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Tarbosaurus

Tarbosaurus (/ˌtɑːrbəˈsɔːrəs/ TAR-bə-SOR-əs; meaning "alarming lizard") is a genus of tyrannosaurine theropod dinosaur that lived in Asia about 70 million years ago, during the Maastrichtian age at the end of the Late Cretaceous period, considered to contain a single known species: Tarbosaurus bataar. Fossils have been recovered from the Nemegt Formation of Mongolia, with more fragmentary remains found further afield in the Subashi Formation of China.

Tarbosaurus
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian), 70 Ma
Possible Campanian record[1][2]
Skeleton on exhibit in Maryland Science Center
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Clade: Saurischia
Clade: Theropoda
Family: Tyrannosauridae
Subfamily: Tyrannosaurinae
Clade: Tyrannosaurini
Genus: Tarbosaurus
Maleev, 1955b
Type species
Tarbosaurus bataar
Maleev, 1955a
Synonyms
Genus synonymy
  • Shanshanosaurus
    Dong, 1977
  • Maleevosaurus
    Carpenter, 1992
  • Jenghizkhan
    Olshevsky, 1995
Species synonymy
  • Tyrannosaurus bataar
    Maleev, 1955a
  • Gorgosaurus novojilovi
    Maleev, 1955b
  • Tarbosaurus efremovi
    Maleev, 1955b
  • Gorgosaurus lancinator
    Maleev, 1955b
  • Deinodon novojilovi
    (Maleev, 1955b) Kuhn, 1965
  • Deinodon lancinator
    (Maleev, 1955b) Kuhn, 1965
  • Aublysodon lancinator
    (Maleev, 1955b) Charig, 1967
  • Aublysodon novojilovi
    (Maleev, 1955b) Charig, 1967
  • Shanshanosaurus huoyanshanensis
    Dong, 1977
  • Tyrannosaurus efremovi
    (Maleev, 1955b) Rozhdestvensky, 1977
  • Tarbosaurus novojilovi
    (Maleev, 1955b) Olshevsky, 1978
  • Aublysodon huoyanshanensis
    (Dong, 1977) Paul, 1988a
  • Albertosaurus novojilovi
    (Maleev, 1955b) Mader & Bradley, 1989
  • Maleevosaurus novojilovi
    (Maleev, 1955b) Carpenter, 1992
  • Jenghizkhan bataar
    (Maleev, 1955a) Olshevsky, 1995
  • Tyrannosaurus novojilovi
    (Maleev, 1955b) Glut, 1997
  • ?Raptorex kriegsteini
    Sereno et al., 2009

Although many species have been named, modern paleontologists recognize only one species, T. bataar. Some experts see this species as an Asian representative of the North American genus Tyrannosaurus, which would make the genus Tarbosaurus redundant. Tarbosaurus and Tyrannosaurus, if not synonymous, are considered to be very closely related genera. Alioramus, also from Mongolia, has previously been thought by some authorities to be the closest relative of Tarbosaurus, though this has since been disproven with the discovery of Qianzhousaurus and the description of the tyrannosaurine tribe Alioramini.

Like most known tyrannosaurids, Tarbosaurus was a large bipedal predator, with the type specimen measuring approximately 10 metres (33 ft) long, 3 metres (9.8 ft) tall at the hips, and weighing up to 4.5–5 metric tons (5.0–5.5 short tons). It had a unique locking mechanism in its jaw, equipped with about sixty large teeth, and the smallest arms relative to body size of all tyrannosaurids, renowned for their disproportionately tiny, two-fingered hands.

Tarbosaurus lived in a humid floodplain criss-crossed by river channels. In this environment, it was an apex predator preying on other large dinosaurs, like the hadrosaurids Saurolophus and Barsboldia or the sauropod Nemegtosaurus. Tarbosaurus is represented by dozens of fossil specimens, including several complete skulls and skeletons. These remains have allowed scientific studies focusing on its phylogeny, skull mechanics, and brain structure.

Discovery and naming edit

 
Holotype skull PIN 551–1, Museum of Paleontology, Moscow

In 1946, a joint Soviet-Mongolian expedition to the Gobi Desert in the Ömnögovi Province turned up a large theropod skull and some vertebrae from the Nemegt Formation. In 1955, Evgeny Maleev, a Soviet paleontologist, made this specimen the holotype (PIN 551–1) of a new species, which he called Tyrannosaurus bataar.[3] The specific name is a misspelling of the Mongolian word баатар/baatar, meaning "hero".[4] In the same year, Maleev also described and named three new theropod skulls, each associated with skeletal remains discovered by the same expedition in 1948 and 1949. The first of these, PIN 551–2, was named Tarbosaurus efremovi, a new generic name composed of the Ancient Greek words τάρβος (tarbos), meaning "terror", "alarm", "awe", or "reverence", and σαυρος (sauros), meaning "lizard",[5] and the species was named after Ivan Yefremov, a Russian paleontologist and science fiction author. The other two, PIN 553-1 and PIN 552–2, were also named as new species and assigned to the North American genus Gorgosaurus as G. lancinator and G. novojilovi, respectively. All three of these latter specimens are smaller than the first.[6]

 
Specimen PIN 553–1, holotype of Gorgosaurus lancinator, in death pose

A 1965 paper by A. K. Rozhdestvensky recognized all of Maleev's specimens as different growth stages of the same species, which he believed to be distinct from the North American Tyrannosaurus. He created a new combination, Tarbosaurus bataar, to include all the specimens described in 1955 and newer material.[7] Later authors, including Maleev himself,[8] agreed with Rozhdestvensky's analysis, although some used the name Tarbosaurus efremovi instead of T. bataar.[9] American paleontologist Ken Carpenter re-examined the material in 1992. He concluded that it belonged to the genus Tyrannosaurus, as originally published by Maleev, and lumped all the specimens into the species Tyrannosaurus bataar (except the remains that Maleev had named Gorgosaurus novojilovi). Carpenter thought this specimen represented a separate, smaller genus of tyrannosaurid, which he called Maleevosaurus novojilovi.[10] George Olshevsky created the new generic name Jenghizkhan (after Genghis Khan) for Tyrannosaurus bataar in 1995, while also recognizing Tarbosaurus efremovi and Maleevosaurus novojilovi, for a total of three distinct, contemporaneous genera from the Nemegt Formation.[11] A 1999 study subsequently reclassified Maleevosaurus as a juvenile Tarbosaurus.[12] All research published since 1999 recognizes only a single species, which is either called Tarbosaurus bataar[13][14][15] or Tyrannosaurus bataar.[16]

After the original Soviet-Mongolian expeditions in the 1940s, Polish-Mongolian joint expeditions to the Gobi Desert began in 1963 and continued until 1971, recovering many new fossils, including new specimens of Tarbosaurus from the Nemegt Formation.[4] Expeditions involving Japanese and Mongolian scientists between 1993 and 1998,[17] as well as private expeditions hosted by Canadian paleontologist Phil Currie around the turn of the 21st century, discovered and collected even more Tarbosaurus material.[18][19] More than 30 specimens are known, including more than 15 skulls and several complete postcranial skeletons.[13]

Poached specimens edit

 
Tarbosaurus fossils that were smuggled to the US, and subsequently returned to Mongolia, at New York

Tarbosaurus fossils are only found around the Gobi Desert of Mongolia and China, both of which ban their export, though some specimens have been looted by private collectors.[20] A $1 million smuggling deal was uncovered when suspicions were raised about a catalog put out by Heritage Auctions for an event in New York City on May 20, 2012. By Mongolian law, any specimen found in the Gobi Desert was to rest at an appropriate Mongolian institution and there was little reasonable doubt that the Tarbosaurus bataar advertised on the catalog was a stolen one. The president of Mongolia and many paleontologists raised objections to the sale, which led to a last-minute investigation that confirmed that it was a specimen that can only be found in the Gobi Desert, rightfully belonging to Mongolia.[21] During the court case (United States v. One Tyrannosaurus Bataar Skeleton), Eric Prokopi, the smuggler, pleaded guilty to illegal smuggling and the dinosaur was returned to Mongolia in 2013, where it is temporarily displayed on Sukhbaatar Square, the center of the city of Ulaanbaatar.[22] Prokopi had sold the dinosaur with a partner and fellow commercial hunter in England named Christopher Moore.[23] The case led to the repatriation of dozens of Mongolian dinosaurs, including several skeletons of Tarbosaurus bataar.[24]

Synonyms edit

 
The pieces of IVPP V4878, described as Shanshanosaurus huoyanshanensis

Chinese paleontologists discovered a partial skull and skeleton of a small theropod (IVPP V4878) in the Xinjiang Autonomous Region of China in the mid-1960s. In 1977, Dong Zhiming described this specimen, which was recovered from the Subashi Formation in Shanshan County, as a new genus and species, Shanshanosaurus huoyanshanensis.[25] Gregory S. Paul recognized Shanshanosaurus as a tyrannosaurid in 1988, referring it to the now-defunct genus Aublysodon.[26] Dong and Currie later re-examined the specimen and deemed it to be a juvenile of a larger species of tyrannosaurine. These authors refrained from assigning it to any particular genus, but suggested Tarbosaurus as a possibility.[27]

Albertosaurus periculosus, Tyrannosaurus luanchuanensis, Tyrannosaurus turpanensis, and Chingkankousaurus fragilis were all considered synonyms of Tarbosaurus in the second edition of the Dinosauria, but Chingkankousaurus has been assessed as dubious by Brusatte et al. (2013).[13][28]

Named in 1976 by Sergei Kurzanov, Alioramus is another genus of tyrannosaurid from slightly older sediments in Mongolia.[29] Several analyses have concluded Alioramus was quite closely related to Tarbosaurus.[4][14] It was described as an adult, but its long, low skull is characteristic of a juvenile tyrannosaurid. This led Currie to speculate that Alioramus might represent a juvenile Tarbosaurus, but he noted that the much higher tooth count and row of crests on top of the snout suggested otherwise.[30]

Skin impressions and footprints edit

Skin impressions were recovered from a large skeleton at the Bugiin Tsav locality that was subsequently destroyed by poachers. These impressions show non-overlapping scales with an average diameter of 2.4 millimeters (0.094 in) and pertain to the thoracic region of the individual, although the exact position can no longer be assessed due to the destruction of the skeleton.[31]

Phil Currie and colleagues (2003) described two footprints from the Nemegt locality that probably pertain to Tarbosaurus. These tracks represent natural casts, which means that only the sandy infill of the tracks, not the tracks themselves, are preserved. The better-preserved track features skin impressions over large areas on and behind the toe impressions that are similar to those discovered in Bugiin Tsav. It also features vertical parallel slide marks that were left by scales when the foot was pushed into the ground. The track measures 61 centimeters (24 in) in length, thus representing a large individual. The second track, although even larger, was affected by erosion and does not show any detail.[31]

In 1997, Ken Carpenter reported a damaged Tarbosaurus skull with impressions of a dewlap or throat pouch beneath the lower jaws, based on a personal communication from Konstantin Mikhailov.[32] Carpenter speculated that the pouch may have been used for display, possibly being brightly colored and inflatable like a frigatebird's.[33] In a 2019 communication to Mickey Mortimer, Mikhailov confirmed that this specimen had not been collected because it was on a heavy stone slab. He revealed that it had been discovered by Sergei Kurzanov and that it was Kurzanov himself who had originally interpreted the impressions as a throat structure.[34] This specimen may be the same as one that was purportedly destroyed by poachers in 1992.[35]

Description edit

 
Size comparison of specimens representing various growth stages

Although slightly smaller than Tyrannosaurus, Tarbosaurus was one of the largest tyrannosaurines, with the type specimen PIN 551–1 measuring approximately 10 metres (33 ft) long, 3 metres (9.8 ft) tall at the hips, and weighing up to 4.5–5 metric tons (5.0–5.5 short tons).[36][37][38] The largest known Tarbosaurus skull is about 1.35 m (4.4 ft) long,[39] which is larger than that of all other tyrannosaurids, aside from Tyrannosaurus.[13]

Skull edit

 
Skull of juvenile (top, MPC-D 107/7), and adult (bottom, ZPAL MgD I/4)

The skull was tall, like that of Tyrannosaurus, but not as wide, especially towards the rear. The unexpanded rear of the skull meant that Tarbosaurus‘s eyes did not face directly forwards, suggesting that it lacked the binocular vision of Tyrannosaurus. Large fenestrae in the skull reduced its overall weight and served as attachment points for muscles. Between 58 and 64 teeth lined its jaws. This tooth count is slightly more than that of Tyrannosaurus, but fewer than in smaller tyrannosaurids, like Gorgosaurus and Alioramus. Most of its teeth were ovalur in cross section, although the teeth of the premaxilla at the tip of the upper jaw had a D-shaped cross section. However, this heterodonty is characteristic of the family. The longest teeth were in the maxilla (upper jaw bone), with crowns up to 85 millimeters (3.3 in) long. In the lower jaw, a ridge on the outer surface of the angular bone articulated with the rear of the dentary bone, creating a locking mechanism unique to Tarbosaurus and Alioramus. Other tyrannosaurids lacked this ridge and had more flexibility in the lower jaw.[4]

Postcranial skeleton edit

 
Skeletal reconstruction (ZPAL MgD I/4)

Tyrannosaurids varied little in overall body form and Tarbosaurus was no exception. The head was supported by an S-shaped neck, while the rest of the vertebral column, including the tail, was held horizontally. Tarbosaurus had tiny arms, proportionably to body size the smallest of all members in the family. The hands had two clawed digits each, with an additional unclawed third metacarpal found in some specimens, similar to those of closely related genera. Holtz has suggested that Tarbosaurus also has a theropod reduction of fingers IV-I "developed further" than in other tyrannosaurids,[40] as the second metacarpal in the Tarbosaurus specimens he studied is less than twice the length of the first metacarpal. Other tyrannosaurids have a second metacarpal about twice the length of the first metacarpal. Also, the third metacarpal in Tarbosaurus is proportionally shorter than in other tyrannosaurids. In other tyrannosaurids, like Albertosaurus and Daspletosaurus, the third metacarpal is often longer than the first metacarpal, while in the Tarbosaurus specimens studied by Holtz, the third metacarpal is shorter than the first.[13] In contrast to the arms, the three-toed legs were long, thick, and muscular to support the body in a bipedal posture. The long, heavy tail served as a counterweight to the head and torso, while also placing the center of gravity directly over the hips.[6]

Classification edit

 
Diagram showing the differences between a generalized Tarbosaurus (A) and Tyrannosaurus (B) skull

Tarbosaurus is classified as a theropod in the subfamily Tyrannosaurinae of the family Tyrannosauridae. Other members include Tyrannosaurus and the earlier Daspletosaurus, both from North America,[16] and possibly the Mongolian genus Alioramus.[4][14] Animals in this subfamily are more closely related to Tyrannosaurus than to Albertosaurus and are known for their robust build with proportionally larger skulls and longer femurs than in the other subfamily, Albertosaurinae.[13]

Tarbosaurus bataar was originally described as a species of Tyrannosaurus,[3] an arrangement that has been supported by some more recent studies.[16][10] Others prefer to keep the genera separate, while still recognizing them as sister taxa.[13] A 2003 cladistic analysis based on skull features instead identified Alioramus as the closest known relative of Tarbosaurus, as the two genera share skull characteristics that are related to stress distribution and are not found in other tyrannosaurines. If proven, this relationship would argue against Tarbosaurus being a synonym of Tyrannosaurus and would suggest that separate tyrannosaurine lineages evolved in Asia and North America.[4][14] The two known specimens of Alioramus, which show juvenile characteristics, are not likely juvenile individuals of Tarbosaurus because of their much higher tooth count (76 to 78 teeth) and their unique row of bony bumps along the top of their snouts.[30]

The discovery of Lythronax argestes, a much earlier tyrannosaurine, further reveals the close relationship between Tyrannosaurus and Tarbosaurus. It was also discovered that Lythronax is a sister taxon to a clade consisting of Campanian genus Zhuchengtyrannus, and the Maastrichtian genera Tyrannosaurus and Tarbosaurus. Further studies of Lythronax also suggest that the Asian tyrannosauroids were part of one evolutionary radiation.[41]

Below is the cladogram of Tyrannosaurinae based on the phylogenetic analysis conducted by Voris and team in 2020.[42]

Paleobiology edit

Ontogeny edit

 
Juvenile specimen MPC-D 107/7
 
Juvenile specimen MPC-D 100/66

Most specimens of Tarbosaurus represent adult or subadult individuals, while juveniles remain very rare. Nevertheless, the 2006 discovery of a juvenile individual (MPC-D 107/7) with a complete, 290-millimeter (0.95 ft) long skull was reported and described in 2011, providing information on the life history of this dinosaur. This individual was probably 2 to 3 years old at the time of death. Compared to adult skulls, the juvenile skull was weakly constructed and the teeth were thin, indicating different food preferences in juveniles and adults that reduced competition between different age groups.[43] Examination of the sclerotic rings in this juvenile Tarbosaurus suggests they may also have been crepuscular or nocturnal hunters. Whether or not the adult Tarbosaurus were also nocturnal is currently unknown due to the lack of fossil evidence to suggest so.[44]

Senses edit

 
Braincase of Tarbosaurus (left) next to the braincaise of Iguanodon (right)

A Tarbosaurus skull found in 1948 by Soviet and Mongolian scientists (PIN 553–1, originally called Gorgosaurus lancinator) included the skull cavity that held the brain. Making a plaster cast, called an endocast, of the inside of this cavity allowed Maleev to make preliminary observations about the shape of a Tarbosaurus brain.[45] A newer polyurethane rubber cast allowed a more detailed study of Tarbosaurus brain structure and function.[46]

The endocranial structure of Tarbosaurus was similar to that of Tyrannosaurus,[47] differing only in the positions of some cranial nerve roots, including the trigeminal and accessory nerves. Tyrannosaurid brains were more similar to those of crocodilians and other nonavian reptiles than they were to birds. The total brain volume for a 12 meters (39 ft) long Tarbosaurus is estimated at only 184 cubic centimeters (11.2 cu in).[46]

The large size of the olfactory bulbs, as well as the terminal and olfactory nerves, suggest that Tarbosaurus had a highly keen sense of smell, as was also the case with Tyrannosaurus. The vomeronasal bulb is large and differentiated from the olfactory bulb, which was initially suggested as being indicative of a well-developed Jacobsen's organ, which was used to detect pheromones. This may imply that Tarbosaurus had complex mating behavior.[46] However, the identification of the vomeronasal bulb has been challenged by other researchers because they are not present in any living archosaurs.[48]

The auditory nerve was also large, suggesting good hearing, which may have been useful for auditory communication and spatial awareness. The nerve had a well-developed vestibular component as well, which implies a good sense of balance and coordination. In contrast, the nerves and brain structures associated with eyesight were smaller and undeveloped. The midbrain tectum, responsible for visual processing in reptiles, was very small in Tarbosaurus, as were the optic nerve and the oculomotor nerve, which controls eye movement. Unlike Tyrannosaurus, which had forward-facing eyes that provided accurate binocular vision, Tarbosaurus had a narrower skull more typical of other tyrannosaurids in which the eyes faced primarily sideways. All of this suggests that Tarbosaurus relied more on its senses of smell and hearing than on its eyesight.[46] It has been suggested that the lack of binocular vision in Asian tyrannosaurs, like Tarbosaurus, might have been correlated with a greater amount of scavenging resources provided by sauropod carcasses, which might have afforded them a less active predatory lifestyle when compared to the North American forms, meaning they would need less predatory adaptations.[49] However, this is contradicted by numerous lines of evidence indicating Tarbosaurus was actively preying on hadrosaurs, titanosaur sauropods, and other large bodied herbivores in its ecosystem.[50][51][52][53]

Skull mechanics edit

 
 
Skull from the front and right

The skull of Tarbosaurus was completely described for the first time in 2003. Scientists noted key differences between Tarbosaurus and the North American tyrannosaurids. Many of these differences are related to the handling of stress by the skull bones during a bite. When the upper jaw bit down on an object, force was transmitted up through the maxilla, the primary tooth-bearing bone of the upper jaw, into surrounding skull bones. In North American tyrannosaurids, this force went from the maxilla into the fused nasal bones on top of the snout, which were firmly connected in the rear to the lacrimal bones by bony struts. These struts locked the two bones together, suggesting that force was then transmitted from the nasals to the lacrimals.[4]

Tarbosaurus lacked these bony struts and the connection between the nasals and lacrimals was weak. Instead, a backwards projection of the maxilla was massively developed in Tarbosaurus and fit inside a sheath formed from the lacrimal. This projection was a thin, bony plate in North American tyrannosaurids. The large backwards projection suggests that force was transmitted more directly from the maxilla to the lacrimal in Tarbosaurus. The lacrimal was also more firmly anchored to the frontal and prefrontal bones in Tarbosaurus. The well-developed connections between the maxilla, lacrimal, frontal, and prefrontal would have made its entire upper jaw much more rigid.[4]

Another major difference between Tarbosaurus and its North American relatives was its more rigid mandible. While many theropods, including North American tyrannosaurids, had some degree of flexibility between the bones in the rear of the mandible and the dentary in the front, Tarbosaurus had a locking mechanism formed from a ridge on the surface of the angular, which articulated with a square process on the rear of the dentary.[4]

Some scientists have hypothesized that the more rigid skull of Tarbosaurus was an adaptation to hunting the massive titanosaurid sauropods found in the Nemegt Formation, which did not exist in most of North America during the Late Cretaceous. The differences in skull mechanics also affect tyrannosaurid phylogeny. Tarbosaurus-like articulations between the skull bones are also seen in Alioramus from Mongolia, suggesting that it is the closest relative of Tarbosaurus. Similarities between Tarbosaurus and Tyrannosaurus might be related to their large size, independently developed through convergent evolution.[4]

Bite force and feeding edit

 
Left humerus of S. angustirostris MPC-D 100/764, showing multiple bite marks attributed to Tarbosaurus

In 2001, Bruce Rothschild and others published a study examining evidence for stress fractures and tendon avulsions in theropod dinosaurs and the implications for their behavior. Since stress fractures are caused by repeated trauma rather than singular events, they are more likely to be caused by regular behavior than other types of injuries. None of the eighteen Tarbosaurus foot bones examined in the study were found to have a stress fracture, but one of the ten examined hand bones was found to have one. Stress fractures in the hands have special behavioral significance compared to those found in the feet, since stress fractures there can be obtained while running or during migration. Hand injuries, by contrast, are more likely to be obtained while in contact with struggling prey. The presence of stress fractures and tendon avulsions, in general, provide evidence for a "very active" predation-based diet instead of obligate scavenging.[54]

As for its bite force, it was revealed in 2005 that Tarbosaurus had a bite force of around 8,000 to 10,000 pounds per square inch of force, meaning that it could crush bones just like its North American relative, Tyrannosaurus.[55]

 
Life restoration of Tarbosaurus pursuing Saurolophus
 
Life restoration of Tarbosaurus attacking Deinocheirus

David W. E. Hone and Mahito Watabe in 2011 reported the left humerus of a nearly complete Saurolophus skeleton (MPC-D 100/764) from the Bügiin Tsav locality of the Nemegt Formation, which was heavily damaged from bite marks attributed to Tarbosaurus. As suggested by the lack of damage to the rest of the skeleton (such as large wounds in skeletal remains indicative of predation), this tyrannosaurid was likely scavenging an already dead Saurolophus. It is unlikely that a large-bodied predator, such as Tarbosaurus, would have left sparse feeding traces on a single humerus when having an entire carcass to feed on. The humerus shows three distinctive feeding methods, interpreted as punctures, drag marks, and bite−and−drag marks. Hone and Watabe noted that bite marks were mostly located at the deltopectoral crest, suggesting that this Tarbosaurus was actively selecting which biting style to employ so it could scavenge the bone.[56]

In 2012, bite marks on two fragmentary gastralia of the holotype specimen of the large ornithomimosaur Deinocheirus mirificus were reported. The size and shape of the bite marks match the teeth of Tarbosaurus, the largest known predator from the Nemegt Formation. Various types of feeding traces were identified. These include punctures, gouges, striae, fragmentary teeth, and combinations of the above marks. The bite marks probably represent feeding behavior instead of aggression between the species and the fact that bite marks were not found elsewhere on the body indicates the predator focused on internal organs. Tarbosaurus bite marks have also been identified on hadrosaur and sauropod fossils, but theropod bite marks on bones of other theropods are very rare in the fossil record.[57]

A 2020 study involving stable isotopes found that Tarbosaurus primarily hunted large dinosaurs in its environment, most notably titanosaurs and hadrosaurs.[58]

Paleoenvironment edit

 
Cretaceous-aged dinosaur fossil localities of Mongolia; Tarbosaurus was collected in area A (left)

The vast majority of known Tarbosaurus fossils were recovered from the Nemegt Formation in the Gobi Desert of southern Mongolia. This geologic formation has never been dated radiometrically, but the fauna present in the fossil record indicate it was probably deposited during the early Maastrichtian stage at the near end of the Late Cretaceous,[59] about 70 million years ago.[60][61] The Subashi Formation, in which Shanshanosaurus remains were discovered, is also Maastrichtian in age.[62]

Tarbosaurus is found chiefly in the Nemegt Formation, whose sediments preserve large river channels and soil deposits that indicate a far more humid climate than those suggested by the underlying Barun Goyot and Djadochta Formations. However, caliche deposits indicate at least periodic droughts. Sediment was deposited in the channels and floodplains of large rivers. The rock facies of this formation suggest the presence of mudflats and shallow lakes. Sediments also indicate that there existed a rich habitat, offering diverse food in abundant amounts that could sustain massive Cretaceous dinosaurs.[63] Fossils of an unidentified tyrannosaur from the older Djadochta Formation, which closely resemble those of Tarbosaurus, may indicate that it also lived at an earlier time and in a more arid ecosystem than that of the Nemegt.[1]

 
Restoration of Tarbosaurus in Late Cretaceous Mongolian environment

Occasional mollusk fossils are found, as well as a variety of other aquatic animals, such as fish and turtles.[59] Crocodilians included several species of Paralligator, a genus with teeth adapted for crushing shells.[64] Mammal fossils are exceedingly rare in the Nemegt Formation, but many birds have been found, including the enantiornithine Gurilynia and the hesperornithiform Judinornis, as well as Teviornis, an early representative of the still-existing Anseriformes. Scientists have described many dinosaurs from the Nemegt Formation, including the ankylosaurid Saichania and pachycephalosaur Prenocephale.[59] By far the largest predator known from the formation, adult Tarbosaurus most likely preyed upon large hadrosaurs, such as Saurolophus and Barsboldia, or sauropods, such as Nemegtosaurus and Opisthocoelicaudia.[4] Adults would have received little competition from small theropods, such as the small tyrannosaurid Alioramus, troodontids (Borogovia, Tochisaurus, Zanabazar), oviraptorosaurs (Elmisaurus, Nemegtomaia, Rinchenia) or Bagaraatan, sometimes considered a basal tyrannosauroid. Other theropods, like the gigantic Therizinosaurus, might have been herbivorous and ornithomimosaurs, such as Anserimimus, Gallimimus, and gigantic Deinocheirus might have been omnivores that only took small prey and were therefore no competition for Tarbosaurus. However, as in other large tyrannosaurids, as well as modern Komodo dragons, juveniles and subadult Tarbosaurus would have filled niches between the massive adults and these smaller theropods.[13]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Mortimer, M (2004). . The Theropod Database. Archived from the original on September 29, 2013. Retrieved August 21, 2007.
  2. ^ Weishampel, David B.; Barrett, Paul M.; Coria, Rodolfo A.; Le Loueff, Jean; Xu, Xing; Zhao, Xijin; Sahni, Ashok; Gomani, Emily M. P.; Noto, Christopher N. (2004). "Dinosaur distribution". In Weishampel, David B.; Dodson, Peter; Osmólska, Halszka (eds.). The Dinosauria (Second ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 596–598. ISBN 978-0-520-24209-8.
  3. ^ a b Maleev, Evgeny A. (1955). "Giant carnivorous dinosaurs of Mongolia". Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR. 104 (4): 634–637.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Hurum, Jørn H.; Sabath, Karol (2003). "Giant theropod dinosaurs from Asia and North America: Skulls of Tarbosaurus bataar and Tyrannosaurus rex compared" (PDF). Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 48 (2): 161–190.
  5. ^ Liddell, Henry G.; Scott, Robert (1980). Greek–English Lexicon (Abridged ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-910207-5.
  6. ^ a b Maleev, E. A. (1955). "New carnivorous dinosaurs from the Upper Cretaceous of Mongolia" (PDF). Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR. 104 (5). translated by F. J. Alcock: 779–783.
  7. ^ Rozhdestvensky, Anatoly K. (1965). "Growth changes in Asian dinosaurs and some problems of their taxonomy". Paleontological Journal. 3: 95–109.
  8. ^ Maleev, Evgeny A. (1974). "Gigantic carnosaurs of the family Tyrannosauridae". The Joint Soviet-Mongolian Paleontological Expedition Transactions. 1: 132–191.
  9. ^ Barsbold, Rinchen (1983). "Carnivorous dinosaurs from the Cretaceous of Mongolia". The Joint Soviet-Mongolian Paleontological Expedition Transactions. 19: 5–119.
  10. ^ a b Carpenter, Ken. (1992). "Tyrannosaurids (Dinosauria) of Asia and North America". In Mateer, Niall J.; Peiji, Chen (eds.). Aspects of Nonmarine Cretaceous Geology. Beijing: China Ocean Press. pp. 250–268.
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External links edit

Images and photos

  • of Shanshanosaurus at .
  • .

Readable material

  • at The Theropod Database.
  • by George Olshevsky (1995).
  • Scienceblogs: .

tarbosaurus, ɑːr, ɔːr, meaning, alarming, lizard, genus, tyrannosaurine, theropod, dinosaur, that, lived, asia, about, million, years, during, maastrichtian, late, cretaceous, period, considered, contain, single, known, species, bataar, fossils, have, been, re. Tarbosaurus ˌ t ɑːr b e ˈ s ɔːr e s TAR be SOR es meaning alarming lizard is a genus of tyrannosaurine theropod dinosaur that lived in Asia about 70 million years ago during the Maastrichtian age at the end of the Late Cretaceous period considered to contain a single known species Tarbosaurus bataar Fossils have been recovered from the Nemegt Formation of Mongolia with more fragmentary remains found further afield in the Subashi Formation of China TarbosaurusTemporal range Late Cretaceous Maastrichtian 70 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Possible Campanian record 1 2 Skeleton on exhibit in Maryland Science CenterScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClade DinosauriaClade SaurischiaClade TheropodaFamily TyrannosauridaeSubfamily TyrannosaurinaeClade TyrannosauriniGenus TarbosaurusMaleev 1955bType species Tarbosaurus bataarMaleev 1955aSynonymsGenus synonymy Shanshanosaurus Dong 1977Maleevosaurus Carpenter 1992Jenghizkhan Olshevsky 1995 Species synonymy Tyrannosaurus bataar Maleev 1955aGorgosaurus novojilovi Maleev 1955bTarbosaurus efremovi Maleev 1955bGorgosaurus lancinator Maleev 1955bDeinodon novojilovi Maleev 1955b Kuhn 1965Deinodon lancinator Maleev 1955b Kuhn 1965Aublysodon lancinator Maleev 1955b Charig 1967Aublysodon novojilovi Maleev 1955b Charig 1967Shanshanosaurus huoyanshanensis Dong 1977Tyrannosaurus efremovi Maleev 1955b Rozhdestvensky 1977Tarbosaurus novojilovi Maleev 1955b Olshevsky 1978Aublysodon huoyanshanensis Dong 1977 Paul 1988aAlbertosaurus novojilovi Maleev 1955b Mader amp Bradley 1989Maleevosaurus novojilovi Maleev 1955b Carpenter 1992Jenghizkhan bataar Maleev 1955a Olshevsky 1995Tyrannosaurus novojilovi Maleev 1955b Glut 1997 Raptorex kriegsteini Sereno et al 2009Although many species have been named modern paleontologists recognize only one species T bataar Some experts see this species as an Asian representative of the North American genus Tyrannosaurus which would make the genus Tarbosaurus redundant Tarbosaurus and Tyrannosaurus if not synonymous are considered to be very closely related genera Alioramus also from Mongolia has previously been thought by some authorities to be the closest relative of Tarbosaurus though this has since been disproven with the discovery of Qianzhousaurus and the description of the tyrannosaurine tribe Alioramini Like most known tyrannosaurids Tarbosaurus was a large bipedal predator with the type specimen measuring approximately 10 metres 33 ft long 3 metres 9 8 ft tall at the hips and weighing up to 4 5 5 metric tons 5 0 5 5 short tons It had a unique locking mechanism in its jaw equipped with about sixty large teeth and the smallest arms relative to body size of all tyrannosaurids renowned for their disproportionately tiny two fingered hands Tarbosaurus lived in a humid floodplain criss crossed by river channels In this environment it was an apex predator preying on other large dinosaurs like the hadrosaurids Saurolophus and Barsboldia or the sauropod Nemegtosaurus Tarbosaurus is represented by dozens of fossil specimens including several complete skulls and skeletons These remains have allowed scientific studies focusing on its phylogeny skull mechanics and brain structure Contents 1 Discovery and naming 1 1 Poached specimens 1 2 Synonyms 1 3 Skin impressions and footprints 2 Description 2 1 Skull 2 2 Postcranial skeleton 3 Classification 4 Paleobiology 4 1 Ontogeny 4 2 Senses 4 3 Skull mechanics 4 4 Bite force and feeding 5 Paleoenvironment 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksDiscovery and naming edit nbsp Holotype skull PIN 551 1 Museum of Paleontology MoscowIn 1946 a joint Soviet Mongolian expedition to the Gobi Desert in the Omnogovi Province turned up a large theropod skull and some vertebrae from the Nemegt Formation In 1955 Evgeny Maleev a Soviet paleontologist made this specimen the holotype PIN 551 1 of a new species which he called Tyrannosaurus bataar 3 The specific name is a misspelling of the Mongolian word baatar baatar meaning hero 4 In the same year Maleev also described and named three new theropod skulls each associated with skeletal remains discovered by the same expedition in 1948 and 1949 The first of these PIN 551 2 was named Tarbosaurus efremovi a new generic name composed of the Ancient Greek words tarbos tarbos meaning terror alarm awe or reverence and sayros sauros meaning lizard 5 and the species was named after Ivan Yefremov a Russian paleontologist and science fiction author The other two PIN 553 1 and PIN 552 2 were also named as new species and assigned to the North American genus Gorgosaurus as G lancinator and G novojilovi respectively All three of these latter specimens are smaller than the first 6 nbsp Specimen PIN 553 1 holotype of Gorgosaurus lancinator in death poseA 1965 paper by A K Rozhdestvensky recognized all of Maleev s specimens as different growth stages of the same species which he believed to be distinct from the North American Tyrannosaurus He created a new combination Tarbosaurus bataar to include all the specimens described in 1955 and newer material 7 Later authors including Maleev himself 8 agreed with Rozhdestvensky s analysis although some used the name Tarbosaurus efremovi instead of T bataar 9 American paleontologist Ken Carpenter re examined the material in 1992 He concluded that it belonged to the genus Tyrannosaurus as originally published by Maleev and lumped all the specimens into the species Tyrannosaurus bataar except the remains that Maleev had named Gorgosaurus novojilovi Carpenter thought this specimen represented a separate smaller genus of tyrannosaurid which he called Maleevosaurus novojilovi 10 George Olshevsky created the new generic name Jenghizkhan after Genghis Khan for Tyrannosaurus bataar in 1995 while also recognizing Tarbosaurus efremovi and Maleevosaurus novojilovi for a total of three distinct contemporaneous genera from the Nemegt Formation 11 A 1999 study subsequently reclassified Maleevosaurus as a juvenile Tarbosaurus 12 All research published since 1999 recognizes only a single species which is either called Tarbosaurus bataar 13 14 15 or Tyrannosaurus bataar 16 After the original Soviet Mongolian expeditions in the 1940s Polish Mongolian joint expeditions to the Gobi Desert began in 1963 and continued until 1971 recovering many new fossils including new specimens of Tarbosaurus from the Nemegt Formation 4 Expeditions involving Japanese and Mongolian scientists between 1993 and 1998 17 as well as private expeditions hosted by Canadian paleontologist Phil Currie around the turn of the 21st century discovered and collected even more Tarbosaurus material 18 19 More than 30 specimens are known including more than 15 skulls and several complete postcranial skeletons 13 Poached specimens edit nbsp Tarbosaurus fossils that were smuggled to the US and subsequently returned to Mongolia at New YorkTarbosaurus fossils are only found around the Gobi Desert of Mongolia and China both of which ban their export though some specimens have been looted by private collectors 20 A 1 million smuggling deal was uncovered when suspicions were raised about a catalog put out by Heritage Auctions for an event in New York City on May 20 2012 By Mongolian law any specimen found in the Gobi Desert was to rest at an appropriate Mongolian institution and there was little reasonable doubt that the Tarbosaurus bataar advertised on the catalog was a stolen one The president of Mongolia and many paleontologists raised objections to the sale which led to a last minute investigation that confirmed that it was a specimen that can only be found in the Gobi Desert rightfully belonging to Mongolia 21 During the court case United States v One Tyrannosaurus Bataar Skeleton Eric Prokopi the smuggler pleaded guilty to illegal smuggling and the dinosaur was returned to Mongolia in 2013 where it is temporarily displayed on Sukhbaatar Square the center of the city of Ulaanbaatar 22 Prokopi had sold the dinosaur with a partner and fellow commercial hunter in England named Christopher Moore 23 The case led to the repatriation of dozens of Mongolian dinosaurs including several skeletons of Tarbosaurus bataar 24 Synonyms edit nbsp The pieces of IVPP V4878 described as Shanshanosaurus huoyanshanensisChinese paleontologists discovered a partial skull and skeleton of a small theropod IVPP V4878 in the Xinjiang Autonomous Region of China in the mid 1960s In 1977 Dong Zhiming described this specimen which was recovered from the Subashi Formation in Shanshan County as a new genus and species Shanshanosaurus huoyanshanensis 25 Gregory S Paul recognized Shanshanosaurus as a tyrannosaurid in 1988 referring it to the now defunct genus Aublysodon 26 Dong and Currie later re examined the specimen and deemed it to be a juvenile of a larger species of tyrannosaurine These authors refrained from assigning it to any particular genus but suggested Tarbosaurus as a possibility 27 Albertosaurus periculosus Tyrannosaurus luanchuanensis Tyrannosaurus turpanensis and Chingkankousaurus fragilis were all considered synonyms of Tarbosaurus in the second edition of the Dinosauria but Chingkankousaurus has been assessed as dubious by Brusatte et al 2013 13 28 Named in 1976 by Sergei Kurzanov Alioramus is another genus of tyrannosaurid from slightly older sediments in Mongolia 29 Several analyses have concluded Alioramus was quite closely related to Tarbosaurus 4 14 It was described as an adult but its long low skull is characteristic of a juvenile tyrannosaurid This led Currie to speculate that Alioramus might represent a juvenile Tarbosaurus but he noted that the much higher tooth count and row of crests on top of the snout suggested otherwise 30 Skin impressions and footprints edit Skin impressions were recovered from a large skeleton at the Bugiin Tsav locality that was subsequently destroyed by poachers These impressions show non overlapping scales with an average diameter of 2 4 millimeters 0 094 in and pertain to the thoracic region of the individual although the exact position can no longer be assessed due to the destruction of the skeleton 31 Phil Currie and colleagues 2003 described two footprints from the Nemegt locality that probably pertain to Tarbosaurus These tracks represent natural casts which means that only the sandy infill of the tracks not the tracks themselves are preserved The better preserved track features skin impressions over large areas on and behind the toe impressions that are similar to those discovered in Bugiin Tsav It also features vertical parallel slide marks that were left by scales when the foot was pushed into the ground The track measures 61 centimeters 24 in in length thus representing a large individual The second track although even larger was affected by erosion and does not show any detail 31 In 1997 Ken Carpenter reported a damaged Tarbosaurus skull with impressions of a dewlap or throat pouch beneath the lower jaws based on a personal communication from Konstantin Mikhailov 32 Carpenter speculated that the pouch may have been used for display possibly being brightly colored and inflatable like a frigatebird s 33 In a 2019 communication to Mickey Mortimer Mikhailov confirmed that this specimen had not been collected because it was on a heavy stone slab He revealed that it had been discovered by Sergei Kurzanov and that it was Kurzanov himself who had originally interpreted the impressions as a throat structure 34 This specimen may be the same as one that was purportedly destroyed by poachers in 1992 35 Description edit nbsp Size comparison of specimens representing various growth stagesAlthough slightly smaller than Tyrannosaurus Tarbosaurus was one of the largest tyrannosaurines with the type specimen PIN 551 1 measuring approximately 10 metres 33 ft long 3 metres 9 8 ft tall at the hips and weighing up to 4 5 5 metric tons 5 0 5 5 short tons 36 37 38 The largest known Tarbosaurus skull is about 1 35 m 4 4 ft long 39 which is larger than that of all other tyrannosaurids aside from Tyrannosaurus 13 Skull edit nbsp Skull of juvenile top MPC D 107 7 and adult bottom ZPAL MgD I 4 The skull was tall like that of Tyrannosaurus but not as wide especially towards the rear The unexpanded rear of the skull meant that Tarbosaurus s eyes did not face directly forwards suggesting that it lacked the binocular vision of Tyrannosaurus Large fenestrae in the skull reduced its overall weight and served as attachment points for muscles Between 58 and 64 teeth lined its jaws This tooth count is slightly more than that of Tyrannosaurus but fewer than in smaller tyrannosaurids like Gorgosaurus and Alioramus Most of its teeth were ovalur in cross section although the teeth of the premaxilla at the tip of the upper jaw had a D shaped cross section However this heterodonty is characteristic of the family The longest teeth were in the maxilla upper jaw bone with crowns up to 85 millimeters 3 3 in long In the lower jaw a ridge on the outer surface of the angular bone articulated with the rear of the dentary bone creating a locking mechanism unique to Tarbosaurus and Alioramus Other tyrannosaurids lacked this ridge and had more flexibility in the lower jaw 4 Postcranial skeleton edit nbsp Skeletal reconstruction ZPAL MgD I 4 nbsp Life restoration Tyrannosaurids varied little in overall body form and Tarbosaurus was no exception The head was supported by an S shaped neck while the rest of the vertebral column including the tail was held horizontally Tarbosaurus had tiny arms proportionably to body size the smallest of all members in the family The hands had two clawed digits each with an additional unclawed third metacarpal found in some specimens similar to those of closely related genera Holtz has suggested that Tarbosaurus also has a theropod reduction of fingers IV I developed further than in other tyrannosaurids 40 as the second metacarpal in the Tarbosaurus specimens he studied is less than twice the length of the first metacarpal Other tyrannosaurids have a second metacarpal about twice the length of the first metacarpal Also the third metacarpal in Tarbosaurus is proportionally shorter than in other tyrannosaurids In other tyrannosaurids like Albertosaurus and Daspletosaurus the third metacarpal is often longer than the first metacarpal while in the Tarbosaurus specimens studied by Holtz the third metacarpal is shorter than the first 13 In contrast to the arms the three toed legs were long thick and muscular to support the body in a bipedal posture The long heavy tail served as a counterweight to the head and torso while also placing the center of gravity directly over the hips 6 Classification edit nbsp Diagram showing the differences between a generalized Tarbosaurus A and Tyrannosaurus B skullTarbosaurus is classified as a theropod in the subfamily Tyrannosaurinae of the family Tyrannosauridae Other members include Tyrannosaurus and the earlier Daspletosaurus both from North America 16 and possibly the Mongolian genus Alioramus 4 14 Animals in this subfamily are more closely related to Tyrannosaurus than to Albertosaurus and are known for their robust build with proportionally larger skulls and longer femurs than in the other subfamily Albertosaurinae 13 Tarbosaurus bataar was originally described as a species of Tyrannosaurus 3 an arrangement that has been supported by some more recent studies 16 10 Others prefer to keep the genera separate while still recognizing them as sister taxa 13 A 2003 cladistic analysis based on skull features instead identified Alioramus as the closest known relative of Tarbosaurus as the two genera share skull characteristics that are related to stress distribution and are not found in other tyrannosaurines If proven this relationship would argue against Tarbosaurus being a synonym of Tyrannosaurus and would suggest that separate tyrannosaurine lineages evolved in Asia and North America 4 14 The two known specimens of Alioramus which show juvenile characteristics are not likely juvenile individuals of Tarbosaurus because of their much higher tooth count 76 to 78 teeth and their unique row of bony bumps along the top of their snouts 30 The discovery of Lythronax argestes a much earlier tyrannosaurine further reveals the close relationship between Tyrannosaurus and Tarbosaurus It was also discovered that Lythronax is a sister taxon to a clade consisting of Campanian genus Zhuchengtyrannus and the Maastrichtian genera Tyrannosaurus and Tarbosaurus Further studies of Lythronax also suggest that the Asian tyrannosauroids were part of one evolutionary radiation 41 Below is the cladogram of Tyrannosaurinae based on the phylogenetic analysis conducted by Voris and team in 2020 42 Tyrannosaurinae Alioramini Qianzhousaurus sinensis nbsp Alioramus remotus nbsp Alioramus altai nbsp Teratophoneus curriei nbsp Dynamoterror dynastesLythronax argestes nbsp Nanuqsaurus hoglundi nbsp Daspletosaurini Thanatotheristes degrootorum nbsp Daspletosaurus torosus nbsp Daspletosaurus horneriZhuchengtyrannus magnus nbsp Tarbosaurus bataar nbsp Tyrannosaurus rex nbsp Paleobiology editOntogeny edit nbsp Juvenile specimen MPC D 107 7 nbsp Juvenile specimen MPC D 100 66 Most specimens of Tarbosaurus represent adult or subadult individuals while juveniles remain very rare Nevertheless the 2006 discovery of a juvenile individual MPC D 107 7 with a complete 290 millimeter 0 95 ft long skull was reported and described in 2011 providing information on the life history of this dinosaur This individual was probably 2 to 3 years old at the time of death Compared to adult skulls the juvenile skull was weakly constructed and the teeth were thin indicating different food preferences in juveniles and adults that reduced competition between different age groups 43 Examination of the sclerotic rings in this juvenile Tarbosaurus suggests they may also have been crepuscular or nocturnal hunters Whether or not the adult Tarbosaurus were also nocturnal is currently unknown due to the lack of fossil evidence to suggest so 44 Senses edit nbsp Braincase of Tarbosaurus left next to the braincaise of Iguanodon right A Tarbosaurus skull found in 1948 by Soviet and Mongolian scientists PIN 553 1 originally called Gorgosaurus lancinator included the skull cavity that held the brain Making a plaster cast called an endocast of the inside of this cavity allowed Maleev to make preliminary observations about the shape of a Tarbosaurus brain 45 A newer polyurethane rubber cast allowed a more detailed study of Tarbosaurus brain structure and function 46 The endocranial structure of Tarbosaurus was similar to that of Tyrannosaurus 47 differing only in the positions of some cranial nerve roots including the trigeminal and accessory nerves Tyrannosaurid brains were more similar to those of crocodilians and other nonavian reptiles than they were to birds The total brain volume for a 12 meters 39 ft long Tarbosaurus is estimated at only 184 cubic centimeters 11 2 cu in 46 The large size of the olfactory bulbs as well as the terminal and olfactory nerves suggest that Tarbosaurus had a highly keen sense of smell as was also the case with Tyrannosaurus The vomeronasal bulb is large and differentiated from the olfactory bulb which was initially suggested as being indicative of a well developed Jacobsen s organ which was used to detect pheromones This may imply that Tarbosaurus had complex mating behavior 46 However the identification of the vomeronasal bulb has been challenged by other researchers because they are not present in any living archosaurs 48 The auditory nerve was also large suggesting good hearing which may have been useful for auditory communication and spatial awareness The nerve had a well developed vestibular component as well which implies a good sense of balance and coordination In contrast the nerves and brain structures associated with eyesight were smaller and undeveloped The midbrain tectum responsible for visual processing in reptiles was very small in Tarbosaurus as were the optic nerve and the oculomotor nerve which controls eye movement Unlike Tyrannosaurus which had forward facing eyes that provided accurate binocular vision Tarbosaurus had a narrower skull more typical of other tyrannosaurids in which the eyes faced primarily sideways All of this suggests that Tarbosaurus relied more on its senses of smell and hearing than on its eyesight 46 It has been suggested that the lack of binocular vision in Asian tyrannosaurs like Tarbosaurus might have been correlated with a greater amount of scavenging resources provided by sauropod carcasses which might have afforded them a less active predatory lifestyle when compared to the North American forms meaning they would need less predatory adaptations 49 However this is contradicted by numerous lines of evidence indicating Tarbosaurus was actively preying on hadrosaurs titanosaur sauropods and other large bodied herbivores in its ecosystem 50 51 52 53 Skull mechanics edit nbsp nbsp Skull from the front and right The skull of Tarbosaurus was completely described for the first time in 2003 Scientists noted key differences between Tarbosaurus and the North American tyrannosaurids Many of these differences are related to the handling of stress by the skull bones during a bite When the upper jaw bit down on an object force was transmitted up through the maxilla the primary tooth bearing bone of the upper jaw into surrounding skull bones In North American tyrannosaurids this force went from the maxilla into the fused nasal bones on top of the snout which were firmly connected in the rear to the lacrimal bones by bony struts These struts locked the two bones together suggesting that force was then transmitted from the nasals to the lacrimals 4 Tarbosaurus lacked these bony struts and the connection between the nasals and lacrimals was weak Instead a backwards projection of the maxilla was massively developed in Tarbosaurus and fit inside a sheath formed from the lacrimal This projection was a thin bony plate in North American tyrannosaurids The large backwards projection suggests that force was transmitted more directly from the maxilla to the lacrimal in Tarbosaurus The lacrimal was also more firmly anchored to the frontal and prefrontal bones in Tarbosaurus The well developed connections between the maxilla lacrimal frontal and prefrontal would have made its entire upper jaw much more rigid 4 Another major difference between Tarbosaurus and its North American relatives was its more rigid mandible While many theropods including North American tyrannosaurids had some degree of flexibility between the bones in the rear of the mandible and the dentary in the front Tarbosaurus had a locking mechanism formed from a ridge on the surface of the angular which articulated with a square process on the rear of the dentary 4 Some scientists have hypothesized that the more rigid skull of Tarbosaurus was an adaptation to hunting the massive titanosaurid sauropods found in the Nemegt Formation which did not exist in most of North America during the Late Cretaceous The differences in skull mechanics also affect tyrannosaurid phylogeny Tarbosaurus like articulations between the skull bones are also seen in Alioramus from Mongolia suggesting that it is the closest relative of Tarbosaurus Similarities between Tarbosaurus and Tyrannosaurus might be related to their large size independently developed through convergent evolution 4 Bite force and feeding edit nbsp Left humerus of S angustirostris MPC D 100 764 showing multiple bite marks attributed to TarbosaurusIn 2001 Bruce Rothschild and others published a study examining evidence for stress fractures and tendon avulsions in theropod dinosaurs and the implications for their behavior Since stress fractures are caused by repeated trauma rather than singular events they are more likely to be caused by regular behavior than other types of injuries None of the eighteen Tarbosaurus foot bones examined in the study were found to have a stress fracture but one of the ten examined hand bones was found to have one Stress fractures in the hands have special behavioral significance compared to those found in the feet since stress fractures there can be obtained while running or during migration Hand injuries by contrast are more likely to be obtained while in contact with struggling prey The presence of stress fractures and tendon avulsions in general provide evidence for a very active predation based diet instead of obligate scavenging 54 As for its bite force it was revealed in 2005 that Tarbosaurus had a bite force of around 8 000 to 10 000 pounds per square inch of force meaning that it could crush bones just like its North American relative Tyrannosaurus 55 nbsp Life restoration of Tarbosaurus pursuing Saurolophus nbsp Life restoration of Tarbosaurus attacking Deinocheirus David W E Hone and Mahito Watabe in 2011 reported the left humerus of a nearly complete Saurolophus skeleton MPC D 100 764 from the Bugiin Tsav locality of the Nemegt Formation which was heavily damaged from bite marks attributed to Tarbosaurus As suggested by the lack of damage to the rest of the skeleton such as large wounds in skeletal remains indicative of predation this tyrannosaurid was likely scavenging an already dead Saurolophus It is unlikely that a large bodied predator such as Tarbosaurus would have left sparse feeding traces on a single humerus when having an entire carcass to feed on The humerus shows three distinctive feeding methods interpreted as punctures drag marks and bite and drag marks Hone and Watabe noted that bite marks were mostly located at the deltopectoral crest suggesting that this Tarbosaurus was actively selecting which biting style to employ so it could scavenge the bone 56 In 2012 bite marks on two fragmentary gastralia of the holotype specimen of the large ornithomimosaur Deinocheirus mirificus were reported The size and shape of the bite marks match the teeth of Tarbosaurus the largest known predator from the Nemegt Formation Various types of feeding traces were identified These include punctures gouges striae fragmentary teeth and combinations of the above marks The bite marks probably represent feeding behavior instead of aggression between the species and the fact that bite marks were not found elsewhere on the body indicates the predator focused on internal organs Tarbosaurus bite marks have also been identified on hadrosaur and sauropod fossils but theropod bite marks on bones of other theropods are very rare in the fossil record 57 A 2020 study involving stable isotopes found that Tarbosaurus primarily hunted large dinosaurs in its environment most notably titanosaurs and hadrosaurs 58 Paleoenvironment edit nbsp Cretaceous aged dinosaur fossil localities of Mongolia Tarbosaurus was collected in area A left The vast majority of known Tarbosaurus fossils were recovered from the Nemegt Formation in the Gobi Desert of southern Mongolia This geologic formation has never been dated radiometrically but the fauna present in the fossil record indicate it was probably deposited during the early Maastrichtian stage at the near end of the Late Cretaceous 59 about 70 million years ago 60 61 The Subashi Formation in which Shanshanosaurus remains were discovered is also Maastrichtian in age 62 Tarbosaurus is found chiefly in the Nemegt Formation whose sediments preserve large river channels and soil deposits that indicate a far more humid climate than those suggested by the underlying Barun Goyot and Djadochta Formations However caliche deposits indicate at least periodic droughts Sediment was deposited in the channels and floodplains of large rivers The rock facies of this formation suggest the presence of mudflats and shallow lakes Sediments also indicate that there existed a rich habitat offering diverse food in abundant amounts that could sustain massive Cretaceous dinosaurs 63 Fossils of an unidentified tyrannosaur from the older Djadochta Formation which closely resemble those of Tarbosaurus may indicate that it also lived at an earlier time and in a more arid ecosystem than that of the Nemegt 1 nbsp Restoration of Tarbosaurus in Late Cretaceous Mongolian environmentOccasional mollusk fossils are found as well as a variety of other aquatic animals such as fish and turtles 59 Crocodilians included several species of Paralligator a genus with teeth adapted for crushing shells 64 Mammal fossils are exceedingly rare in the Nemegt Formation but many birds have been found including the enantiornithine Gurilynia and the hesperornithiform Judinornis as well as Teviornis an early representative of the still existing Anseriformes Scientists have described many dinosaurs from the Nemegt Formation including the ankylosaurid Saichania and pachycephalosaur Prenocephale 59 By far the largest predator known from the formation adult Tarbosaurus most likely preyed upon large hadrosaurs such as Saurolophus and Barsboldia or sauropods such as Nemegtosaurus and Opisthocoelicaudia 4 Adults would have received little competition from small theropods such as the small tyrannosaurid Alioramus troodontids Borogovia Tochisaurus Zanabazar oviraptorosaurs Elmisaurus Nemegtomaia Rinchenia or Bagaraatan sometimes considered a basal tyrannosauroid Other theropods like the gigantic Therizinosaurus might have been herbivorous and ornithomimosaurs such as Anserimimus Gallimimus and gigantic Deinocheirus might have been omnivores that only took small prey and were therefore no competition for Tarbosaurus However as in other large tyrannosaurids as well as modern Komodo dragons juveniles and subadult Tarbosaurus would have filled niches between the massive adults and these smaller theropods 13 See also editTimeline of tyrannosaur researchReferences edit a b Mortimer M 2004 Tyrannosauroidea The Theropod Database Archived from the original on September 29 2013 Retrieved August 21 2007 Weishampel David B Barrett Paul M Coria Rodolfo A Le Loueff Jean Xu Xing Zhao Xijin Sahni Ashok Gomani Emily M P Noto Christopher N 2004 Dinosaur distribution In Weishampel David B Dodson Peter Osmolska Halszka eds The Dinosauria Second ed Berkeley University of California Press pp 596 598 ISBN 978 0 520 24209 8 a b Maleev Evgeny A 1955 Giant carnivorous dinosaurs of Mongolia Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR 104 4 634 637 a b c d e f g h i j k Hurum Jorn H Sabath Karol 2003 Giant theropod dinosaurs from Asia and North America Skulls of Tarbosaurus bataar and Tyrannosaurus rex compared PDF Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 48 2 161 190 Liddell Henry G Scott Robert 1980 Greek English Lexicon Abridged ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 910207 5 a b Maleev E A 1955 New carnivorous dinosaurs from the Upper Cretaceous of Mongolia PDF Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR 104 5 translated by F J Alcock 779 783 Rozhdestvensky Anatoly K 1965 Growth changes in Asian dinosaurs and some problems of their taxonomy Paleontological Journal 3 95 109 Maleev Evgeny A 1974 Gigantic carnosaurs of the family Tyrannosauridae The Joint Soviet Mongolian Paleontological Expedition Transactions 1 132 191 Barsbold Rinchen 1983 Carnivorous dinosaurs from the Cretaceous of Mongolia The Joint Soviet Mongolian Paleontological Expedition Transactions 19 5 119 a b Carpenter Ken 1992 Tyrannosaurids Dinosauria of Asia and North America In Mateer Niall J Peiji Chen eds Aspects of Nonmarine Cretaceous Geology Beijing China Ocean Press pp 250 268 Olshevsky George Ford Tracy L 1995 The origin and evolution of the tyrannosaurids part 1 Dinosaur Frontline in Japanese 9 92 119 Carr Thomas D 1999 Craniofacial ontogeny in Tyrannosauridae Dinosauria Coelurosauria Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 19 3 497 520 Bibcode 1999JVPal 19 497C doi 10 1080 02724634 1999 10011161 S2CID 83744433 a b c d e f g h Holtz Thomas R Jr 2004 Tyrannosauroidea In Weishampel David B Dodson Peter Osmolska Halszka eds The Dinosauria Second ed Berkeley University of California Press p 124 ISBN 978 0 520 24209 8 a b c d Currie Philip J Hurum Jorn H Sabath Karol 2003 Skull structure and evolution in tyrannosaurid phylogeny PDF Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 48 2 227 234 Xu Xing Norell Mark A Kuang Xuewen Wang Xiaolin Zhao Qi Jia Chengkai 2004 Basal tyrannosauroids from China and evidence for protofeathers in tyrannosauroids Nature 431 7009 680 684 Bibcode 2004Natur 431 680X doi 10 1038 nature02855 PMID 15470426 S2CID 4381777 a b c Carr Thomas D Williamson Thomas E Schwimmer David R 2005 A new genus and species of tyrannosauroid from the Late Cretaceous middle Campanian Demopolis Formation of Alabama Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 25 1 119 143 doi 10 1671 0272 4634 2005 025 0119 ANGASO 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 86243316 Watabe Masato Suzuki Shigeru 2000 Cretaceous fossil localities and a list of fossils collected by the Hayashibara Museum of Natural Sciences and Mongolian Paleontological Center Joint Paleontological Expedition JMJPE from 1993 through 1998 Hayashibara Museum of Natural Sciences Research Bulletin 1 99 108 Currie Philip J 2001 Nomadic Expeditions Inc report of fieldwork in Mongolia September 2000 Alberta Palaeontological Society Fifth Annual Symposium Abstract Volume Calgary Mount Royal College pp 12 16 Currie Philip J 2002 Report on fieldwork in Mongolia September 2001 Alberta Palaeontological Society Sixth Annual Symposium Fossils 2002 Abstract Volume Calgary Mount Royal College pp 8 12 Switek Brian May 19 2012 Stop the Tarbosaurus Auction Wired Black Riley January 9 2013 The Million Dollar Dinosaur Scandal Slate Retrieved June 6 2021 Parry Wynne May 7 2013 Mongolia gets stolen dinosaur back Mother Nature Network Retrieved August 21 2013 Williams Paige January 28 2013 Bones of Contention The New Yorker Retrieved September 9 2017 Williams Paige June 7 2014 The Black Market for Dinosaurs The New Yorker Retrieved September 9 2017 Dong Zhiming 1977 On the dinosaurian remains from Turpan Xinjiang Vertebrata PalAsiatica in Chinese 15 59 66 Paul Gregory S 1988 Predatory Dinosaurs of the World New York Simon amp Schuster p 464 Currie Philip J Dong Zhiming 2001 New information on Shanshanosaurus huoyanshanensis a juvenile tyrannosaurid Theropoda Dinosauria from the Late Cretaceous of China PDF Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 38 12 1729 1737 Bibcode 2001CaJES 38 1729C doi 10 1139 cjes 38 12 1729 Brusatte Hone and Xu 2013 Phylogenetic revision of Chingkankousaurus fragilis a forgotten tyrannosauroid from the Late Cretaceous of China in Parrish Molnar Currie and Koppelhus eds Tyrannosaurid Paleobiology Indiana University Press 1 13 Kurzanov Sergei M 1976 A new Late Cretaceous carnosaur from Nogon Tsav Mongolia The Joint Soviet Mongolian Paleontological Expedition Transactions in Russian 3 93 104 a b Currie Philip J 2003 Cranial anatomy of tyrannosaurids from the Late Cretaceous of Alberta PDF Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 48 2 191 226 Archived from the original PDF on June 21 2007 a b Currie Philip J Badamgarav Demchig Koppelhus Eva B 2003 The First Late Cretaceous Footprints from the Locality in the Gobi of Mongolia PDF Ichnos 10 1 12 doi 10 1080 10420940390235071 S2CID 140547544 Carpenter K 1997 Tyrannosauridae In Currie P J Padian K eds Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs San Diego CA Academic Press pp 766 768 ISBN 978 0 12 226810 6 Carpenter K 1999 Eggs Nests and Baby Dinosaurs A Look at Dinosaur Reproduction Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 60 61 ISBN 0 253 33497 7 Mortimer M 2019 Tarbosaurus bataar Skin impressions The Theropod Database Retrieved November 21 2020 Watabe M Suzuki S 2000 Report on the Japan Mongolia Joint Paleontological Expedition to the Gobi desert 1993 Hayashibara Museum of Natural Sciences Research Bulletin 1 19 29 Holtz Thomas R Jr 2012 Dinosaurs The Most Complete Up to Date Encyclopedia for Dinosaur Lovers of All Ages PDF Archived PDF from the original on October 2 2022 Winter 2011 Appendix Molina Perez R Larramendi A 2019 Dinosaurs Facts and Figures The Theropods and Other Dinosauriformes Princeton University Press p 267 ISBN 9780565094973 Campione Nicolas E Evans David C 2020 The accuracy and precision of body mass estimation in non avian dinosaurs Biological Reviews 95 6 1759 1797 doi 10 1111 brv 12638 ISSN 1469 185X PMID 32869488 S2CID 221404013 Currie Philip J 2003 Allometric growth in tyrannosaurids Dinosauria Theropoda from the Upper Cretaceous of North America and Asia PDF Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 40 4 651 665 Bibcode 2003CaJES 40 651C doi 10 1139 e02 083 Carpenter K Tanke D H amp Skrepnick M W 2001 Mesozoic Vertebrate Life Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 33907 3 p 71 Loewen Mark A Irmis Randall B Sertich Joseph J W Currie Philip J Sampson Scott D November 6 2013 Tyrant Dinosaur Evolution Tracks the Rise and Fall of Late Cretaceous Oceans PLOS ONE 8 11 e79420 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 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376 1 72 doi 10 1206 810 1 hdl 2246 6422 Pahl Cameron C Ruedas Luis A October 15 2021 Carnosaurs as Apex Scavengers Agent based simulations reveal possible vulture analogues in late Jurassic Dinosaurs Ecological Modelling 458 109706 Bibcode 2021EcMod 45809706P doi 10 1016 j ecolmodel 2021 109706 ISSN 0304 3800 Owocki Krzysztof Kremer Barbara Cotte Martin Bocherens Herve January 1 2020 Diet preferences and climate inferred from oxygen and carbon isotopes of tooth enamel of Tarbosaurus bataar Nemegt Formation Upper Cretaceous Mongolia Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 537 109190 Bibcode 2020PPP 53709190O doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2019 05 012 S2CID 182937778 Retrieved October 15 2020 Bell P R Currie P J Lee Y N 2012 Tyrannosaur feeding traces on Deinocheirus Theropoda Ornithomimosauria remains from the Nemegt Formation Late Cretaceous Mongolia Cretaceous Research 37 186 190 Bibcode 2012CrRes 37 186B doi 10 1016 j cretres 2012 03 018 Holtz Jr Thomas 2007 Dinosaurs the most complete up to date encyclopedia for dinosaur lovers of all ages New York New York Random House Inc p 241 ISBN 9780375824197 Gallagher W B Tumanova T A Dodson P Axel L 1998 CT scanning Asian ankylosaurs paleopathology in a Tarchia skull Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 18 44A 45A Rothschild B Tanke D H and Ford T L 2001 Theropod stress fractures and tendon avulsions as a clue to activity In Mesozoic Vertebrate Life edited by Tanke D H and Carpenter K Indiana University Press p 331 336 Therrien Francois Henderson Donald M Ruff Christopher B January 2005 Bite me Biomechanical models of theropod mandibles and implications for feeding behavior In Kenneth Carpenter ed The Carnivorous Dinosaurs Indiana University Press pp 179 237 Retrieved November 11 2018 Hone D W E Watabe M 2011 New information on scavenging and selective feeding behaviour of tyrannosaurids PDF Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 55 4 627 634 doi 10 4202 app 2009 0133 Bell P R Currie P J Lee Y N 2012 Tyrannosaur feeding traces on Deinocheirus Theropoda Ornithomimosauria remains from the Nemegt Formation Late Cretaceous Mongolia Cretaceous Research 37 186 190 Bibcode 2012CrRes 37 186B doi 10 1016 j cretres 2012 03 018 Owocki Krzysztof Kremer Barbara Cotte Martin Bocherens Herve January 1 2020 Diet preferences and climate inferred from oxygen and carbon isotopes of tooth enamel of Tarbosaurus bataar Nemegt Formation Upper Cretaceous Mongolia Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 537 109190 Bibcode 2020PPP 53709190O doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2019 05 012 S2CID 182937778 Retrieved October 15 2020 a b c Jerzykiewicz Tomasz Russell Dale A 1991 Late Mesozoic stratigraphy and vertebrates of the Gobi Basin Cretaceous Research 12 4 345 377 Bibcode 1991CrRes 12 345J doi 10 1016 0195 6671 91 90015 5 Sulliban R M 2006 A taxonomic review of the Pachycephalosauridae Dinosauria Ornithischia Pp 347 366 in Lucas S G and Sullivan R M eds Late Cretaceous vertebrates from the Western Interior New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 3 Gradstein Felix M Ogg James G and Smith Alan G 2005 A Geologic Time Scale 2004 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 500pp ISBN 978 0 521 78142 8 Shen Y B Mateer Niall J 1992 An outline of the Cretaceous System in northern Xinjiang western China In Mateer Niall J Peiji Chen eds Aspects of Nonmarine Cretaceous Geology Beijing China Ocean Press pp 49 77 Novacek M 1996 Dinosaurs of the Flaming Cliffs Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group Inc New York New York ISBN 978 0 385 47775 8 Efimov Mikhail B 1983 Revision of the fossil crocodiles of Mongolia The Joint Soviet Mongolian Paleontological Expedition Transactions in Russian 24 76 95 External links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Tarbosaurus nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tarbosaurus Images and photos Skeletal image of Shanshanosaurus at The Grave Yard Comparison between Tarbosaurus skulls from specimens of different age group and size Readable material Discussion and specimen list at The Theropod Database Review of the Tyrannosauridae by George Olshevsky 1995 Scienceblogs Juvenile 5 years old Tarbosaurus specimen found in Mongolia 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tarbosaurus amp oldid 1214672390, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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