fbpx
Wikipedia

Tyrannosaurinae

Tyrannosaurinae (sometimes referred to as tyrannosaurines) is one of the two extinct subfamilies of Tyrannosauridae, a family of coelurosaurian theropods that consists of at least three tribes and several genera. All fossils of these genera have been found in the Late Cretaceous deposits of western North America and east Asia. Compared to the related subfamily Albertosaurinae, tyrannosaurines overall are more robust and larger though the alioramins were gracile by comparison. This subfamily also includes the oldest known tyrannosaurid genus Lythronax as well as the youngest and most famous member of the group, Tyrannosaurus rex. There were at least 30 different species of tyrannosaurines.

Tyrannosaurinae
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous,
81.9–66 Ma
Skull of Alioramus.
Skull of Tyrannosaurus.
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Clade: Saurischia
Clade: Theropoda
Family: Tyrannosauridae
Subfamily: Tyrannosaurinae
Osborn, 1906
Type genus
Tyrannosaurus
Osborn, 1905
Subgroups[2]

History of discovery edit

 
Deinodon teeth, the earliest known tyrannosaurid remains

The first remains of tyrannosaurids were uncovered during expeditions led by the Geological Survey of Canada, which located numerous scattered teeth. These distinctive dinosaur teeth were given the name Deinodon ("terrible tooth") by Joseph Leidy in 1856. In 1892 Edward Drinker Cope described more tyrannosaur material in the form of isolated vertebrae, and gave this animal the name Manospondylus gigas. This discovery was mostly overlooked for over a century, and caused controversy in the early 2000s when it was discovered that this material actually belonged to, and had name priority over, Tyrannosaurus rex.[3] Later in 1905 Henry Fairfield Osborn described two tyrannosaur specimens that had been collected in Montana and Wyoming during a 1902 expedition of the American Museum of Natural History, led by Barnum Brown. Initially, Osborn considered these to be distinct species. The first, he named Dynamosaurus imperiosus ("emperor power lizard"), and the second, Tyrannosaurus rex ("king tyrant lizard"). A year later, Osborn recognized that these two specimens actually came from the same species. Despite the fact that Dynamosaurus had been found first, the name Tyrannosaurus had appeared one page earlier in his original article describing both specimens. Therefore, according to the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN), the name Tyrannosaurus was used.[4]

The second described representative of the tyrannosaurines, Tarbosaurus (originally described as an Asiatic representative of Tyrannosaurus) was in 1955 after a large skull was recovered in a joint Soviet-Mongolian expedition to the Gobi Desert in the Mongolian Ömnögovi Province in 1946. The holotype was named as Tyrannosaurus bataar by Evgeny Maleev as Tyrannosaurus bataar.[5] The genus Tarbosaurus was also described in the same year based on PIN 551–2, a specimen with a skull and skeletal remains discovered by the same expedition in 1948 and 1949 as Tarbosaurus efremovi.[6] It was only in 1965 that Ty. bataar and Ta. efremovi were the same species, the latter being a younger animal, and distinct from Tyrannosaurus recognized by A.K. Rozhdestvensky who recombined the species as Tarbosaurus bataar.[7]

In the 1970s saw the description of two genera. In 1970 saw the publication of Daspletosaurus, with the holotype CMN 8506 consisting of a partial skeleton including the skull, the shoulder, a forelimb, the pelvis, a femur and all of the vertebrae from the neck, torso and hip, as well as the first eleven tail vertebrae. It was discovered in 1921 near Steveville, Alberta, by Charles Mortram Sternberg, who thought it was a new species of Gorgosaurus, but was found to be a new genus by Dale Russell using the aforementioned CMN 8506.[8] The second, Alioramus, described in 1976 by Sergei Kurzanov which the holotype (PIN 3141/1) is a partial skull associated with three metatarsals found by a joint Soviet-Mongolian expedition to the Gobi Desert in the early 1970s found these remains at a locality known as Nogon-Tsav in the Mongolian province of Bayankhongor, Nemegt Formation.[9]

From 1977 to 2009 saw the publications of several genera. In Asia they include Shanshanosaurus (1977),[10] Maleevosaurus (1992),[11] and Raptorex (2009),[12] while in North America saw Nanotyrannus (1988),[13] Dinotyrannus and Stygivenator (1995).[14] These genera, however are controversial as the remains of these animals are immature or juvenile individuals. As of 2021 it is widely understood that the Asian specimens are early growth stages of Tarbosaurus,[15][16][17] while the North American specimens are those of Tyrannosaurus.[18][19]

 
Skeletal diagrams showing holotype remains of Lythronax (A) and a Teratophoneus specimen (B). N–P show selected bones of the former

Valid genera would not be named until the 2010s, where in 2011 announced the publication of Teratophoneus by Thomas D. Carr and colleagues. The fossils were first found in the Kaiparowits Formation of southern Utah. Later, fossils from the same formation were discovered and identified as the genus. Argon-argon radiometric dating indicates that the Kaiparowits Formation was deposited between 76.1 and 74.0 million years ago, during the Campanian stage of the Late Cretaceous period. This date means that Teratophoneus lived in the middle of the Campanian stage of the Late Cretaceous.[20] In the same year Zhuchengtyrannus was named by David W. E. Hone and colleagues based on the holotype ZCDM V0031, a nearly complete right maxilla and associated left dentary (lower jaw, both with teeth) housed at Zhucheng Dinosaur Museum.[21] In 2014 came Nanuqsaurus, the northern most tyrannosaurid found in Prince Creek Formation of the North Slope of Alaska, United States.[22][23] In the same year also announced Qianzhousaurus known from a partial sub-adult individual consisting of a nearly complete skull with the lower jaws missing all teeth (lost during fossilization), 9 cervical vertebrae, 3 dorsal vertebrae, 18 caudal vertebrae, both scapulocoracoids, partial ilia, and the left hindlimb compromising the femur, tibia, fibula, astragalus with calcaneum, and metatarsals III and IV.[24] Lythronax, the oldest known member of Tyrannosauridae, was described in 2013 by Mark A. Loewen and colleagues from a nearly complete specimen that was uncovered in 2009 in the Wahweap Formation of the Grand Staircase–Escalante National Monument.[25]

Natural history edit

Description edit

 
Size of A. remotus compared with a human
 
The specimens "Sue", AMNH 5027, "Stan", and "Jane", to scale with a human.

In comparison to the albertosaurines, tyrannosaurines were more heavily built and larger. The alioramin genera of Qianzhousaurus and Alioramus, however, were the exception, as they were more comparable in built to albertosaurines and have longirostrine snouts.[24] Like albertosaurines, tyrannosaurines also had heterodont dentition, large heads design to catch and kill their prey, and short didactyl arms. Based on the growth stages of Tyrannosaurus (and possibly Tarbosaurus[17]), tyrannosaurines undergone ontogenetic changes from gracile or slender, semi-longirostrine immatures to robust, heavy-headed adults. This implies that these animals occupy different ecological niches as they developed.[19] While there is fossil evidence of earlier tyrannosauroids having feathers,[26][27] the evidence of such structures in tyrannosaurids is controversial as a study in 2017 from Bell and colleagues found no support in feathered integument in tyrannosaurids.[28] The study used skin impressions which are small, found widely dispersed across the post-cranium at different regions of the body with a pattern similar to crocodiles. Further the croc analogy Thomas Carr and colleagues in 2017 by studying the snout of Daspletosaurus suggested they have large scales with sensory sensory neuron pits under the skin.[29] This notion has been challenged from other authors who suggested a more lip-covering of the teeth.[30]

Distribution edit

The temporal range for tyrannosaurines went from almost 80.6 million years ago in the Campanian stage of the Late Cretaceous epoch to 66 million years ago in the Maastrichtian stage. Fossils have been found in different formations in what is now east Asia and western North America. While the Asian alioramins are the basal most group of the tyrannosaurines, the geographic placement of albertosaurines and other eutyrannosaurian tyrannosauroids found in North America suggests greatly the tyrannosaurines are North American in origin.[31]

Systematics edit

Prior to the 2010s, the relationships of the tyrannosaurines was best understood as Tyrannosaurus being a sister taxon to Tarbosaurus. These two genera in turn were the sister taxon to Daspletosaurus, follow by Alioramus. There was an alternative hypothesis from Phil Currie and colleagues (2003) who suggested Daspletosaurus to be more closely related to Tarbosaurus and Alioramus than to Tyrannosaurus based on cranial features.[32] This relationship, however, has not been found in more recent studies.[20][22][25][31][33] In 1988 Gregory Paul considered all tyrannosaurines at the time except Alioramus to be species of Tyrannosaurus.[34] In the second edition of The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs published in 2016, Paul would continue this thought as well as including Bistahieversor, Teratophoneus, Lythronax, and Nanuqsaurus into the genus as well.[35] This multispecies Tyrannosaurus classification is, however, not widely accepted by most paleontologists.[33] In some phylogenetic studies Bistahieversor is nested within Tyrannosaurinae,[22][25] but it is most often recovered as the sister taxon to Tyrannosauridae instead.[31][33]

The cladogram below displays the position of the Tyrannosaurinae within Eutyrannosauria and Tyrannosauridae, based on the results of phylogenetic analyses performed by Voris et al. (2020):[33]

As of 2023, at least three lineages of tyrannosaurines have been suggested.[33] The basalmost clade is the Alioramini. The second clade to diverge is the Teratophoneini, which comprises the American southwest taxa Dynamoterror, Lythronax, and Teratophoneus. They are sister to a third clade comprising Nanuqsaurus and the clade containing Daspletosaurini, which includes Daspletosaurus and Thanatotheristes, and the Tyrannosaurini, which includes Zhuchengtyrannus, Tarbosaurus, and Tyrannosaurus.[1]

The cladogram below displays the results of the strict consensus phylogenetic analysis performed by Scherer & Voiculescu-Holvad (2023), indicating the distinct lineages of tyrannosaurines.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Scherer, Charlie Roger; Voiculescu-Holvad, Christian (2023-11-28). "Re-analysis of a dataset refutes claims of anagenesis within Tyrannosaurus-line tyrannosaurines (Theropoda, Tyrannosauridae)". Cretaceous Research (In press): 105780. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2023.105780. ISSN 0195-6671.
  2. ^ Holtz, Thomas R. Jr. (2012) Dinosaurs: The Most Complete, Up-to-Date Encyclopedia for Dinosaur Lovers of All Ages, Winter 2011 Appendix. 2017-08-12 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Breithaupt, B.H.; Southwell, E.H.; Matthews, N.A. (18 October 2005). "In Celebration of 100 years of Tyrannosaurus rex: Manospondylus gigas, Ornithomimus grandis, and Dynamosaurus imperiosus, the Earliest Discoveries of Tyrannosaurus rex in the West". Abstracts with Programs. 2005 Salt Lake City Annual Meeting. Vol. 37. Geological Society of America. p. 406. from the original on 22 October 2019. Retrieved 8 October 2008.
  4. ^ Breithaup, BH; Southwell EH; Matthews NA (2006). "Dynamosaurus imperiosus and the earliest discoveries of Tyrannosaurus rex in Wyoming and the West". New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin. 35: 257–258.
  5. ^ Maleev, Evgeny A. (1955). "Giant carnivorous dinosaurs of Mongolia". Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR. 104 (4): 634–637.
  6. ^ Maleev, E. A. (1955). translated by F. J. Alcock. "New carnivorous dinosaurs from the Upper Cretaceous of Mongolia" (PDF). Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR. 104 (5): 779–783.
  7. ^ Rozhdestvensky, Anatoly K. (1965). "Growth changes in Asian dinosaurs and some problems of their taxonomy". Paleontological Journal. 3: 95–109.
  8. ^ Russell, Dale A. (1970). "Tyrannosaurs from the Late Cretaceous of western Canada". National Museum of Natural Sciences Publications in Paleontology. 1: 1–34.
  9. ^ Kurzanov, Sergei M. "A new carnosaur from the Late Cretaceous of Nogon-Tsav, Mongolia". The Joint Soviet-Mongolian Paleontological Expedition Transactions (in Russian). 3: 93–104.
  10. ^ Dong Zhiming (1977). "On the dinosaurian remains from Turpan, Xinjiang". Vertebrata PalAsiatica (in Chinese). 15: 59–66.
  11. ^ 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.
  12. ^ Sereno, P.; Tan, L.; Brusatte, S. L.; Kriegstein, H. J.; Zhao, X.; Cloward, K. (2009). "Tyrannosaurid skeletal design first evolved at small body size". Science. 326 (5951): 418–422. Bibcode:2009Sci...326..418S. doi:10.1126/science.1177428. PMID 19762599. S2CID 1953405.
  13. ^ Bakker, R.T.; Williams, M.; Currie, P.J. (1988). "Nanotyrannus, a new genus of pygmy tyrannosaur, from the latest Cretaceous of Montana". Hunteria. 1: 1–30.
  14. ^ Olshevsky, G. (1995). "The origin and evolution of the tyrannosaurids". Kyoryugaku Saizensen [Dino Frontline]. 9–10: 92–119.
  15. ^ Carr, Thomas D. (1999). "Craniofacial ontogeny in Tyrannosauridae (Dinosauria, Coelurosauria)". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 19 (3): 497–520. doi:10.1080/02724634.1999.10011161. S2CID 83744433.
  16. ^ 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.
  17. ^ a b Fowler, DW; Woodward, HN; Freedman, EA; Larson, PL; Horner, JR (2011). "Reanalysis of "Raptorex kriegsteini": A Juvenile Tyrannosaurid Dinosaur from Mongolia". PLOS ONE. 6 (6): e21376. Bibcode:2011PLoSO...621376F. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0021376. PMC 3126816. PMID 21738646.
  18. ^ Woodward, Holly N.; Tremaine, Katie; Williams, Scott A.; Zanno, Lindsay E.; Horner, John R.; Myhrvold, Nathan (2020). "Growing up Tyrannosaurus rex: Osteohistology refutes the pygmy "Nanotyrannus" and supports ontogenetic niche partitioning in juvenile Tyrannosaurus". Science Advances. 6 (1): eaax6250. Bibcode:2020SciA....6.6250W. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aax6250. ISSN 2375-2548. PMC 6938697. PMID 31911944.
  19. ^ a b Carr, T.D. (2020). "A high-resolution growth series of Tyrannosaurus rex obtained from multiple lines of evidence". PeerJ. 8: e9192. doi:10.7717/peerj.9192.
  20. ^ a b Carr, T.D.; Williamson, T.E.; Britt, B.B.; Stadtman, K. (2011). "Evidence for high taxonomic and morphologic tyrannosaurid diversity in the Late Cretaceous (Late Campanian) of the American Southwest and a new short-skulled tyrannosaurid from the Kaiparowits formation of Utah". Naturwissenschaften. 98 (3): 241–246. Bibcode:2011NW.....98..241C. doi:10.1007/s00114-011-0762-7. PMID 21253683. S2CID 13261338.
  21. ^ Hone, D. W. E.; Wang, K.; Sullivan, C.; Zhao, X.; Chen, S.; Li, D.; Ji, S.; Ji, Q.; Xu, X. (2011). "A new, large tyrannosaurine theropod from the Upper Cretaceous of China". Cretaceous Research. 32 (4): 495–503. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2011.03.005.
  22. ^ a b c Fiorillo, A. R.; Tykoski, R. S. (2014). Dodson, Peter (ed.). "A Diminutive New Tyrannosaur from the Top of the World". PLoS ONE. 9 (3): e91287. Bibcode:2014PLoSO...991287F. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0091287. PMC 3951350. PMID 24621577.
  23. ^ Fiorillo, Anthony R.; Gangloff, Roland A. (2000). "Theropod teeth from the Prince Creek Formation (Cretaceous) of northern Alaska, with speculations on Arctic Dinosaur paleoecology". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 20 (4): 675. doi:10.1671/0272-4634(2000)020[0675:TTFTPC]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 130766946.
  24. ^ a b Lü, J.; Yi, L.; Brusatte, S. L.; Yang, L.; Chen, L. (2014). "A new clade of Asian Late Cretaceous long-snouted tyrannosaurids". Nature Communications. 5 (3788): 3788. Bibcode:2014NatCo...5.3788L. doi:10.1038/ncomms4788. PMID 24807588.
  25. ^ a b c Loewen, M.A.; Irmis, R.B.; Sertich, J.J.W.; Currie, P.J.; Sampson, S.D. (2013). Evans, D.C (ed.). "Tyrant dinosaur evolution tracks the rise and fall of Late Cretaceous oceans". PLoS ONE. 8 (11): e79420. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...879420L. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0079420. PMC 3819173. PMID 24223179.
  26. ^ Xu Xing, X; Norell, Mark A.; Kuang Xuewen; Wang Xiaolin; Zhao Qi; Jia Chengkai. (2004). "Basal tyrannosauroids from China and evidence for protofeathers in tyrannosauroids" (PDF). Nature. 431 (7009): 680–684. Bibcode:2004Natur.431..680X. doi:10.1038/nature02855. PMID 15470426. S2CID 4381777.
  27. ^ Xu, X.; Wang, K.; Zhang, K.; Ma, Q.; Xing, L.; Sullivan, C.; Hu, D.; Cheng, S.; Wang, S.; et al. (2012). (PDF). Nature. 484 (7392): 92–95. doi:10.1038/nature10906. PMID 22481363. S2CID 29689629. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 April 2012.
  28. ^ Bell, P. R.; Campione, N. E.; Persons, W. S.; Currie, P. J.; Larson, P. L.; Tanke, D. H.; Bakker, R. T. (2017). "Tyrannosauroid integument reveals conflicting patterns of gigantism and feather evolution". Biology Letters. 13 (6): 20170092. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2017.0092. PMC 5493735. PMID 28592520.
  29. ^ Carr, Thomas D.; Varricchio, David J.; Sedlmayr, Jayc C.; Roberts, Eric M.; Moore, Jason R. (2017-03-30). "A new tyrannosaur with evidence for anagenesis and crocodile-like facial sensory system". Scientific Reports. 7: 44942. Bibcode:2017NatSR...744942C. doi:10.1038/srep44942. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 5372470. PMID 28358353.
  30. ^ Milinkovitch, Michel; Manukyan, Liana; Debry, Adrien; Di-Po, Nicolas; Martin, Samuel; Singh, Dalijit; Lambert, Dominique; Zwicker, Matthias (January 4, 2013). "Crocodile Head Scales Are Not Developmental Units But Emerge from Physical Cracking". Science. 339 (6115): 78–81. Bibcode:2013Sci...339...78M. doi:10.1126/science.1226265. PMID 23196908. S2CID 6859452.
  31. ^ a b c Delcourt, R.; Grillo, O. N. (2018). "Tyrannosauroids from the Southern Hemisphere: Implications for biogeography, evolution, and taxonomy". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 511: 379–387. Bibcode:2018PPP...511..379D. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2018.09.003. S2CID 133830150.
  32. ^ Currie, Philip J.; Hurum, Jørn H.; Sabath, Karol (2003). (PDF). Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 48 (2): 227–234. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 25, 2007.
  33. ^ a b c d e Voris, Jared T.; Therrien, Francois; Zelenitzky, Darla K.; Brown, Caleb M. (2020). "A new tyrannosaurine (Theropoda:Tyrannosauridae) from the Campanian Foremost Formation of Alberta, Canada, provides insight into the evolution and biogeography of tyrannosaurids". Cretaceous Research. 110: 104388. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2020.104388. S2CID 213838772.
  34. ^ Paul, Gregory S. (1988). Predatory Dinosaurs of the World. New York: Simon & Schuster. pp. 464pp. ISBN 978-0-671-61946-6.
  35. ^ Paul, Gregory S. (2016). The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 360. ISBN 9781400883141.

tyrannosaurinae, sometimes, referred, tyrannosaurines, extinct, subfamilies, tyrannosauridae, family, coelurosaurian, theropods, that, consists, least, three, tribes, several, genera, fossils, these, genera, have, been, found, late, cretaceous, deposits, weste. Tyrannosaurinae sometimes referred to as tyrannosaurines is one of the two extinct subfamilies of Tyrannosauridae a family of coelurosaurian theropods that consists of at least three tribes and several genera All fossils of these genera have been found in the Late Cretaceous deposits of western North America and east Asia Compared to the related subfamily Albertosaurinae tyrannosaurines overall are more robust and larger though the alioramins were gracile by comparison This subfamily also includes the oldest known tyrannosaurid genus Lythronax as well as the youngest and most famous member of the group Tyrannosaurus rex There were at least 30 different species of tyrannosaurines TyrannosaurinaeTemporal range Late Cretaceous 81 9 66 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NSkull of Alioramus Skull of Tyrannosaurus Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClade DinosauriaClade SaurischiaClade TheropodaFamily TyrannosauridaeSubfamily TyrannosaurinaeOsborn 1906Type genus TyrannosaurusOsborn 1905Subgroups 2 Nanuqsaurus Alioramini Daspletosaurini Teratophoneini 1 Dynamoterror Lythronax Teratophoneus Tyrannosaurini 1 Tarbosaurus Tyrannosaurus Zhuchengtyrannus Contents 1 History of discovery 2 Natural history 2 1 Description 2 2 Distribution 3 Systematics 4 ReferencesHistory of discovery edit nbsp Deinodon teeth the earliest known tyrannosaurid remainsThe first remains of tyrannosaurids were uncovered during expeditions led by the Geological Survey of Canada which located numerous scattered teeth These distinctive dinosaur teeth were given the name Deinodon terrible tooth by Joseph Leidy in 1856 In 1892 Edward Drinker Cope described more tyrannosaur material in the form of isolated vertebrae and gave this animal the name Manospondylus gigas This discovery was mostly overlooked for over a century and caused controversy in the early 2000s when it was discovered that this material actually belonged to and had name priority over Tyrannosaurus rex 3 Later in 1905 Henry Fairfield Osborn described two tyrannosaur specimens that had been collected in Montana and Wyoming during a 1902 expedition of the American Museum of Natural History led by Barnum Brown Initially Osborn considered these to be distinct species The first he named Dynamosaurus imperiosus emperor power lizard and the second Tyrannosaurus rex king tyrant lizard A year later Osborn recognized that these two specimens actually came from the same species Despite the fact that Dynamosaurus had been found first the name Tyrannosaurus had appeared one page earlier in his original article describing both specimens Therefore according to the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature ICZN the name Tyrannosaurus was used 4 The second described representative of the tyrannosaurines Tarbosaurus originally described as an Asiatic representative of Tyrannosaurus was in 1955 after a large skull was recovered in a joint Soviet Mongolian expedition to the Gobi Desert in the Mongolian Omnogovi Province in 1946 The holotype was named as Tyrannosaurus bataar by Evgeny Maleev as Tyrannosaurus bataar 5 The genus Tarbosaurus was also described in the same year based on PIN 551 2 a specimen with a skull and skeletal remains discovered by the same expedition in 1948 and 1949 as Tarbosaurus efremovi 6 It was only in 1965 that Ty bataar and Ta efremovi were the same species the latter being a younger animal and distinct from Tyrannosaurus recognized by A K Rozhdestvensky who recombined the species as Tarbosaurus bataar 7 In the 1970s saw the description of two genera In 1970 saw the publication of Daspletosaurus with the holotype CMN 8506 consisting of a partial skeleton including the skull the shoulder a forelimb the pelvis a femur and all of the vertebrae from the neck torso and hip as well as the first eleven tail vertebrae It was discovered in 1921 near Steveville Alberta by Charles Mortram Sternberg who thought it was a new species of Gorgosaurus but was found to be a new genus by Dale Russell using the aforementioned CMN 8506 8 The second Alioramus described in 1976 by Sergei Kurzanov which the holotype PIN 3141 1 is a partial skull associated with three metatarsals found by a joint Soviet Mongolian expedition to the Gobi Desert in the early 1970s found these remains at a locality known as Nogon Tsav in the Mongolian province of Bayankhongor Nemegt Formation 9 From 1977 to 2009 saw the publications of several genera In Asia they include Shanshanosaurus 1977 10 Maleevosaurus 1992 11 and Raptorex 2009 12 while in North America saw Nanotyrannus 1988 13 Dinotyrannus and Stygivenator 1995 14 These genera however are controversial as the remains of these animals are immature or juvenile individuals As of 2021 it is widely understood that the Asian specimens are early growth stages of Tarbosaurus 15 16 17 while the North American specimens are those of Tyrannosaurus 18 19 nbsp Skeletal diagrams showing holotype remains of Lythronax A and a Teratophoneus specimen B N P show selected bones of the formerValid genera would not be named until the 2010s where in 2011 announced the publication of Teratophoneus by Thomas D Carr and colleagues The fossils were first found in the Kaiparowits Formation of southern Utah Later fossils from the same formation were discovered and identified as the genus Argon argon radiometric dating indicates that the Kaiparowits Formation was deposited between 76 1 and 74 0 million years ago during the Campanian stage of the Late Cretaceous period This date means that Teratophoneus lived in the middle of the Campanian stage of the Late Cretaceous 20 In the same year Zhuchengtyrannus was named by David W E Hone and colleagues based on the holotype ZCDM V0031 a nearly complete right maxilla and associated left dentary lower jaw both with teeth housed at Zhucheng Dinosaur Museum 21 In 2014 came Nanuqsaurus the northern most tyrannosaurid found in Prince Creek Formation of the North Slope of Alaska United States 22 23 In the same year also announced Qianzhousaurus known from a partial sub adult individual consisting of a nearly complete skull with the lower jaws missing all teeth lost during fossilization 9 cervical vertebrae 3 dorsal vertebrae 18 caudal vertebrae both scapulocoracoids partial ilia and the left hindlimb compromising the femur tibia fibula astragalus with calcaneum and metatarsals III and IV 24 Lythronax the oldest known member of Tyrannosauridae was described in 2013 by Mark A Loewen and colleagues from a nearly complete specimen that was uncovered in 2009 in the Wahweap Formation of the Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument 25 Natural history editDescription edit nbsp Size of A remotus compared with a human nbsp The specimens Sue AMNH 5027 Stan and Jane to scale with a human In comparison to the albertosaurines tyrannosaurines were more heavily built and larger The alioramin genera of Qianzhousaurus and Alioramus however were the exception as they were more comparable in built to albertosaurines and have longirostrine snouts 24 Like albertosaurines tyrannosaurines also had heterodont dentition large heads design to catch and kill their prey and short didactyl arms Based on the growth stages of Tyrannosaurus and possibly Tarbosaurus 17 tyrannosaurines undergone ontogenetic changes from gracile or slender semi longirostrine immatures to robust heavy headed adults This implies that these animals occupy different ecological niches as they developed 19 While there is fossil evidence of earlier tyrannosauroids having feathers 26 27 the evidence of such structures in tyrannosaurids is controversial as a study in 2017 from Bell and colleagues found no support in feathered integument in tyrannosaurids 28 The study used skin impressions which are small found widely dispersed across the post cranium at different regions of the body with a pattern similar to crocodiles Further the croc analogy Thomas Carr and colleagues in 2017 by studying the snout of Daspletosaurus suggested they have large scales with sensory sensory neuron pits under the skin 29 This notion has been challenged from other authors who suggested a more lip covering of the teeth 30 Distribution edit The temporal range for tyrannosaurines went from almost 80 6 million years ago in the Campanian stage of the Late Cretaceous epoch to 66 million years ago in the Maastrichtian stage Fossils have been found in different formations in what is now east Asia and western North America While the Asian alioramins are the basal most group of the tyrannosaurines the geographic placement of albertosaurines and other eutyrannosaurian tyrannosauroids found in North America suggests greatly the tyrannosaurines are North American in origin 31 Systematics editPrior to the 2010s the relationships of the tyrannosaurines was best understood as Tyrannosaurus being a sister taxon to Tarbosaurus These two genera in turn were the sister taxon to Daspletosaurus follow by Alioramus There was an alternative hypothesis from Phil Currie and colleagues 2003 who suggested Daspletosaurus to be more closely related to Tarbosaurus and Alioramus than to Tyrannosaurus based on cranial features 32 This relationship however has not been found in more recent studies 20 22 25 31 33 In 1988 Gregory Paul considered all tyrannosaurines at the time except Alioramus to be species of Tyrannosaurus 34 In the second edition of The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs published in 2016 Paul would continue this thought as well as including Bistahieversor Teratophoneus Lythronax and Nanuqsaurus into the genus as well 35 This multispecies Tyrannosaurus classification is however not widely accepted by most paleontologists 33 In some phylogenetic studies Bistahieversor is nested within Tyrannosaurinae 22 25 but it is most often recovered as the sister taxon to Tyrannosauridae instead 31 33 The cladogram below displays the position of the Tyrannosaurinae within Eutyrannosauria and Tyrannosauridae based on the results of phylogenetic analyses performed by Voris et al 2020 33 Eutyrannosauria Dryptosaurus aquilunguisAppalachiosaurus montgomeriensisBistahieversor sealeyiTyrannosauridae Albertosaurinae Gorgosaurus libratusAlbertosaurus sarcophagusTyrannosaurinaeAs of 2023 at least three lineages of tyrannosaurines have been suggested 33 The basalmost clade is the Alioramini The second clade to diverge is the Teratophoneini which comprises the American southwest taxa Dynamoterror Lythronax and Teratophoneus They are sister to a third clade comprising Nanuqsaurus and the clade containing Daspletosaurini which includes Daspletosaurus and Thanatotheristes and the Tyrannosaurini which includes Zhuchengtyrannus Tarbosaurus and Tyrannosaurus 1 The cladogram below displays the results of the strict consensus phylogenetic analysis performed by Scherer amp Voiculescu Holvad 2023 indicating the distinct lineages of tyrannosaurines 1 Tyrannosaurinae Alioramini Alioramus remotusAlioramus altaiQianzhousaurus sinensisTeratophoneini Dynamoterror dynastesTeratophoneus currieiLythronax argestesNanuqsaurus hoglundiDaspletosaurini Thanatotheristes degrootorumDaspletosaurus horneriDaspletosaurus wilsoniDaspletosaurus torosusTMP 2001 36 1Tyrannosaurini Zhuchengtyrannus magnusTarbosaurus bataarTyrannosaurus rexReferences edit a b c d Scherer Charlie Roger Voiculescu Holvad Christian 2023 11 28 Re analysis of a dataset refutes claims of anagenesis within Tyrannosaurus line tyrannosaurines Theropoda Tyrannosauridae Cretaceous Research In press 105780 doi 10 1016 j cretres 2023 105780 ISSN 0195 6671 Holtz Thomas R Jr 2012 Dinosaurs The Most Complete Up to Date Encyclopedia for Dinosaur Lovers of All Ages Winter 2011 Appendix Archived 2017 08 12 at the Wayback Machine Breithaupt B H Southwell E H Matthews N A 18 October 2005 In Celebration of 100 years of Tyrannosaurus rex Manospondylus gigas Ornithomimus grandis and Dynamosaurus imperiosus the Earliest Discoveries of Tyrannosaurus rex in the West Abstracts with Programs 2005 Salt Lake City Annual Meeting Vol 37 Geological Society of America p 406 Archived from the original on 22 October 2019 Retrieved 8 October 2008 Breithaup BH Southwell EH Matthews NA 2006 Dynamosaurus imperiosus and the earliest discoveries of Tyrannosaurus rex in Wyoming and the West New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 35 257 258 Maleev Evgeny A 1955 Giant carnivorous dinosaurs of Mongolia Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR 104 4 634 637 Maleev E A 1955 translated by F J Alcock New carnivorous dinosaurs from the Upper Cretaceous of Mongolia PDF Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR 104 5 779 783 Rozhdestvensky Anatoly K 1965 Growth changes in Asian dinosaurs and some problems of their taxonomy Paleontological Journal 3 95 109 Russell Dale A 1970 Tyrannosaurs from the Late Cretaceous of western Canada National Museum of Natural Sciences Publications in Paleontology 1 1 34 Kurzanov Sergei M A new carnosaur from the Late Cretaceous of Nogon Tsav Mongolia The Joint Soviet Mongolian Paleontological Expedition Transactions in Russian 3 93 104 Dong Zhiming 1977 On the dinosaurian remains from Turpan Xinjiang Vertebrata PalAsiatica in Chinese 15 59 66 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 Sereno P Tan L Brusatte S L Kriegstein H J Zhao X Cloward K 2009 Tyrannosaurid skeletal design first evolved at small body size Science 326 5951 418 422 Bibcode 2009Sci 326 418S doi 10 1126 science 1177428 PMID 19762599 S2CID 1953405 Bakker R T Williams M Currie P J 1988 Nanotyrannus a new genus of pygmy tyrannosaur from the latest Cretaceous of Montana Hunteria 1 1 30 Olshevsky G 1995 The origin and evolution of the tyrannosaurids Kyoryugaku Saizensen Dino Frontline 9 10 92 119 Carr Thomas D 1999 Craniofacial ontogeny in Tyrannosauridae Dinosauria Coelurosauria Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 19 3 497 520 doi 10 1080 02724634 1999 10011161 S2CID 83744433 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 a b Fowler DW Woodward HN Freedman EA Larson PL Horner JR 2011 Reanalysis of Raptorex kriegsteini A Juvenile Tyrannosaurid Dinosaur from Mongolia PLOS ONE 6 6 e21376 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 621376F doi 10 1371 journal pone 0021376 PMC 3126816 PMID 21738646 Woodward Holly N Tremaine Katie Williams Scott A Zanno Lindsay E Horner John R Myhrvold Nathan 2020 Growing up Tyrannosaurus rex Osteohistology refutes the pygmy Nanotyrannus and supports ontogenetic niche partitioning in juvenile Tyrannosaurus Science Advances 6 1 eaax6250 Bibcode 2020SciA 6 6250W doi 10 1126 sciadv aax6250 ISSN 2375 2548 PMC 6938697 PMID 31911944 a b Carr T D 2020 A high resolution growth series of Tyrannosaurus rex obtained from multiple lines of evidence PeerJ 8 e9192 doi 10 7717 peerj 9192 a b Carr T D Williamson T E Britt B B Stadtman K 2011 Evidence for high taxonomic and morphologic tyrannosaurid diversity in the Late Cretaceous Late Campanian of the American Southwest and a new short skulled tyrannosaurid from the Kaiparowits formation of Utah Naturwissenschaften 98 3 241 246 Bibcode 2011NW 98 241C doi 10 1007 s00114 011 0762 7 PMID 21253683 S2CID 13261338 Hone D W E Wang K Sullivan C Zhao X Chen S Li D Ji S Ji Q Xu X 2011 A new large tyrannosaurine theropod from the Upper Cretaceous of China Cretaceous Research 32 4 495 503 doi 10 1016 j cretres 2011 03 005 a b c Fiorillo A R Tykoski R S 2014 Dodson Peter ed A Diminutive New Tyrannosaur from the Top of the World PLoS ONE 9 3 e91287 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 991287F doi 10 1371 journal pone 0091287 PMC 3951350 PMID 24621577 Fiorillo Anthony R Gangloff Roland A 2000 Theropod teeth from the Prince Creek Formation Cretaceous of northern Alaska with speculations on Arctic Dinosaur paleoecology Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 20 4 675 doi 10 1671 0272 4634 2000 020 0675 TTFTPC 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 130766946 a b Lu J Yi L Brusatte S L Yang L Chen L 2014 A new clade of Asian Late Cretaceous long snouted tyrannosaurids Nature Communications 5 3788 3788 Bibcode 2014NatCo 5 3788L doi 10 1038 ncomms4788 PMID 24807588 a b c Loewen M A Irmis R B Sertich J J W Currie P J Sampson S D 2013 Evans D C ed Tyrant dinosaur evolution tracks the rise and fall of Late Cretaceous oceans PLoS ONE 8 11 e79420 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 879420L doi 10 1371 journal pone 0079420 PMC 3819173 PMID 24223179 Xu Xing X Norell Mark A Kuang Xuewen Wang Xiaolin Zhao Qi Jia Chengkai 2004 Basal tyrannosauroids from China and evidence for protofeathers in tyrannosauroids PDF Nature 431 7009 680 684 Bibcode 2004Natur 431 680X doi 10 1038 nature02855 PMID 15470426 S2CID 4381777 Xu X Wang K Zhang K Ma Q Xing L Sullivan C Hu D Cheng S Wang S et al 2012 A gigantic feathered dinosaur from the Lower Cretaceous of China PDF Nature 484 7392 92 95 doi 10 1038 nature10906 PMID 22481363 S2CID 29689629 Archived from the original PDF on 17 April 2012 Bell P R Campione N E Persons W S Currie P J Larson P L Tanke D H Bakker R T 2017 Tyrannosauroid integument reveals conflicting patterns of gigantism and feather evolution Biology Letters 13 6 20170092 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2017 0092 PMC 5493735 PMID 28592520 Carr Thomas D Varricchio David J Sedlmayr Jayc C Roberts Eric M Moore Jason R 2017 03 30 A new tyrannosaur with evidence for anagenesis and crocodile like facial sensory system Scientific Reports 7 44942 Bibcode 2017NatSR 744942C doi 10 1038 srep44942 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 5372470 PMID 28358353 Milinkovitch Michel Manukyan Liana Debry Adrien Di Po Nicolas Martin Samuel Singh Dalijit Lambert Dominique Zwicker Matthias January 4 2013 Crocodile Head Scales Are Not Developmental Units But Emerge from Physical Cracking Science 339 6115 78 81 Bibcode 2013Sci 339 78M doi 10 1126 science 1226265 PMID 23196908 S2CID 6859452 a b c Delcourt R Grillo O N 2018 Tyrannosauroids from the Southern Hemisphere Implications for biogeography evolution and taxonomy Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 511 379 387 Bibcode 2018PPP 511 379D doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2018 09 003 S2CID 133830150 Currie Philip J Hurum Jorn H Sabath Karol 2003 Skull structure and evolution in tyrannosaurid phylogeny PDF Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 48 2 227 234 Archived from the original PDF on October 25 2007 a b c d e Voris Jared T Therrien Francois Zelenitzky Darla K Brown Caleb M 2020 A new tyrannosaurine Theropoda Tyrannosauridae from the Campanian Foremost Formation of Alberta Canada provides insight into the evolution and biogeography of tyrannosaurids Cretaceous Research 110 104388 doi 10 1016 j cretres 2020 104388 S2CID 213838772 Paul Gregory S 1988 Predatory Dinosaurs of the World New York Simon amp Schuster pp 464pp ISBN 978 0 671 61946 6 Paul Gregory S 2016 The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs Princeton Princeton University Press p 360 ISBN 9781400883141 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tyrannosaurinae amp oldid 1187826341, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.