

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Recently, scientists discovered the fossil of a hadrosaur, a duckbilled dinosaur, which was bitten by a Tyrannosaurus. A bite on a fossil is not that unusual, but this one helped settle an argument. Over the past few decades, some paleontologists maintained that T. rex was a ferocious hunter. Newer theories pointed to his useless forelimbs, small eyes, and huge olfactory chambers. He wouldn’t have been able to grasp prey and may have had poor vision—but he would have been able to smell a rotting carcass from miles away. In other words, he was likely a scavenger. But the hadrosaur tail vertebrae in this fossil were fused together around a T. rex tooth—the wound had healed. This meant that the hadrosaur was alive when it happened, and lived on. Which strongly suggests that T. rex did in fact chase and catch it—almost. This brought up another question: given his weaknesses, how did the tyrannosaur do it? A different set of scientists analyzed the leg mechanics of T. rex for bone stress. Proponents of “T. rex the hunter” had pointed to his speed, previously estimated at over 30 miles per hour. But this new research suggests that the foot bones, carrying his 7 tons of weight, would have shattered at that pace. The tyrannosaur’s top speed was probably just 12 miles per hour. And maybe that’s why the duckbill got away—T. rex may have been an occasional hunter, but maybe not a very good one.
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