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Tyrannosaurus

Tyrannosaurus (/tɪˌrænəˈsɔːrəs, t-/; lit.'tyrant lizard'; from Ancient Greek τύραννος (túrannos) 'tyrant', and σαῦρος (saûros) 'lizard') is a genus of large theropod dinosaur. The type species Tyrannosaurus rex (rex meaning "king" in Latin), often called T. rex or colloquially T-Rex, is one of the best represented theropods. It lived throughout what is now western North America, on what was then an island continent known as Laramidia. Tyrannosaurus had a much wider range than other tyrannosaurids. Fossils are found in a variety of rock formations dating to the latest Campanian-Maastrichtian ages of the Late Cretaceous period, 72.7 to 66 million years ago. It was the last known member of the tyrannosaurids and among the last non-avian dinosaurs to exist before the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event.

Tyrannosaurus
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous, 72.7–66 Ma
Reconstruction of the T. rex type specimen at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Clade: Saurischia
Clade: Theropoda
Family: Tyrannosauridae
Subfamily: Tyrannosaurinae
Clade: Tyrannosaurini
Genus: Tyrannosaurus
Osborn, 1905
Type species
Tyrannosaurus rex
Osborn, 1905
Other species
Synonyms
Genus synonymy
  • Dinotyrannus
    Olshevsky, 1995
  • Dynamosaurus
    Osborn, 1905
  • Manospondylus
    Cope, 1892
  • Nanotyrannus
    Bakker, Williams & Currie, 1988
  • Stygivenator
    Olshevsky, 1995
  • Tarbosaurus?
    Maleev, 1955b
Species synonymy
  • Aublysodon amplus?
    Marsh, 1892
  • Deinodon amplus?
    (Marsh, 1892) Hay, 1902
  • Manospondylus amplus?
    (Marsh, 1892) Olshevsky, 1978
  • Stygivenator amplus?
    (Marsh, 1892) Olshevsky, 1995
  • Tyrannosaurus amplus?
    (Marsh, 1892) Hay, 1930
  • Aublysodon cristatus?
    Marsh, 1892
  • Deinodon cristatus?
    (Marsh, 1892) Hay, 1902
  • Stygivenator cristatus?
    (Marsh, 1892) Olshevsky, 1995
  • Manospondylus gigas
    Cope, 1892
  • Dynamosaurus imperiosus
    Osborn, 1905
  • Tyrannosaurus imperiosus
    (Osborn, 1905) Swinton, 1970
  • Gorgosaurus lancensis
    Gilmore, 1946
  • Albertosaurus lancensis
    (Gilmore, 1946) Russell, 1970
  • Deinodon lancensis
    (Gilmore, 1946) Kuhn, 1965
  • Aublysodon lancensis
    (Gilmore, 1946) Charig in Appleby, Charig, Cox, Kermack & Tarlo, 1967
  • Nanotyrannus lancensis
    (Gilmore, 1946) Bakker, Williams & Currie, 1988
  • Albertosaurus "megagracilis"
    Paul, 1988a (nomen nudum)
  • Dinotyrannus megagracilis
    Olshevsky, 1995
  • Aublysodon molnaris
    Paul, 1988a
  • Aublysodon molnari
    Paul, 1988a emend Paul, 1990
  • Stygivenator molnari
    (Paul, 1988a emend Paul, 1990) Olshevsky, 1995

Like other tyrannosaurids, Tyrannosaurus was a bipedal carnivore with a massive skull balanced by a long, heavy tail. Relative to its large and powerful hind limbs, the forelimbs of Tyrannosaurus were short but unusually powerful for their size, and they had two clawed digits. The most complete specimen measures up to 12.3–12.4 m (40–41 ft) in length, but according to most modern estimates, Tyrannosaurus could have exceeded sizes of 13 m (43 ft) in length, 3.7–4 m (12–13 ft) in hip height, and 8.8 tonnes (8.7 long tons; 9.7 short tons) in mass. Although some other theropods might have rivaled or exceeded Tyrannosaurus in size, it is still among the largest known land predators, with an estimated bite force being the largest among all terrestrial animals. By far the largest carnivore in its environment, Tyrannosaurus rex was most likely an apex predator, preying upon hadrosaurs, juvenile armored herbivores like ceratopsians and ankylosaurs, and possibly sauropods. Some experts have suggested the dinosaur was primarily a scavenger. The question of whether Tyrannosaurus was an apex predator or a pure scavenger was among the longest debates in paleontology. Most paleontologists today accept that Tyrannosaurus was both an active predator and a scavenger.

Specimens of Tyrannosaurus rex include some that are nearly complete skeletons. Soft tissue and proteins have been reported in at least one of these specimens. The abundance of fossil material has allowed significant research into many aspects of its biology, including its life history and biomechanics. The feeding habits, physiology, and potential speed of Tyrannosaurus rex are a few subjects of debate. Its taxonomy is also controversial, as some scientists consider Tarbosaurus bataar from Asia to be a second Tyrannosaurus species, while others maintain Tarbosaurus is a separate genus. Several other genera of North American tyrannosaurids have also been synonymized with Tyrannosaurus. At present, two species of Tyrannosaurus are considered valid; the type species, T. rex, and the earlier and more recently discovered T. mcraeensis.

As the archetypal theropod, Tyrannosaurus has been one of the best-known dinosaurs since the early 20th century and has been featured in film, advertising, postal stamps, and many other media.

History of research

Earliest finds

 
Type specimen (AMNH 3982) of Manospondylus gigas

Teeth from what is now documented as a Tyrannosaurus rex were found in 1874 by Arthur Lakes near Golden, Colorado. In the early 1890s, John Bell Hatcher collected postcranial elements in eastern Wyoming. The fossils were believed to be from the large species Ornithomimus grandis (now Deinodon) but are now considered T. rex remains.[1]

In 1892, Edward Drinker Cope found two vertebral fragments of a large dinosaur. Cope believed the fragments belonged to an "agathaumid" (ceratopsid) dinosaur, and named them Manospondylus gigas, meaning "giant porous vertebra", in reference to the numerous openings for blood vessels he found in the bone.[1] The M. gigas remains were, in 1907, identified by Hatcher as those of a theropod rather than a ceratopsid.[2]

Henry Fairfield Osborn recognized the similarity between Manospondylus gigas and T. rex as early as 1917, by which time the second vertebra had been lost. Owing to the fragmentary nature of the Manospondylus vertebrae, Osborn did not synonymize the two genera, instead considering the older genus indeterminate.[3] In June 2000, the Black Hills Institute found around 10% of a Tyrannosaurus skeleton (BHI 6248) at a site that might have been the original M. gigas locality.[4]

Skeleton discovery and naming

 
Outdated skeletal restoration by William D. Matthew from 1905, published alongside Osborn's description paper

Barnum Brown, assistant curator of the American Museum of Natural History, found the first partial skeleton of T. rex in eastern Wyoming in 1900. Brown found another partial skeleton in the Hell Creek Formation in Montana in 1902, comprising approximately 34 fossilized bones.[5] Writing at the time Brown said "Quarry No. 1 contains the femur, pubes, humerus, three vertebrae and two undetermined bones of a large Carnivorous Dinosaur not described by Marsh. ... I have never seen anything like it from the Cretaceous."[6] Henry Fairfield Osborn, president of the American Museum of Natural History, named the second skeleton T. rex in 1905. The generic name is derived from the Greek words τύραννος (tyrannos, meaning "tyrant") and σαῦρος (sauros, meaning "lizard"). Osborn used the Latin word rex, meaning "king", for the specific name. The full binomial therefore translates to "tyrant lizard the king" or "King Tyrant Lizard", emphasizing the animal's size and presumed dominance over other species of the time.[5]

 
Dynamosaurus imperiosus holotype, Natural History Museum

Osborn named the other specimen Dynamosaurus imperiosus in a paper in 1905.[5] In 1906, Osborn recognized that the two skeletons were from the same species and selected Tyrannosaurus as the preferred name.[7] The original Dynamosaurus material resides in the collections of the Natural History Museum, London.[8] In 1941, the T. rex type specimen was sold to the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, for $7,000.[6] Dynamosaurus would later be honored by the 2018 description of another species of tyrannosaurid by Andrew McDonald and colleagues, Dynamoterror dynastes, whose name was chosen in reference to the 1905 name, as it had been a "childhood favorite" of McDonald's.[9]

From the 1910s through the end of the 1950s, Barnum's discoveries remained the only specimens of Tyrannosaurus, as the Great Depression and wars kept many paleontologists out of the field.[4]

Resurgent interest

 
Specimen "Sue", Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago

Beginning in the 1960s, there was renewed interest in Tyrannosaurus, resulting in the recovery of 42 skeletons (5–80% complete by bone count) from Western North America.[4] In 1967, Dr. William MacMannis located and recovered the skeleton named "MOR 008", which is 15% complete by bone count and has a reconstructed skull displayed at the Museum of the Rockies. The 1990s saw numerous discoveries, with nearly twice as many finds as in all previous years, including two of the most complete skeletons found to date: Sue and Stan.[4]

Sue Hendrickson, an amateur paleontologist, discovered the most complete (approximately 85%) and largest Tyrannosaurus skeleton in the Hell Creek Formation on August 12, 1990. The specimen Sue, named after the discoverer, was the object of a legal battle over its ownership. In 1997, the litigation was settled in favor of Maurice Williams, the original land owner. The fossil collection was purchased by the Field Museum of Natural History at auction for $7.6 million, making it the most expensive dinosaur skeleton until the sale of Stan for $31.8 million in 2020.[10] From 1998 to 1999, Field Museum of Natural History staff spent over 25,000 hours taking the rock off the bones.[11] The bones were then shipped to New Jersey where the mount was constructed, then shipped back to Chicago for the final assembly. The mounted skeleton opened to the public on May 17, 2000, in the Field Museum of Natural History. A study of this specimen's fossilized bones showed that Sue reached full size at age 19 and died at the age of 28, the longest estimated life of any tyrannosaur known.[12]

 
"Scotty", the largest known specimen, exhibited in Japan

Another Tyrannosaurus, nicknamed Stan (BHI 3033), in honor of amateur paleontologist Stan Sacrison, was recovered from the Hell Creek Formation in 1992. Stan is the second most complete skeleton found, with 199 bones recovered representing 70% of the total.[13] This tyrannosaur also had many bone pathologies, including broken and healed ribs, a broken (and healed) neck, and a substantial hole in the back of its head, about the size of a Tyrannosaurus tooth.[14]

In 1998, Bucky Derflinger noticed a T. rex toe exposed above ground, making Derflinger, who was 20 years old at the time, the youngest person to discover a Tyrannosaurus. The specimen, dubbed Bucky in honor of its discoverer, was a young adult, 3.0 metres (10 ft) tall and 11 metres (35 ft) long. Bucky is the first Tyrannosaurus to be found that preserved a furcula (wishbone). Bucky is permanently displayed at The Children's Museum of Indianapolis.[15]

 
The specimens "Sue", AMNH 5027, "Stan", and "Jane", to scale with a human.

In the summer of 2000, crews organized by Jack Horner discovered five Tyrannosaurus skeletons near the Fort Peck Reservoir.[16] In 2001, a 50% complete skeleton of a juvenile Tyrannosaurus was discovered in the Hell Creek Formation by a crew from the Burpee Museum of Natural History. Dubbed Jane (BMRP 2002.4.1), the find was thought to be the first known skeleton of a pygmy tyrannosaurid, Nanotyrannus, but subsequent research revealed that it is more likely a juvenile Tyrannosaurus, and the most complete juvenile example known;[17] Jane is exhibited at the Burpee Museum of Natural History.[18] In 2002, a skeleton named Wyrex, discovered by amateur collectors Dan Wells and Don Wyrick, had 114 bones and was 38% complete. The dig was concluded over 3 weeks in 2004 by the Black Hills Institute with the first live online Tyrannosaurus excavation providing daily reports, photos, and video.[4]

In 2006, Montana State University revealed that it possessed the largest Tyrannosaurus skull yet discovered (from a specimen named MOR 008), measuring 5 feet (152 cm) long.[19] Subsequent comparisons indicated that the longest head was 136.5 centimetres (53.7 in) (from specimen LACM 23844) and the widest head was 90.2 centimetres (35.5 in) (from Sue).[20]

Footprints

 
Probable footprint from New Mexico

Two isolated fossilized footprints have been tentatively assigned to T. rex. The first was discovered at Philmont Scout Ranch, New Mexico, in 1983 by American geologist Charles Pillmore. Originally thought to belong to a hadrosaurid, examination of the footprint revealed a large 'heel' unknown in ornithopod dinosaur tracks, and traces of what may have been a hallux, the dewclaw-like fourth digit of the tyrannosaur foot. The footprint was published as the ichnogenus Tyrannosauripus pillmorei in 1994, by Martin Lockley and Adrian Hunt. Lockley and Hunt suggested that it was very likely the track was made by a T. rex, which would make it the first known footprint from this species. The track was made in what was once a vegetated wetland mudflat. It measures 83 centimeters (33 in) long by 71 centimeters (28 in) wide.[21]

A second footprint that may have been made by a Tyrannosaurus was first reported in 2007 by British paleontologist Phil Manning, from the Hell Creek Formation of Montana. This second track measures 72 centimeters (28 in) long, shorter than the track described by Lockley and Hunt. Whether or not the track was made by Tyrannosaurus is unclear, though Tyrannosaurus is the only large theropod known to have existed in the Hell Creek Formation.[22][23]

A set of footprints in Glenrock, Wyoming dating to the Maastrichtian stage of the Late Cretaceous and hailing from the Lance Formation were described by Scott Persons, Phil Currie and colleagues in 2016, and are believed to belong to either a juvenile T. rex or the dubious tyrannosaurid Nanotyrannus lancensis. From measurements and based on the positions of the footprints, the animal was believed to be traveling at a walking speed of around 2.8 to 5 miles per hour and was estimated to have a hip height of 1.56 m (5.1 ft) to 2.06 m (6.8 ft).[24][25][26] A follow-up paper appeared in 2017, increasing the speed estimations by 50–80%.[27]

Description

Size

 
Size (in blue) compared with selected giant theropods and a human

T. rex was one of the largest land carnivores of all time. One of the largest and the most complete specimens, nicknamed Sue (FMNH PR2081), is located at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago. Sue measured 12.3–12.4 m (40.4–40.7 ft) long,[28][29] was 3.66–3.96 meters (12–13 ft) tall at the hips,[30][31][32] and according to the most recent studies, using a variety of techniques, maximum body masses have been estimated approximately 8.4–8.46 metric tons (9.26–9.33 short tons).[33][34] A specimen nicknamed Scotty (RSM P2523.8), located at the Royal Saskatchewan Museum, is reported to measure 13 m (43 ft) in length. Using a mass estimation technique that extrapolates from the circumference of the femur, Scotty was estimated as the largest known specimen at 8.87 metric tons (9.78 short tons) in body mass.[33][35]

Not every adult Tyrannosaurus specimen recovered is as big. Historically average adult mass estimates have varied widely over the years, from as low as 4.5 metric tons (5.0 short tons),[36][37] to more than 7.2 metric tons (7.9 short tons),[38] with most modern estimates ranging between 5.4 metric tons (6.0 short tons) and 8.0 metric tons (8.8 short tons).[28][39][40][41][42]

Skull

 
Profile view of a skull (AMNH 5027)

The largest known T. rex skulls measure up to 1.54 meters (5 ft) in length.[19][30] Large fenestrae (openings) in the skull reduced weight, as in all carnivorous theropods. In other respects Tyrannosaurus's skull was significantly different from those of large non-tyrannosaurid theropods. It was extremely wide at the rear but had a narrow snout, allowing unusually good binocular vision.[43][44] The skull bones were massive and the nasals and some other bones were fused, preventing movement between them; but many were pneumatized (contained a "honeycomb" of tiny air spaces) and thus lighter. These and other skull-strengthening features are part of the tyrannosaurid trend towards an increasingly powerful bite, which easily surpassed that of all non-tyrannosaurids.[45][46][47] The tip of the upper jaw was U-shaped (most non-tyrannosauroid carnivores had V-shaped upper jaws), which increased the amount of tissue and bone a tyrannosaur could rip out with one bite, although it also increased the stresses on the front teeth.[48]

 
Skull replica of specimen "Sue", showing dentition

The teeth of T. rex displayed marked heterodonty (differences in shape).[49][50] The premaxillary teeth, four per side at the front of the upper jaw, were closely packed, D-shaped in cross-section, had reinforcing ridges on the rear surface, were incisiform (their tips were chisel-like blades) and curved backwards. The D-shaped cross-section, reinforcing ridges and backwards curve reduced the risk that the teeth would snap when Tyrannosaurus bit and pulled. The remaining teeth were robust, like "lethal bananas" rather than daggers, more widely spaced and also had reinforcing ridges.[51] Those in the upper jaw, twelve per side in mature individuals,[49] were larger than their counterparts of the lower jaw, except at the rear. The largest found so far is estimated to have been 30.5 centimeters (12 in) long including the root when the animal was alive, making it the largest tooth of any carnivorous dinosaur yet found.[52] The lower jaw was robust. Its front dentary bone bore thirteen teeth. Behind the tooth row, the lower jaw became notably taller.[49] The upper and lower jaws of Tyrannosaurus, like those of many dinosaurs, possessed numerous foramina, or small holes in the bone. Various functions have been proposed for these foramina, such as a crocodile-like sensory system[53] or evidence of extra-oral structures such as scales or potentially lips,[54][55][56] with subsequent research on theropod tooth wear patterns supporting such a proposition.[57]

Skeleton

 
Life restoration showing scaly skin with sparse feathering, and lipped jaws
 
Skeletal reconstruction of specimen "Sue"

The vertebral column of Tyrannosaurus consisted of ten neck vertebrae, thirteen back vertebrae and five sacral vertebrae. The number of tail vertebrae is unknown and could well have varied between individuals but probably numbered at least forty. Sue was mounted with forty-seven of such caudal vertebrae.[49] The neck of T. rex formed a natural S-shaped curve like that of other theropods. Compared to these, it was exceptionally short, deep and muscular to support the massive head. The second vertebra, the axis, was especially short. The remaining neck vertebrae were weakly opisthocoelous, i.e. with a convex front of the vertebral body and a concave rear. The vertebral bodies had single pleurocoels, pneumatic depressions created by air sacs, on their sides.[49] The vertebral bodies of the torso were robust but with a narrow waist. Their undersides were keeled. The front sides were concave with a deep vertical trough. They had large pleurocoels. Their neural spines had very rough front and rear sides for the attachment of strong tendons. The sacral vertebrae were fused to each other, both in their vertebral bodies and neural spines. They were pneumatized. They were connected to the pelvis by transverse processes and sacral ribs. The tail was heavy and moderately long, in order to balance the massive head and torso and to provide space for massive locomotor muscles that attached to the thighbones. The thirteenth tail vertebra formed the transition point between the deep tail base and the middle tail that was stiffened by a rather long front articulation processes. The underside of the trunk was covered by eighteen or nineteen pairs of segmented belly ribs.[49]

 
Right forelimb of specimen "Sue"

The shoulder girdle was longer than the entire forelimb. The shoulder blade had a narrow shaft but was exceptionally expanded at its upper end. It connected via a long forward protrusion to the coracoid, which was rounded. Both shoulder blades were connected by a small furcula. The paired breast bones possibly were made of cartilage only.[49]

The forelimb or arm was very short. The upper arm bone, the humerus, was short but robust. It had a narrow upper end with an exceptionally rounded head. The lower arm bones, the ulna and radius, were straight elements, much shorter than the humerus. The second metacarpal was longer and wider than the first, whereas normally in theropods the opposite is true. The forelimbs had only two clawed fingers,[49] along with an additional splint-like small third metacarpal representing the remnant of a third digit.[58]

 
Pelvic girdle of specimen MOR 555

The pelvis was a large structure. Its upper bone, the ilium, was both very long and high, providing an extensive attachment area for hindlimb muscles. The front pubic bone ended in an enormous pubic boot, longer than the entire shaft of the element. The rear ischium was slender and straight, pointing obliquely to behind and below.[49]

In contrast to the arms, the hindlimbs were among the longest in proportion to body size of any theropod. In the foot, the metatarsus was "arctometatarsalian", meaning that the part of the third metatarsal near the ankle was pinched. The third metatarsal was also exceptionally sinuous.[49] Compensating for the immense bulk of the animal, many bones throughout the skeleton were hollowed, reducing its weight without significant loss of strength.[49]

Classification

 
Skull casts of different Tyrannosaurus specimens

Tyrannosaurus is the type genus of the superfamily Tyrannosauroidea, the family Tyrannosauridae, and the subfamily Tyrannosaurinae; in other words it is the standard by which paleontologists decide whether to include other species in the same group. Other members of the tyrannosaurine subfamily include the North American Daspletosaurus and the Asian Tarbosaurus,[17][59] both of which have occasionally been synonymized with Tyrannosaurus.[60] Tyrannosaurids were once commonly thought to be descendants of earlier large theropods such as megalosaurs and carnosaurs, although more recently they were reclassified with the generally smaller coelurosaurs.[48]

Many phylogenetic analyses have found Tarbosaurus bataar to be the sister taxon of T. rex.[59] The discovery of the tyrannosaurid Lythronax further indicates that Tarbosaurus and Tyrannosaurus are closely related, forming a clade with fellow Asian tyrannosaurid Zhuchengtyrannus, with Lythronax being their sister taxon.[61][62] A further study from 2016 by Steve Brusatte, Thomas Carr and colleagues, also indicates that Tyrannosaurus may have been an immigrant from Asia, as well as a possible descendant of Tarbosaurus.[63]

Below is the cladogram of Tyrannosauridae based on the phylogenetic analysis conducted by Loewen and colleagues in 2013.[61]

In their 2024 description of Tyrannosaurus mcraeensis, Dalman et al. recovered similar results to previous analyses, with Tyrannosaurus as the sister taxon to the clade formed by Tarbosaurus and Zhuchengtyrannus, called the Tyrannosaurini. They also found support for a monophyletic clade containing Daspletosaurus and Thanatotheristes, typically referred to as the Daspletosaurini.[64][65]

Daspletosaurus torosus  

Daspletosaurus wilsoni

Teratophoneus
 

Nanuqsaurus  

Bistahieversor

Lythronax  

Tyrannosaurini

Tyrannosaurus mcraeensis

Tyrannosaurus rex  

Additional species

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

In 1955, Soviet paleontologist Evgeny Maleev named a new species, Tyrannosaurus bataar, from Mongolia.[66] By 1965, this species was renamed as a distinct genus, Tarbosaurus bataar.[67] While most palaeontologists continue to maintain the two as distinct genera, some authors such as Thomas Holtz, Kenneth Carpenter, and Thomas Carr argue that the two species are similar enough to be considered members of the same genus, with the Mongolian taxon having the resulting binomial of Tyrannosaurus bataar.[48][68][53]

In 2001, various tyrannosaurid teeth and a metatarsal unearthed in a quarry near Zhucheng, China were assigned by Chinese paleontologist Hu Chengzhi to the newly erected species Tyrannosaurus zhuchengensis. However, in a nearby site, a right maxilla and left jawbone were assigned to the newly erected tyrannosaurid genus Zhuchengtyrannus in 2011. It is possible that T. zhuchengensis is synonymous with Zhuchengtyrannus. In any case, T. zhuchengensis is considered to be a nomen dubium as the holotype lacks diagnostic features below the level Tyrannosaurinae.[69]

In a 2022 study, Gregory S. Paul and colleagues argued that Tyrannosaurus rex, as traditionally understood, actually represents three species: the type species Tyrannosaurus rex, and two new species: T. imperator (meaning "tyrant lizard emperor") and T. regina (meaning "tyrant lizard queen"). The holotype of the former (T. imperator) is the Sue specimen, and the holotype of the latter (T. regina) is Wankel rex. The division into multiple species was primarily based on the observation of a very high degree of variation in the proportions and robusticity of the femur (and other skeletal elements) across catalogued T. rex specimens, more so than that observed in other theropods recognized as one species. Differences of general body proportions representing robust and gracile morphotypes were also used as a line of evidence, in addition to the number of small, slender incisiform teeth in the dentary, as based on tooth sockets. Specifically, the paper's T. rex was distinguished by robust anatomy, a moderate ratio of femur length vs circumference, and the possession of a singular slender incisiform dentary tooth; T. imperator was considered to be robust with a small femur length to circumference ratio and two of the slender teeth; and T. regina was a gracile form with a high femur ratio and one of the slender teeth. It was observed that variation in proportions and robustness became more extreme higher up in the sample, stratigraphically. This was interpreted as a single earlier population, T. imperator, speciating into more than one taxon, T. rex and T. regina.[70]

However, several other leading paleontologists, including Stephen Brusatte, Thomas Carr, Thomas Holtz, David Hone, Jingmai O'Connor, and Lindsay Zanno, criticized the study or expressed skepticism of its conclusions when approached by various media outlets for comment.[71][72][73] Their criticism was subsequently published in a technical paper.[74] Holtz and Zanno both remarked that it was plausible that more than one species of Tyrannosaurus existed, but felt the new study was insufficient to support the species it proposed. Holtz remarked that, even if Tyrannosaurus imperator represented a distinct species from Tyrannosaurus rex, it may represent the same species as Nanotyrannus lancensis and would need to be called Tyrannosaurus lancensis. O'Connor, a curator at the Field Museum, where the T. imperator holotype Sue is displayed, regarded the new species as too poorly-supported to justify modifying the exhibit signs. Brusatte, Carr, and O'Connor viewed the distinguishing features proposed between the species as reflecting natural variation within a species. Both Carr and O'Connor expressed concerns about the study's inability to determine which of the proposed species several well-preserved specimens belonged to. Another paleontologist, Philip J. Currie, originally co-authored the study but withdrew from it as he did not want to be involved in naming the new species.[71]

Paul rejected the objections raised by critics, insisting that they are unwilling to consider that Tyrannosaurus might represent more than one species.[75] In a subsequent paper awaiting publication, Paul maintained the conclusion that Tyrannosaurus consists of three species. He pointed out that the criticism of the study naming T. imperator and T. regina only focused on two of the features used to distinguish the two new species (the number of small incisiform teeth and femur robustness), while the original study also compared the robustness of other bones as well (the maxilla, dentary, humerus, ilium and metatarsals). Furthermore, Paul argued that Tyrannosaurus can be separated into three different species based on the shape of knob-like bumps ('postorbital bosses') behind the eyes. Paul also argued that past research concluding that Tyrannosaurus only consists of one species (T. rex) has simply assumed that all Tyrannosaurus skeletons are a single species, and that many new dinosaur species have been named on the basis of fewer differences than he and his colleagues used when proposing T. imperator and T. regina.[76]

Tyrannosaurus mcraeensis

 
Reconstructed skull of T. mcraeensis

In 2024, Dalman and colleagues described the remains of a tyrannosaur discovered in 1983 in the Campanian-early Maastrichtian Hall Lake Formation in New Mexico. Reposited at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science, the fossil material (NMMNH P-3698) consists of the right postorbital, right squamosal, left palatine, and an incomplete maxilla from the skull, the left dentary, right splenial, right prearticular, right angular and right articular from the lower jaws, isolated teeth, and chevrons.[64] Some of the bones were briefly mentioned in 1984 as belonging to T. rex,[77] and described in 1986.[78]

Dalman et al. (2024) proposed the new name Tyrannosaurus mcraeensis for the holotype, referencing the McRae Group, the rock layers to which the Hall Lake Formation belongs. These rock layers were estimated to date to between 72.7 and 70.9 Ma, correlating to the latest Campanian or earliest Maastrichtian. This is approximately 5–7 million years before T. rex, which existed at the end of the Maastrichtian. T. mcraeensis was estimated at 12 metres (39 ft) long, which is similar to the size of an adult T. rex. The two are distinguished by characters of the skull. Amongst these, the dentary of T. mcraeensis is proportionately longer and possesses a less prominent chin, and the lower jaw shallower than that of T. rex, suggesting a weaker bite. The teeth are likewise blunter and more laterally compressed, while the post orbital crests are less prominent. Likewise, the skeletal anatomy showcases shared characteristics with Tarbosaurus and Zhuchengtyrannus.[64][79]

Nanotyrannus

 
Holotype of Nanotyrannus lancensis, now interpreted as a juvenile Tyrannosaurus

Other tyrannosaurid fossils found in the same formations as T. rex were originally classified as separate taxa, including Aublysodon and Albertosaurus megagracilis,[60] the latter being named Dinotyrannus megagracilis in 1995.[80] These fossils are now universally considered to belong to juvenile T. rex.[81] A small but nearly complete skull from Montana, 60 centimeters (2.0 ft) long, might be an exception. This skull, CMNH 7541, was originally classified as a species of Gorgosaurus (G. lancensis) by Charles W. Gilmore in 1946.[82] In 1988, the specimen was re-described by Robert T. Bakker, Phil Currie, and Michael Williams, then the curator of paleontology at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, where the original specimen was housed and is now on display. Their initial research indicated that the skull bones were fused, and that it therefore represented an adult specimen. In light of this, Bakker and colleagues assigned the skull to a new genus named Nanotyrannus (meaning "dwarf tyrant", for its apparently small adult size). The specimen is estimated to have been around 5.2 meters (17 ft) long when it died.[83] However, In 1999, a detailed analysis by Thomas Carr revealed the specimen to be a juvenile, leading Carr and many other paleontologists to consider it a juvenile T. rex individual.[84][85]

 
Reconstructed skeleton of "Jane", Burpee Museum of Natural History

In 2001, a more complete juvenile tyrannosaur (nicknamed "Jane", catalog number BMRP 2002.4.1), belonging to the same species as the original Nanotyrannus specimen, was uncovered. This discovery prompted a conference on tyrannosaurs focused on the issues of Nanotyrannus validity at the Burpee Museum of Natural History in 2005. Several paleontologists who had previously published opinions that N. lancensis was a valid species, including Currie and Williams, saw the discovery of "Jane" as a confirmation that Nanotyrannus was, in fact, a juvenile T. rex.[86][87][88] Peter Larson continued to support the hypothesis that N. lancensis was a separate but closely related species, based on skull features such as two more teeth in both jaws than T. rex; as well as proportionately larger hands with phalanges on the third metacarpal and different wishbone anatomy in an undescribed specimen. He also argued that Stygivenator, generally considered to be a juvenile T. rex, may be a younger Nanotyrannus specimen.[89][90] Later research revealed that other tyrannosaurids such as Gorgosaurus also experienced reduction in tooth count during growth,[84] and given the disparity in tooth count between individuals of the same age group in this genus and Tyrannosaurus, this feature may also be due to individual variation.[85] In 2013, Carr noted that all of the differences claimed to support Nanotyrannus have turned out to be individually or ontogenetically variable features or products of distortion of the bones.[91]

 
Adult T. rex skeleton (the specimen AMNH 5027) at American Museum of Natural History.

In 2016, analysis of limb proportions by Persons and Currie suggested Nanotyrannus specimens to have differing cursoriality levels, potentially separating it from T. rex.[92] However, paleontologist Manabu Sakomoto has commented that this conclusion may be impacted by low sample size, and the discrepancy does not necessarily reflect taxonomic distinction.[93] In 2016, Joshua Schmerge argued for Nanotyrannus' validity based on skull features, including a dentary groove in BMRP 2002.4.1's skull. According to Schmerge, as that feature is absent in T. rex and found only in Dryptosaurus and albertosaurines, this suggests Nanotyrannus is a distinct taxon within the Albertosaurinae.[94] The same year, Carr and colleagues noted that this was not sufficient enough to clarify Nanotyrannus' validity or classification, being a common and ontogenetically variable feature among tyrannosauroids.[95]

A 2020 study by Holly Woodward and colleagues showed the specimens referred to Nanotyrannus were all ontogenetically immature and found it probable that these specimens belonged to T. rex.[96] The same year, Carr published a paper on T. rex's growth history, finding that CMNH 7541 fit within the expected ontogenetic variation of the taxon and displayed juvenile characteristics found in other specimens. It was classified as a juvenile, under 13 years old with a skull less than 80 cm (31 in). No significant sexual or phylogenetic variation was discernible among any of the 44 specimens studied, with Carr stating that characters of potential phylogenetic importance decrease throughout age at the same rate as growth occurs.[97] Discussing the paper's results, Carr described how all "Nanotyrannus" specimens formed a continual growth transition between the smallest juveniles and the subadults, unlike what would be expected if it were a distinct taxon where the specimens would group to the exclusion of Tyrannosaurus. Carr concluded that "the 'nanomorphs' are not all that similar to each other and instead form an important bridge in the growth series of T. rex that captures the beginnings of the profound change from the shallow skull of juveniles to the deep skull that is seen in fully-developed adults."[98]

However, a 2024 paper published by Nick Longrich and Evan Thomas Saitta reexamined the holotype and referred specimens of Nanotyrannus. Based on several factors, including differences in morphology, ontogeny, and phylogeny, Longrich and Saitta suggest that Nanotyrannus is a distinct taxon which may fall outside of Tyrannosauridae, based on some of their phylogenetic analyses.[99]

Paleobiology

Life history

 
Illustration of a juvenile Tyrannosaurus rex

The identification of several specimens as juvenile T. rex has allowed scientists to document ontogenetic changes in the species, estimate the lifespan, and determine how quickly the animals would have grown. The smallest known individual (LACM 28471, the "Jordan theropod") is estimated to have weighed only 30 kg (66 lb), while the largest adults, such as FMNH PR2081 (Sue) most likely weighed about 5,650 kg (12,460 lb). Histologic analysis of T. rex bones showed LACM 28471 had aged only 2 years when it died, while Sue was 28 years old, an age which may have been close to the maximum for the species.[39]

 
A graph showing the hypothesized growth curve, body mass versus age (drawn in black, with other tyrannosaurids for comparison). Based on Erickson and colleagues 2004

Histology has also allowed the age of other specimens to be determined. Growth curves can be developed when the ages of different specimens are plotted on a graph along with their mass. A T. rex growth curve is S-shaped, with juveniles remaining under 1,800 kg (4,000 lb) until approximately 14 years of age, when body size began to increase dramatically. During this rapid growth phase, a young T. rex would gain an average of 600 kg (1,300 lb) a year for the next four years. At 18 years of age, the curve plateaus again, indicating that growth slowed dramatically. For example, only 600 kg (1,300 lb) separated the 28-year-old Sue from a 22-year-old Canadian specimen (RTMP 81.12.1).[39] A 2004 histological study performed by different workers corroborates these results, finding that rapid growth began to slow at around 16 years of age.[100]

A study by Hutchinson and colleagues in 2011 corroborated the previous estimation methods in general, but their estimation of peak growth rates is significantly higher; it found that the "maximum growth rates for T. rex during the exponential stage are 1790 kg/year".[28] Although these results were much higher than previous estimations, the authors noted that these results significantly lowered the great difference between its actual growth rate and the one which would be expected of an animal of its size.[28] The sudden change in growth rate at the end of the growth spurt may indicate physical maturity, a hypothesis which is supported by the discovery of medullary tissue in the femur of a 16 to 20-year-old T. rex from Montana (MOR 1125, also known as B-rex). Medullary tissue is found only in female birds during ovulation, indicating that B-rex was of reproductive age.[101] Further study indicates an age of 18 for this specimen.[102] In 2016, it was finally confirmed by Mary Higby Schweitzer and Lindsay Zanno and colleagues that the soft tissue within the femur of MOR 1125 was medullary tissue. This also confirmed the identity of the specimen as a female. The discovery of medullary bone tissue within Tyrannosaurus may prove valuable in determining the sex of other dinosaur species in future examinations, as the chemical makeup of medullary tissue is unmistakable.[103] Other tyrannosaurids exhibit extremely similar growth curves, although with lower growth rates corresponding to their lower adult sizes.[104]

 
Diagram showing growth stages

An additional study published in 2020 by Woodward and colleagues, for the journal Science Advances indicates that during their growth from juvenile to adult, Tyrannosaurus was capable of slowing down its growth to counter environmental factors such as lack of food. The study, focusing on two juvenile specimens between 13 and 15 years old housed at the Burpee Museum in Illinois, indicates that the rate of maturation for Tyrannosaurus was dependent on resource abundance. This study also indicates that in such changing environments, Tyrannosaurus was particularly well-suited to an environment that shifted yearly in regards to resource abundance, hinting that other midsize predators might have had difficulty surviving in such harsh conditions and explaining the niche partitioning between juvenile and adult tyrannosaurs. The study further indicates that Tyrannosaurus and the dubious genus Nanotyrannus are synonymous, due to analysis of the growth rings in the bones of the two specimens studied.[105][106]

Over half of the known T. rex specimens appear to have died within six years of reaching sexual maturity, a pattern which is also seen in other tyrannosaurs and in some large, long-lived birds and mammals today. These species are characterized by high infant mortality rates, followed by relatively low mortality among juveniles. Mortality increases again following sexual maturity, partly due to the stresses of reproduction. One study suggests that the rarity of juvenile T. rex fossils is due in part to low juvenile mortality rates; the animals were not dying in large numbers at these ages, and thus were not often fossilized. This rarity may also be due to the incompleteness of the fossil record or to the bias of fossil collectors towards larger, more spectacular specimens.[104] In a 2013 lecture, Thomas Holtz Jr. suggested that dinosaurs "lived fast and died young" because they reproduced quickly whereas mammals have long life spans because they take longer to reproduce.[107] Gregory S. Paul also writes that Tyrannosaurus reproduced quickly and died young, but attributes their short life spans to the dangerous lives they lived.[108]

Skin and possible filamentous feathering

 
Fossilized skin impressions from the tail region of a Tyrannosaurus rex, Houston Museum of Natural Science

The discovery of feathered dinosaurs led to debate regarding whether, and to what extent, Tyrannosaurus might have been feathered.[109][110] Filamentous structures, which are commonly recognized as the precursors of feathers, have been reported in the small-bodied, basal tyrannosauroid Dilong paradoxus from the Early Cretaceous Yixian Formation of China in 2004.[111] Because integumentary impressions of larger tyrannosauroids known at that time showed evidence of scales, the researchers who studied Dilong speculated that insulating feathers might have been lost by larger species due to their smaller surface-to-volume ratio.[111] The subsequent discovery of the giant species Yutyrannus huali, also from the Yixian, showed that even some large tyrannosauroids had feathers covering much of their bodies, casting doubt on the hypothesis that they were a size-related feature.[112] A 2017 study reviewed known skin impressions of tyrannosaurids, including those of a Tyrannosaurus specimen nicknamed "Wyrex" (BHI 6230) which preserves patches of mosaic scales on the tail, hip, and neck.[4] The study concluded that feather covering of large tyrannosaurids such as Tyrannosaurus was, if present, limited to the upper side of the trunk.[109]

A conference abstract published in 2016 posited that theropods such as Tyrannosaurus had their upper teeth covered in lips, instead of bare teeth as seen in crocodilians. This was based on the presence of enamel, which according to the study needs to remain hydrated, an issue not faced by aquatic animals like crocodilians.[55] However, there has been criticism where it favors the idea for lips, with the 2017 analytical study proposing that tyrannosaurids had large, flat scales on their snouts instead of lips just like modern crocodiles.[53][113] But crocodiles possess rather cracked keratinized skin, not flat scales; by observing the hummocky rugosity of tyrannosaurids, and comparing it to extant lizards, researchers have found that tyrannosaurids had squamose scales rather than a crocodillian-like skin.[114][115]

In 2023, Cullen and colleagues supported the idea that theropods like tyrannosaurids had lips based on anatomical patterns, such as those of the foramina on their face and jaws, more similar to those of modern squamates such as monitor lizards or marine iguanas than those of modern crocodilians like alligators. By comparatively analysing the dentition of Daspletosaurus and the American alligator, it was shown that the enamel of tyrannosaurids had no significant wear, while that of modern crocodilians had erosion on the labial side and substantial wear. This suggests that it is likely that theropod teeth existed under hydrated conditions (i.e. extraoral tissues). On the basis of the relationship between hydration and wear resistance, the authors argued that it is unlikely that the teeth of theropods including tyrannosaurids would have remained unworn when exposed for a long time, as it would have been difficult to maintain hydration. The authors also performed regression analyses to demonstrate the relationship between tooth height and skull length, and found that varanids like the crocodile monitor had substantially greater tooth height–to–skull length ratios than Tyrannosaurus, indicating that the teeth of theropods were not too big to be covered by extraoral tissues when the mouth was closed.[57]

Sexual dimorphism

 
Skeleton casts mounted in a mating position, Jurassic Museum of Asturias

As the number of known specimens increased, scientists began to analyze the variation between individuals and discovered what appeared to be two distinct body types, or morphs, similar to some other theropod species. As one of these morphs was more solidly built, it was termed the 'robust' morph while the other was termed 'gracile'. Several morphological differences associated with the two morphs were used to analyze sexual dimorphism in T. rex, with the 'robust' morph usually suggested to be female. For example, the pelvis of several 'robust' specimens seemed to be wider, perhaps to allow the passage of eggs.[116] It was also thought that the 'robust' morphology correlated with a reduced chevron on the first tail vertebra, also ostensibly to allow eggs to pass out of the reproductive tract, as had been erroneously reported for crocodiles.[117]

In recent years, evidence for sexual dimorphism has been weakened. A 2005 study reported that previous claims of sexual dimorphism in crocodile chevron anatomy were in error, casting doubt on the existence of similar dimorphism between T. rex sexes.[118] A full-sized chevron was discovered on the first tail vertebra of Sue, an extremely robust individual, indicating that this feature could not be used to differentiate the two morphs anyway. As T. rex specimens have been found from Saskatchewan to New Mexico, differences between individuals may be indicative of geographic variation rather than sexual dimorphism. The differences could also be age-related, with 'robust' individuals being older animals.[49]

Only a single Tyrannosaurus specimen has been conclusively shown to belong to a specific sex. Examination of B-rex demonstrated the preservation of soft tissue within several bones. Some of this tissue has been identified as a medullary tissue, a specialized tissue grown only in modern birds as a source of calcium for the production of eggshell during ovulation. As only female birds lay eggs, medullary tissue is only found naturally in females, although males are capable of producing it when injected with female reproductive hormones like estrogen. This strongly suggests that B-rex was female and that she died during ovulation.[101] Recent research has shown that medullary tissue is never found in crocodiles, which are thought to be the closest living relatives of dinosaurs. The shared presence of medullary tissue in birds and other theropod dinosaurs is further evidence of the close evolutionary relationship between the two.[119]

Posture

 
Outdated reconstruction (by Charles R. Knight), showing upright pose

Like many bipedal dinosaurs, T. rex was historically depicted as a 'living tripod', with the body at 45 degrees or less from the vertical and the tail dragging along the ground, similar to a kangaroo. This concept dates from Joseph Leidy's 1865 reconstruction of Hadrosaurus, the first to depict a dinosaur in a bipedal posture.[120] In 1915, convinced that the creature stood upright, Henry Fairfield Osborn, former president of the American Museum of Natural History, further reinforced the notion in unveiling the first complete T. rex skeleton arranged this way. It stood in an upright pose for 77 years, until it was dismantled in 1992.[121]

By 1970, scientists realized this pose was incorrect and could not have been maintained by a living animal, as it would have resulted in the dislocation or weakening of several joints, including the hips and the articulation between the head and the spinal column.[122] The inaccurate AMNH mount inspired similar depictions in many films and paintings (such as Rudolph Zallinger's famous mural The Age of Reptiles in Yale University's Peabody Museum of Natural History)[123] until the 1990s, when films such as Jurassic Park introduced a more accurate posture to the general public.[124] Modern representations in museums, art, and film show T. rex with its body approximately parallel to the ground with the tail extended behind the body to balance the head.[125]

To sit down, Tyrannosaurus may have settled its weight backwards and rested its weight on a pubic boot, the wide expansion at the end of the pubis in some dinosaurs. With its weight rested on the pelvis, it may have been free to move the hindlimbs. Getting back up again might have involved some stabilization from the diminutive forelimbs.[126][122] The latter known as Newman's pushup theory has been debated. Nonetheless, Tyrannosaurus was probably able to get up if it fell, which only would have required placing the limbs below the center of gravity, with the tail as an effective counterbalance. Healed stress fractures in the forelimbs have been put forward both as evidence that the arms cannot have been very useful[127][128] and as evidence that they were indeed used and acquired wounds,[129] like the rest of the body.

Arms

 
The forelimbs might have been used to help T. rex rise from a resting pose, as seen in this cast (Bucky specimen)

When T. rex was first discovered, the humerus was the only element of the forelimb known.[5] For the initial mounted skeleton as seen by the public in 1915, Osborn substituted longer, three-fingered forelimbs like those of Allosaurus.[3] A year earlier, Lawrence Lambe described the short, two-fingered forelimbs of the closely related Gorgosaurus.[130] This strongly suggested that T. rex had similar forelimbs, but this hypothesis was not confirmed until the first complete T. rex forelimbs were identified in 1989, belonging to MOR 555 (the "Wankel rex").[131][132] The remains of Sue also include complete forelimbs.[49] T. rex arms are very small relative to overall body size, measuring only 1 meter (3.3 ft) long, and some scholars have labelled them as vestigial. However, the bones show large areas for muscle attachment, indicating considerable strength. This was recognized as early as 1906 by Osborn, who speculated that the forelimbs may have been used to grasp a mate during copulation.[7] Newman (1970) suggested that the forelimbs were used to assist Tyrannosaurus in rising from a prone position.[122] Since then, other functions have been proposed, although some scholars find them implausible.[128] Padian (2022) argued that the reduction of the arms in tyrannosaurids did not serve a particular function but was a secondary adaptation, stating that as tyrannosaurids developed larger and more powerful skulls and jaws, the arms got smaller to avoid being bitten or torn by other individuals, particularly during group feedings.[128]

 
Diagram illustrating arm anatomy

Another possibility is that the forelimbs held struggling prey while it was killed by the tyrannosaur's enormous jaws. This hypothesis may be supported by biomechanical analysis. T. rex forelimb bones exhibit extremely thick cortical bone, which has been interpreted as evidence that they were developed to withstand heavy loads. The biceps brachii muscle of an adult T. rex was capable of lifting 199 kilograms (439 lb) by itself; other muscles such as the brachialis would work along with the biceps to make elbow flexion even more powerful. The M. biceps muscle of T. rex was 3.5 times as powerful as the human equivalent. A T. rex forearm had a limited range of motion, with the shoulder and elbow joints allowing only 40 and 45 degrees of motion, respectively. In contrast, the same two joints in Deinonychus allow up to 88 and 130 degrees of motion, respectively, while a human arm can rotate 360 degrees at the shoulder and move through 165 degrees at the elbow. The heavy build of the arm bones, strength of the muscles, and limited range of motion may indicate a system evolved to hold fast despite the stresses of a struggling prey animal. In the first detailed scientific description of Tyrannosaurus forelimbs, paleontologists Kenneth Carpenter and Matt Smith dismissed notions that the forelimbs were useless or that Tyrannosaurus was an obligate scavenger.[133]

The idea that the arms served as weapons when hunting prey have also been proposed by Steven M. Stanley, who suggested that the arms were used for slashing prey, especially by using the claws to rapidly inflict long, deep gashes to its prey.[134] This was dismissed by Padian, who have argued that Stanley based his conclusion on incorrectly estimated forelimb size and range of motion.[128]

Thermoregulation

 
Restoration showing partial feathering

Tyrannosaurus, like most dinosaurs, was long thought to have an ectothermic ("cold-blooded") reptilian metabolism. The idea of dinosaur ectothermy was challenged by scientists like Robert T. Bakker and John Ostrom in the early years of the "Dinosaur Renaissance", beginning in the late 1960s.[135][136] T. rex itself was claimed to have been endothermic ("warm-blooded"), implying a very active lifestyle.[37] Since then, several paleontologists have sought to determine the ability of Tyrannosaurus to regulate its body temperature. Histological evidence of high growth rates in young T. rex, comparable to those of mammals and birds, may support the hypothesis of a high metabolism. Growth curves indicate that, as in mammals and birds, T. rex growth was limited mostly to immature animals, rather than the indeterminate growth seen in most other vertebrates.[100]

Oxygen isotope ratios in fossilized bone are sometimes used to determine the temperature at which the bone was deposited, as the ratio between certain isotopes correlates with temperature. In one specimen, the isotope ratios in bones from different parts of the body indicated a temperature difference of no more than 4 to 5 °C (7 to 9 °F) between the vertebrae of the torso and the tibia of the lower leg. This small temperature range between the body core and the extremities was claimed by paleontologist Reese Barrick and geochemist William Showers to indicate that T. rex maintained a constant internal body temperature (homeothermy) and that it enjoyed a metabolism somewhere between ectothermic reptiles and endothermic mammals.[137] Other scientists have pointed out that the ratio of oxygen isotopes in the fossils today does not necessarily represent the same ratio in the distant past, and may have been altered during or after fossilization (diagenesis).[138] Barrick and Showers have defended their conclusions in subsequent papers, finding similar results in another theropod dinosaur from a different continent and tens of millions of years earlier in time (Giganotosaurus).[139] Ornithischian dinosaurs also showed evidence of homeothermy, while varanid lizards from the same formation did not.[140] In 2022, Wiemann and colleagues used a different approach—the spectroscopy of lipoxidation signals, which are byproducts of oxidative phosphorylation and correlate with metabolic rates—to show that various dinosaur genera including Tyrannosaurus had endothermic metabolisms, on par with that of modern birds and higher than that of mammals. They also suggested that such a metabolism was ancestrally common to all dinosaurs.[141]

Even if T. rex does exhibit evidence of homeothermy, it does not necessarily mean that it was endothermic. Such thermoregulation may also be explained by gigantothermy, as in some living sea turtles.[142][143][144] Similar to contemporary crocodilians, openings (dorsotemporal fenestrae) in the skull roofs of Tyrannosaurus may have aided thermoregulation.[145]

Soft tissue

 
T. rex femur (MOR 1125) from which demineralized matrix and peptides (insets) were obtained

In the March 2005 issue of Science, Mary Higby Schweitzer of North Carolina State University and colleagues announced the recovery of soft tissue from the marrow cavity of a fossilized leg bone from a T. rex. The bone had been intentionally, though reluctantly, broken for shipping and then not preserved in the normal manner, specifically because Schweitzer was hoping to test it for soft tissue.[146] Designated as the Museum of the Rockies specimen 1125, or MOR 1125, the dinosaur was previously excavated from the Hell Creek Formation. Flexible, bifurcating blood vessels and fibrous but elastic bone matrix tissue were recognized. In addition, microstructures resembling blood cells were found inside the matrix and vessels. The structures bear resemblance to ostrich blood cells and vessels. Whether an unknown process, distinct from normal fossilization, preserved the material, or the material is original, the researchers do not know, and they are careful not to make any claims about preservation.[147] If it is found to be original material, any surviving proteins may be used as a means of indirectly guessing some of the DNA content of the dinosaurs involved, because each protein is typically created by a specific gene. The absence of previous finds may be the result of people assuming preserved tissue was impossible, therefore not looking. Since the first, two more tyrannosaurs and a hadrosaur have also been found to have such tissue-like structures.[146] Research on some of the tissues involved has suggested that birds are closer relatives to tyrannosaurs than other modern animals.[148]

In studies reported in Science in April 2007, Asara and colleagues concluded that seven traces of collagen proteins detected in purified T. rex bone most closely match those reported in chickens, followed by frogs and newts. The discovery of proteins from a creature tens of millions of years old, along with similar traces the team found in a mastodon bone at least 160,000 years old, upends the conventional view of fossils and may shift paleontologists' focus from bone hunting to biochemistry. Until these finds, most scientists presumed that fossilization replaced all living tissue with inert minerals. Paleontologist Hans Larsson of McGill University in Montreal, who was not part of the studies, called the finds "a milestone", and suggested that dinosaurs could "enter the field of molecular biology and really slingshot paleontology into the modern world".[149]

The presumed soft tissue was called into question by Thomas Kaye of the University of Washington and his co-authors in 2008. They contend that what was really inside the tyrannosaur bone was slimy biofilm created by bacteria that coated the voids once occupied by blood vessels and cells.[150] The researchers found that what previously had been identified as remnants of blood cells, because of the presence of iron, were actually framboids, microscopic mineral spheres bearing iron. They found similar spheres in a variety of other fossils from various periods, including an ammonite. In the ammonite, they found the spheres in a place where the iron they contain could not have had any relationship to the presence of blood.[151] Schweitzer has strongly criticized Kaye's claims and argues that there is no reported evidence that biofilms can produce branching, hollow tubes like those noted in her study.[152] San Antonio, Schweitzer and colleagues published an analysis in 2011 of what parts of the collagen had been recovered, finding that it was the inner parts of the collagen coil that had been preserved, as would have been expected from a long period of protein degradation.[153] Other research challenges the identification of soft tissue as biofilm and confirms finding "branching, vessel-like structures" from within fossilized bone.[154]

Speed

 
Femur (thigh bone)
Tibia (shin bone)
Metatarsals (foot bones)
Phalanges (toe bones)
 
Skeletal anatomy of a T. rex right leg

Scientists have produced a wide range of possible maximum running speeds for Tyrannosaurus: mostly around 9 meters per second (32 km/h; 20 mph), but as low as 4.5–6.8 meters per second (16–24 km/h; 10–15 mph) and as high as 20 meters per second (72 km/h; 45 mph), though it running this speed is very unlikely. Tyrannosaurus was a bulky and heavy carnivore so it is unlikely to run very fast at all compared to other theropods like Carnotaurus or Giganotosaurus.[155] Researchers have relied on various estimating techniques because, while there are many tracks of large theropods walking, none showed evidence of running.[156]

A 2002 report used a mathematical model (validated by applying it to three living animals: alligators, chickens, and humans; and eight more species, including emus and ostriches[156]) to gauge the leg muscle mass needed for fast running (over 40 km/h or 25 mph).[155] Scientists who think that Tyrannosaurus was able to run point out that hollow bones and other features that would have lightened its body may have kept adult weight to a mere 4.5 metric tons (5.0 short tons) or so, or that other animals like ostriches and horses with long, flexible legs are able to achieve high speeds through slower but longer strides.[156] Proposed top speeds exceeded 40 kilometers per hour (25 mph) for Tyrannosaurus, but were deemed infeasible because they would require exceptional leg muscles of approximately 40–86% of total body mass. Even moderately fast speeds would have required large leg muscles. If the muscle mass was less, only 18 kilometers per hour (11 mph) for walking or jogging would have been possible.[155] Holtz noted that tyrannosaurids and some closely related groups had significantly longer distal hindlimb components (shin plus foot plus toes) relative to the femur length than most other theropods, and that tyrannosaurids and their close relatives had a tightly interlocked metatarsus (foot bones).[157] The third metatarsal was squeezed between the second and fourth metatarsals to form a single unit called an arctometatarsus. This ankle feature may have helped the animal to run more efficiently.[158] Together, these leg features allowed Tyrannosaurus to transmit locomotory forces from the foot to the lower leg more effectively than in earlier theropods.[157]

 
Only known tyrannosaurid trackway (Bellatoripes fredlundi), from the Wapiti Formation, British Columbia

Additionally, a 2020 study indicates that Tyrannosaurus and other tyrannosaurids were exceptionally efficient walkers. Studies by Dececchi et al., compared the leg proportions, body mass, and the gaits of more than 70 species of theropod dinosaurs including Tyrannosaurus and its relatives. The research team then applied a variety of methods to estimate each dinosaur's top speed when running as well as how much energy each dinosaur expended while moving at more relaxed speeds such as when walking. Among smaller to medium-sized species such as dromaeosaurids, longer legs appear to be an adaptation for faster running, in line with previous results by other researchers. But for theropods weighing over 1,000 kg (2,200 lb), top running speed is limited by body size, so longer legs instead were found to have correlated with low-energy walking. The results further indicate that smaller theropods evolved long legs as a means to both aid in hunting and escape from larger predators while larger theropods that evolved long legs did so to reduce the energy costs and increase foraging efficiency, as they were freed from the demands of predation pressure due to their role as apex predators. Compared to more basal groups of theropods in the study, tyrannosaurs like Tyrannosaurus itself showed a marked increase in foraging efficiency due to reduced energy expenditures during hunting or scavenging. This in turn likely resulted in tyrannosaurs having a reduced need for hunting forays and requiring less food to sustain themselves as a result. Additionally, the research, in conjunction with studies that show tyrannosaurs were more agile than other large-bodied theropods, indicates they were quite well-adapted to a long-distance stalking approach followed by a quick burst of speed to go for the kill. Analogies can be noted between tyrannosaurids and modern wolves as a result, supported by evidence that at least some tyrannosaurids were hunting in group settings.[159][160]

A study published in 2021 by Pasha van Bijlert et al., calculated the preferred walking speed of Tyrannosaurus, reporting a speed of 1.28 meters per second (4.6 km/h; 2.9 mph). While walking, animals reduce their energy expenditure by choosing certain step rhythms at which their body parts resonate. The same would have been true for dinosaurs, but previous studies did not fully account for the impact the tail had on their walking speeds. According to the authors, when a dinosaur walked, its tail would slightly sway up and down with each step as a result of the interspinous ligaments suspending the tail. Like rubber bands, these ligaments stored energy when they are stretched due to the swaying of the tail. Using a 3-D model of Tyrannosaurus specimen Trix, muscles and ligaments were reconstructed to simulate the tail movements. This results in a rhythmic, energy-efficient walking speed for Tyrannosaurus similar to that seen in living animals such as humans, ostriches and giraffes.[161]

A 2017 study estimated the top running speed of Tyrannosaurus as 17 mph (27 km/h), speculating that Tyrannosaurus exhausted its energy reserves long before reaching top speed, resulting in a parabola-like relationship between size and speed.[162][163] Another 2017 study hypothesized that an adult Tyrannosaurus was incapable of running due to high skeletal loads. Using a calculated weight estimate of 7 tons, the model showed that speeds above 11 mph (18 km/h) would have probably shattered the leg bones of Tyrannosaurus. The finding may mean that running was also not possible for other giant theropod dinosaurs like Giganotosaurus, Mapusaurus and Acrocanthosaurus.[164] However, studies by Eric Snively and colleagues, published in 2019 indicate that Tyrannosaurus and other tyrannosaurids were more maneuverable than allosauroids and other theropods of comparable size due to low rotational inertia compared to their body mass combined with large leg muscles. As a result, it is hypothesized that Tyrannosaurus was capable of making relatively quick turns and could likely pivot its body more quickly when close to its prey, or that while turning, the theropod could "pirouette" on a single planted foot while the alternating leg was held out in a suspended swing during a pursuit. The results of this study potentially could shed light on how agility could have contributed to the success of tyrannosaurid evolution.[165]

Possible footprints

 
Depiction of Tyrannosaurus rising from the ground, based on fossil tracks described in 2021.

Rare fossil footprints and trackways found in New Mexico and Wyoming that are assigned to the ichnogenus Tyrannosauripus have been attributed to being made by Tyrannosaurus, based on the stratigraphic age of the rocks they are preserved in. The first specimen, found in 1994 was described by Lockley and Hunt and consists of a single, large footprint. Another pair of ichnofossils, described in 2021, show a large tyrannosaurid rising from a prone position by rising up using its elbows in conjunction with the pads on their feet to stand. These two unique sets of fossils were found in Ludlow, Colorado and Cimarron, New Mexico.[166] Another ichnofossil described in 2018, perhaps belonging to a juvenile Tyrannosaurus or the dubious genus Nanotyrannus was uncovered in the Lance Formation of Wyoming. The trackway itself offers a rare glimpse into the walking speed of tyrannosaurids, and the trackmaker is estimated to have been moving at a speed of 4.5–8.0 kilometers per hour (2.8–5.0 mph), significantly faster than previously assumed for estimations of walking speed in tyrannosaurids.[167][168]

Brain and senses

 
The eye-sockets faced mainly forwards, giving it good binocular vision (Sue specimen).

A study conducted by Lawrence Witmer and Ryan Ridgely of Ohio University found that Tyrannosaurus shared the heightened sensory abilities of other coelurosaurs, highlighting relatively rapid and coordinated eye and head movements; an enhanced ability to sense low frequency sounds, which would allow tyrannosaurs to track prey movements from long distances; and an enhanced sense of smell.[169] A study published by Kent Stevens concluded that Tyrannosaurus had keen vision. By applying modified perimetry to facial reconstructions of several dinosaurs including Tyrannosaurus, the study found that Tyrannosaurus had a binocular range of 55 degrees, surpassing that of modern hawks. Stevens estimated that Tyrannosaurus had 13 times the visual acuity of a human and surpassed the visual acuity of an eagle, which is 3.6 times that of a person. Stevens estimated a limiting far point (that is, the distance at which an object can be seen as separate from the horizon) as far as 6 km (3.7 mi) away, which is greater than the 1.6 km (1 mi) that a human can see.[43][44][170]

Thomas Holtz Jr. would note that high depth perception of Tyrannosaurus may have been due to the prey it had to hunt, noting that it had to hunt ceratopsians such as Triceratops, ankylosaurs such as Ankylosaurus, and hadrosaurs. He would suggest that this made precision more crucial for Tyrannosaurus enabling it to, "get in, get that blow in and take it down." In contrast, Acrocanthosaurus had limited depth perception because they hunted large sauropods, which were relatively rare during the time of Tyrannosaurus.[107]

Tyrannosaurus had very large olfactory bulbs and olfactory nerves relative to their brain size, the organs responsible for a heightened sense of smell. This suggests that the sense of smell was highly developed, and implies that tyrannosaurs could detect carcasses by scent alone across great distances. The sense of smell in tyrannosaurs may have been comparable to modern vultures, which use scent to track carcasses for scavenging. Research on the olfactory bulbs has shown that T. rex had the most highly developed sense of smell of 21 sampled non-avian dinosaur species.[171]

 
Cast of the braincase at the Australian Museum, Sydney.

Somewhat unusually among theropods, T. rex had a very long cochlea. The length of the cochlea is often related to hearing acuity, or at least the importance of hearing in behavior, implying that hearing was a particularly important sense to tyrannosaurs. Specifically, data suggests that T. rex heard best in the low-frequency range, and that low-frequency sounds were an important part of tyrannosaur behavior.[169] A 2017 study by Thomas Carr and colleagues found that the snout of tyrannosaurids was highly sensitive, based on a high number of small openings in the facial bones of the related Daspletosaurus that contained sensory neurons. The study speculated that tyrannosaurs might have used their sensitive snouts to measure the temperature of their nests and to gently pick up eggs and hatchlings, as seen in modern crocodylians.[53] Another study published in 2021 further suggests that Tyrannosaurus had an acute sense of touch, based on neurovascular canals in the front of its jaws, which it could utilize to better detect and consume prey. The study, published by Kawabe and Hittori et al., suggests that Tyrannosaurus could also accurately sense slight differences in material and movement, allowing it to utilize different feeding strategies on different parts of its prey's carcasses depending on the situation. The sensitive neurovascular canals of Tyrannosaurus also likely were adapted to performing fine movements and behaviors such as nest building, parental care, and other social behavior such as intraspecific communication. The results of this study also align with results made in studying the related tyrannosaurid Daspletosaurus horneri and the allosauroid Neovenator, which have similar neurovascular adaptations, suggesting that the faces of theropods were highly sensitive to pressure and touch.[172][173] However, a more recent study reviewing the evolution of the trigeminal canals among sauropsids notes that a much denser network of neurovascular canals in the snout and lower jaw is more commonly encountered in aquatic or semiaquatic taxa (e.g., Spinosaurus, Halszkaraptor, Plesiosaurus), and taxa that developed a rhamphotheca (e.g., Caenagnathasia), while the network of canals in Tyrannosaurus appears simpler, though still more derived than in most ornithischians, and overall terrestrial taxa such as tyrannosaurids and Neovenator may have had average facial sensitivity for non-edentulous terrestrial theropods, although further research is needed. The neurovascular canals in Tyrannosaurus may instead have supported soft tissue structures for thermoregulation or social signaling, the latter of which could be confirmed by the fact that the neurovascular network of canals may have changed during ontogeny.[174]

A study by Grant R. Hurlburt, Ryan C. Ridgely and Lawrence Witmer obtained estimates for Encephalization Quotients (EQs), based on reptiles and birds, as well as estimates for the ratio of cerebrum to brain mass. The study concluded that Tyrannosaurus had the relatively largest brain of all adult non-avian dinosaurs with the exception of certain small maniraptoriforms (Bambiraptor, Troodon and Ornithomimus). The study found that Tyrannosaurus's relative brain size was still within the range of modern reptiles, being at most 2 standard deviations above the mean of non-avian reptile EQs. The estimates for the ratio of cerebrum mass to brain mass would range from 47.5 to 49.53 percent. According to the study, this is more than the lowest estimates for extant birds (44.6 percent), but still close to the typical ratios of the smallest sexually mature alligators which range from 45.9–47.9 percent.[175] Other studies, such as those by Steve Brusatte, indicate the encephalization quotient of Tyrannosaurus was similar in range (2.0–2.4) to a chimpanzee (2.2–2.5), though this may be debatable as reptilian and mammalian encephalization quotients are not equivalent.[176]

Social behavior

 
Mounted skeletons of different age groups (skeleton in lower left based on the juvenile formerly named Stygivenator), Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County

Philip J. Currie suggested that Tyrannosaurus may have been pack hunters, comparing T. rex to related species Tarbosaurus bataar and Albertosaurus sarcophagus, citing fossil evidence that may indicate gregarious (describing animals that travel in herds or packs) behavior.[177] A find in South Dakota where three T. rex skeletons were in close proximity may suggest the formation of a pack.[178][179] Cooperative pack hunting may have been an effective strategy for subduing prey with advanced anti-predator adaptations which pose potential lethality such as Triceratops and Ankylosaurus.[177]

Currie's pack-hunting T. rex hypothesis has been criticized for not having been peer-reviewed, but rather was discussed in a television interview and book called Dino Gangs.[180] The Currie theory for pack hunting by T. rex is based mainly by analogy to a different species, Tarbosaurus bataar. Evidence of gregariousness in T. bataar itself has not been peer-reviewed, and to Currie's own admission, can only be interpreted with reference to evidence in other closely related species. According to Currie gregariousness in Albertosaurus sarcophagus is supported by the discovery of 26 individuals with varied ages in the Dry Island bonebed. He ruled out the possibility of a predator trap due to the similar preservation state of individuals and the near absence of herbivores.[180][181]

Additional support of tyrannosaurid gregariousness can be found in fossilized trackways from the Upper Cretaceous Wapiti Formation of northeastern British Columbia, Canada, left by three tyrannosaurids traveling in the same direction.[182][183] According to scientists assessing the Dino Gangs program, the evidence for pack hunting in Tarbosaurus and Albertosaurus is weak and based on group skeletal remains for which alternate explanations may apply (such as drought or a flood forcing dinosaurs to die together in one place).[180] Others researchers have speculated that instead of large theropod social groups, some of these finds represent behavior more akin to Komodo dragon-like mobbing of carcasses, even going as far as to say true pack-hunting behavior may not exist in any non-avian dinosaurs due to its rarity in modern predators.[184]

Evidence of intraspecific attack was found by Joseph Peterson and his colleagues in the juvenile Tyrannosaurus nicknamed Jane. Peterson and his team found that Jane's skull showed healed puncture wounds on the upper jaw and snout which they believe came from another juvenile Tyrannosaurus. Subsequent CT scans of Jane's skull would further confirm the team's hypothesis, showing that the puncture wounds came from a traumatic injury and that there was subsequent healing.[185] The team would also state that Jane's injuries were structurally different from the parasite-induced lesions found in Sue and that Jane's injuries were on its face whereas the parasite that infected Sue caused lesions to the lower jaw.[186]

Feeding strategies

 
Tyrannosaurus tooth marks on bones of various herbivorous dinosaurs
 
A Tyrannosaurus mounted next to a Triceratops at the Los Angeles Natural History Museum

Most paleontologists accept that Tyrannosaurus was both an active predator and a scavenger like most large carnivores.[187] By far the largest carnivore in its environment, T. rex was most likely an apex predator, preying upon hadrosaurs, armored herbivores like ceratopsians and ankylosaurs, and possibly sauropods.[188] A study in 2012 by Karl Bates and Peter Falkingham found that Tyrannosaurus had the most powerful bite of any terrestrial animal that has ever lived, finding an adult Tyrannosaurus could have exerted 35,000 to 57,000 N (7,868 to 12,814 lbf) of force in the back teeth.[189][190][191] Even higher estimates were made by Mason B. Meers in 2003.[46] This allowed it to crush bones during repetitive biting and fully consume the carcasses of large dinosaurs.[20] Stephan Lautenschlager and colleagues calculated that Tyrannosaurus was capable of a maximum jaw gape of around 80 degrees, a necessary adaptation for a wide range of jaw angles to power the creature's strong bite.[192][193]

A debate exists, however, about whether Tyrannosaurus was primarily a predator or a pure scavenger. The debate originated in a 1917 study by Lambe which argued that large theropods were pure scavengers because Gorgosaurus teeth showed hardly any wear.[194] This argument disregarded the fact that theropods replaced their teeth quite rapidly. Ever since the first discovery of Tyrannosaurus most scientists have speculated that it was a predator; like modern large predators it would readily scavenge or steal another predator's kill if it had the opportunity.[195]

Paleontologist Jack Horner has been a major proponent of the view that Tyrannosaurus was not a predator at all but instead was exclusively a scavenger.[131][196][197] He has put forward arguments in the popular literature to support the pure scavenger hypothesis:

  • Tyrannosaur arms are short when compared to other known predators. Horner argues that the arms were too short to make the necessary gripping force to hold on to prey.[198] Other paleontologists such as Thomas Holtz Jr. argued that there are plenty of modern-day predators that do not use their forelimbs to hunt such as wolves, hyenas, and secretary birds as well as other extinct animals thought to be predators that would not have used their forelimbs such as phorusrhacids.[199][200]
  • Tyrannosaurs had large olfactory bulbs and olfactory nerves (relative to their brain size). These suggest a highly developed sense of smell which could sniff out carcasses over great distances, as modern vultures do. Research on the olfactory bulbs of dinosaurs has shown that Tyrannosaurus had the most highly developed sense of smell of 21 sampled dinosaurs.[171]
  • Tyrannosaur teeth could crush bone, and therefore could extract as much food (bone marrow) as possible from carcass remnants, usually the least nutritious parts. Karen Chin and colleagues have found bone fragments in coprolites (fossilized feces) that they attribute to tyrannosaurs, but point out that a tyrannosaur's teeth were not well adapted to systematically chewing bone like hyenas do to extract marrow.[201]
  • Since at least some of Tyrannosaurus's potential prey could move quickly, evidence that it walked instead of ran could indicate that it was a scavenger.[196] On the other hand, recent analyses suggest that Tyrannosaurus, while slower than large modern terrestrial predators, may well have been fast enough to prey on large hadrosaurs and ceratopsians.[155][23]

Other evidence suggests hunting behavior in Tyrannosaurus. The eye sockets of tyrannosaurs are positioned so that the eyes would point forward, giving them binocular vision slightly better than that of modern hawks. It is not obvious why natural selection would have favored this long-term trend if tyrannosaurs had been pure scavengers, which would not have needed the advanced depth perception that stereoscopic vision provides.[43][44] In modern animals, binocular vision is found mainly in predators.

 
The damage to the tail vertebrae of this Edmontosaurus annectens skeleton (on display at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science) indicates that it may have been bitten by a Tyrannosaurus

A skeleton of the hadrosaurid Edmontosaurus annectens has been described from Montana with healed tyrannosaur-inflicted damage on its tail vertebrae. The fact that the damage seems to have healed suggests that the Edmontosaurus survived a tyrannosaur's attack on a living target, i.e. the tyrannosaur had attempted active predation.[202] Despite the consensus that the tail bites were caused by Tyrannosaurus, there has been some evidence to show that they might have been created by other factors. For example, a 2014 study suggested that the tail injuries might have been due to Edmontosaurus individuals stepping on each other,[203] while another study in 2020 backs up the hypothesis that biomechanical stress is the cause for the tail injuries.[204] There is also evidence for an aggressive interaction between a Triceratops and a Tyrannosaurus in the form of partially healed tyrannosaur tooth marks on a Triceratops brow horn and squamosal (a bone of the neck frill); the bitten horn is also broken, with new bone growth after the break. It is not known what the exact nature of the interaction was, though: either animal could have been the aggressor.[205] Since the Triceratops wounds healed, it is most likely that the Triceratops survived the encounter and managed to overcome the Tyrannosaurus. In a battle against a bull Triceratops, the Triceratops would likely defend itself by inflicting fatal wounds to the Tyrannosaurus using its sharp horns.[206] Studies of Sue found a broken and healed fibula and tail vertebrae, scarred facial bones and a tooth from another Tyrannosaurus embedded in a neck vertebra, providing evidence for aggressive behavior.[207] Studies on hadrosaur vertebrae from the Hell Creek Formation that were punctured by the teeth of what appears to be a late-stage juvenile Tyrannosaurus indicate that despite lacking the bone-crushing adaptations of the adults, young individuals were still capable of using the same bone-puncturing feeding technique as their adult counterparts.[208]

Tyrannosaurus may have had infectious saliva used to kill its prey, as proposed by William Abler in 1992. Abler observed that the serrations (tiny protuberances) on the cutting edges of the teeth are closely spaced, enclosing little chambers. These chambers might have trapped pieces of carcass with bacteria, giving Tyrannosaurus a deadly, infectious bite much like the Komodo dragon was thought to have.[209][210] Jack Horner and Don Lessem, in a 1993 popular book, questioned Abler's hypothesis, arguing that Tyrannosaurus's tooth serrations as more like cubes in shape than the serrations on a Komodo monitor's teeth, which are rounded.[131]: 214–215 

Tyrannosaurus, and most other theropods, probably primarily processed carcasses with lateral shakes of the head, like crocodilians. The head was not as maneuverable as the skulls of allosauroids, due to flat joints of the neck vertebrae.[211]

Cannibalism

Evidence also strongly suggests that tyrannosaurs were at least occasionally cannibalistic. Tyrannosaurus itself has strong evidence pointing towards it having been cannibalistic in at least a scavenging capacity based on tooth marks on the foot bones, humerus, and metatarsals of one specimen.[212] Fossils from the Fruitland Formation, Kirtland Formation (both Campanian in age) and the Maastrichtian aged Ojo Alamo Formation suggest that cannibalism was present in various tyrannosaurid genera of the San Juan Basin. The evidence gathered from the specimens suggests opportunistic feeding behavior in tyrannosaurids that cannibalized members of their own species.[213] A study from Currie, Horner, Erickson and Longrich in 2010 has been put forward as evidence of cannibalism in the genus Tyrannosaurus.[212] They studied some Tyrannosaurus specimens with tooth marks in the bones, attributable to the same genus. The tooth marks were identified in the humerus, foot bones and metatarsals, and this was seen as evidence for opportunistic scavenging, rather than wounds caused by intraspecific combat. In a fight, they proposed it would be difficult to reach down to bite in the feet of a rival, making it more likely that the bitemarks were made in a carcass. As the bitemarks were made in body parts with relatively scantly amounts of flesh, it is suggested that the Tyrannosaurus was feeding on a cadaver in which the more fleshy parts already had been consumed. They were also open to the possibility that other tyrannosaurids practiced cannibalism.[212]

Parenting

While there is no direct evidence of Tyrannosaurus raising their young (the rarity of juvenile and nest Tyrannosaur fossils has left researchers guessing), it has been suggested by some that like its closest living relatives, modern archosaurs (birds and crocodiles) Tyrannosaurus may have protected and fed its young. Crocodilians and birds are often suggested by some paleontologists to be modern analogues for dinosaur parenting.[214] Direct evidence of parental behavior exists in other dinosaurs such as Maiasaura peeblesorum, the first dinosaur to have been discovered to raise its young, as well as more closely related Oviraptorids, the latter suggesting parental behavior in theropods.[215][216][217][218][219]

Pathology

 
Restoration of an individual (based on MOR 980) with parasite infections

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. Of the 81 Tyrannosaurus foot bones examined in the study, one was found to have a stress fracture, while none of the 10 hand bones were found to have stress fractures. The researchers found tendon avulsions only among Tyrannosaurus and Allosaurus. An avulsion injury left a divot on the humerus of Sue the T. rex, apparently located at the origin of the deltoid or teres major muscles. The presence of avulsion injuries being limited to the forelimb and shoulder in both Tyrannosaurus and Allosaurus suggests that theropods may have had a musculature more complex than and functionally different from those of birds. The researchers concluded that Sue's tendon avulsion was probably obtained from struggling prey. The presence of stress fractures and tendon avulsions, in general, provides evidence for a "very active" predation-based diet rather than obligate scavenging.[220]

A 2009 study showed that smooth-edged holes in the skulls of several specimens might have been caused by Trichomonas-like parasites that commonly infect birds. According to the study, seriously infected individuals, including "Sue" and MOR 980 ("Peck's Rex"), might therefore have died from starvation after feeding became increasingly difficult. Previously, these holes had been explained by the bacterious bone infection Actinomycosis or by intraspecific attacks.[221] A subsequent study found that while trichomoniasis has many attributes of the model proposed (osteolytic, intra oral) several features make the assumption that it was the cause of death less supportable by evidence. For example, the observed sharp margins with little reactive bone shown by the radiographs of Trichomonas-infected birds are dissimilar to the reactive bone seen in the affected T. rex specimens. Also, trichomoniasis can be very rapidly fatal in birds (14 days or less) albeit in its milder form, and this suggests that if a Trichomonas-like protozoan is the culprit, trichomoniasis was less acute in its non-avian dinosaur form during the Late Cretaceous. Finally, the relative size of this type of lesions is much larger in small bird throats, and may not have been enough to choke a T. rex.[222] A more recent study examining the pathologies concluded that the osseous alteration observed most closely resembles those around healing human cranial trepanations and healing fractures in the Triassic reptile Stagonolepis, in the absence of infection. The possible cause may instead have been intraspecific combat.[223]

One study of Tyrannosaurus specimens with tooth marks in the bones attributable to the same genus was presented as evidence of cannibalism.[212] Tooth marks in the humerus, foot bones and metatarsals, may indicate opportunistic scavenging, rather than wounds caused by combat with another T. rex.[212][224] Other tyrannosaurids may also have practiced cannibalism.[212]

Paleoecology

 
Fauna of Hell Creek (Tyrannosaurus in dark red, left).

Tyrannosaurus lived during what is referred to as the Lancian faunal stage (Maastrichtian age) at the end of the Late Cretaceous. Tyrannosaurus ranged from Canada in the north to at least New Mexico in the south of Laramidia.[4] During this time Triceratops was the major herbivore in the northern portion of its range, while the titanosaurian sauropod Alamosaurus "dominated" its southern range. Tyrannosaurus remains have been discovered in different ecosystems, including inland and coastal subtropical, and semi-arid plains.

 
Tyrannosaurus and other animals of the Hell Creek Formation

Several notable Tyrannosaurus remains have been found in the Hell Creek Formation. During the Maastrichtian this area was subtropical, with a warm and humid climate. The flora consisted mostly of angiosperms, but also included trees like dawn redwood (Metasequoia) and Araucaria. Tyrannosaurus shared this ecosystem with ceratopsians Leptoceratops, Torosaurus, and Triceratops, the hadrosaurid Edmontosaurus annectens, the parksosaurid Thescelosaurus, the ankylosaurs Ankylosaurus and Denversaurus, the pachycephalosaurs Pachycephalosaurus and Sphaerotholus, and the theropods Ornithomimus, Struthiomimus, Acheroraptor, Dakotaraptor, Pectinodon and Anzu.[225]

Another formation with Tyrannosaurus remains is the Lance Formation of Wyoming. This has been interpreted as a bayou environment similar to today's Gulf Coast. The fauna was very similar to Hell Creek, but with Struthiomimus replacing its relative Ornithomimus. The small ceratopsian Leptoceratops also lived in the area.[226]

In its southern range Tyrannosaurus lived alongside the titanosaur Alamosaurus, the ceratopsians Torosaurus, Bravoceratops and Ojoceratops, hadrosaurs which consisted of a species of Edmontosaurus, Kritosaurus and a possible species of Gryposaurus, the nodosaur Glyptodontopelta, the oviraptorid Ojoraptosaurus, possible species of the theropods Troodon and Richardoestesia, and the pterosaur Quetzalcoatlus.[227] The region is thought to have been dominated by semi-arid inland plains, following the probable retreat of the Western Interior Seaway as global sea levels fell.[228]

Tyrannosaurus may have also inhabited Mexico's Lomas Coloradas formation in Sonora. Though skeletal evidence is lacking, six shed and broken teeth from the fossil bed have been thoroughly compared with other theropod genera and appear to be identical to those of Tyrannosaurus. If true, the evidence indicates the range of Tyrannosaurus was possibly more extensive than previously believed.[229] It is possible that tyrannosaurs were originally Asian species, migrating to North America before the end of the Cretaceous period.[230]

Population estimates

 
Chart of the time-averaged census for large-bodied dinosaurs from the entire Hell Creek Formation in the study area

According to studies published in 2021 by Charles Marshall et al., the total population of adult Tyrannosaurus at any given time was perhaps 20,000 individuals, with computer estimations also suggesting a total population no lower than 1,300 and no higher than 328,000. The authors themselves suggest that the estimate of 20,000 individuals is probably lower than what should be expected, especially when factoring in that disease pandemics could easily wipe out such a small population. Over the span of the genus' existence, it is estimated that there were about 127,000 generations and that this added up to a total of roughly 2.5 billion animals until their extinction.[231][232]

In the same paper, it is suggested that in a population of Tyrannosaurus adults numbering 20,000, the number of individuals living in an area the size of California could be as high as 3,800 animals, while an area the size of Washington D.C. could support a population of only two adult Tyrannosaurus. The study does not take into account the number of juvenile animals in the genus present in this population estimate due to their occupation of a different niche than the adults, and thus it is likely the total population was much higher when accounting for this factor. Simultaneously, studies of living carnivores suggest that some predator populations are higher in density than others of similar weight (such as jaguars and hyenas, which are similar in weight but have vastly differing population densities). Lastly, the study suggests that in most cases, only one in 80 million Tyrannosaurus would become fossilized, while the chances were likely as high as one in every 16,000 of an individual becoming fossilized in areas that had more dense populations.[231][232]

Meiri (2022) questioned the reliability of the estimates, citing uncertainty in metabolic rate, body size, sex and age-specific survival rates, habitat requirements and range size variability as shortcomings Marshall et al. did not take into account.[233] The authors of the original publication replied that while they agree that their reported uncertainties were probably too small, their framework is flexible enough to accommodate uncerainty in physiology, and that their calculations do not depend on short-term changes in population density and geographic range, but rather on their long-term averages. Finally, they remark that they did estimate the range of reasonable survivorship curves and that they did include uncertainty in the time of onset of sexual maturity and in the growth curve by incorporating the uncertainty in the maximum body mass.[234]

Cultural significance

Since it was first described in 1905, T. rex has become the most widely recognized dinosaur species in popular culture. It is the only dinosaur that is commonly known to the general public by its full scientific name (binomial name) and the scientific abbreviation T. rex has also come into wide usage.[49] Robert T. Bakker notes this in The Dinosaur Heresies and explains that, "a name like 'T. rex' is just irresistible to the tongue."[37]

See also

Explanatory notes

References

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  2. ^ Hatcher, J. B. (1907). "The Ceratopsia". Monographs of the United States Geological Survey. 49: 113–114. ISSN 0886-7550.
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  4. ^ a b c d e f g Larson, N. L. (2008). "One hundred years of Tyrannosaurus rex: the skeletons". In Larson, P.; Carpenter, K. (eds.). Tyrannosaurus rex, The Tyrant King. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. pp. 1–55. ISBN 978-0-253-35087-9.
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  6. ^ a b Dingus, L.; Norell, M. (May 3, 2010). Barnum Brown: The Man Who Discovered Tyrannosaurus rex. University of California Press. pp. 90, 124. ISBN 978-0-520-94552-4.
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  13. ^ . The University of Manchester. September 18, 2010. Archived from the original on September 18, 2010.
  14. ^ Fiffer, S. (2000). "Jurassic Farce". Tyrannosaurus Sue. W. H. Freeman and Company, New York. pp. 121–122. ISBN 978-0-7167-4017-9.
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  18. ^ Black, Riley (October 28, 2015). "Tiny terror: Controversial dinosaur species is just an awkward tween Tyrannosaurus". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved December 10, 2018.
  19. ^ a b . 2006. Archived from the original on April 14, 2006. Retrieved April 7, 2006.
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tyrannosaurus, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, tyrannasorus, ɔː, tyrant, lizard, from, ancient, greek, τύραννος, túrannos, tyrant, σαῦρος, saûros, lizard, genus, large, theropod, dinosaur, type, species, meaning, king, latin, ofte. T rex redirects here For other uses see T rex disambiguation Not to be confused with Tyrannasorus rex Tyrannosaurus t ɪ ˌ r ae n e ˈ s ɔː r e s t aɪ lit tyrant lizard from Ancient Greek tyrannos turannos tyrant and saῦros sauros lizard is a genus of large theropod dinosaur The type species Tyrannosaurus rex rex meaning king in Latin often called T rex or colloquially T Rex is one of the best represented theropods It lived throughout what is now western North America on what was then an island continent known as Laramidia Tyrannosaurus had a much wider range than other tyrannosaurids Fossils are found in a variety of rock formations dating to the latest Campanian Maastrichtian ages of the Late Cretaceous period 72 7 to 66 million years ago It was the last known member of the tyrannosaurids and among the last non avian dinosaurs to exist before the Cretaceous Paleogene extinction event TyrannosaurusTemporal range Late Cretaceous 72 7 66 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NReconstruction of the T rex type specimen at the Carnegie Museum of Natural HistoryScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClade DinosauriaClade SaurischiaClade TheropodaFamily TyrannosauridaeSubfamily TyrannosaurinaeClade TyrannosauriniGenus TyrannosaurusOsborn 1905Type species Tyrannosaurus rexOsborn 1905Other speciesT mcraeensis Dalman et al 2024 See textSynonymsGenus synonymy Dinotyrannus Olshevsky 1995Dynamosaurus Osborn 1905Manospondylus Cope 1892Nanotyrannus Bakker Williams amp Currie 1988Stygivenator Olshevsky 1995Tarbosaurus Maleev 1955b Species synonymy Aublysodon amplus Marsh 1892Deinodon amplus Marsh 1892 Hay 1902Manospondylus amplus Marsh 1892 Olshevsky 1978Stygivenator amplus Marsh 1892 Olshevsky 1995Tyrannosaurus amplus Marsh 1892 Hay 1930Aublysodon cristatus Marsh 1892Deinodon cristatus Marsh 1892 Hay 1902Stygivenator cristatus Marsh 1892 Olshevsky 1995Manospondylus gigas Cope 1892Dynamosaurus imperiosus Osborn 1905Tyrannosaurus imperiosus Osborn 1905 Swinton 1970Gorgosaurus lancensis Gilmore 1946Albertosaurus lancensis Gilmore 1946 Russell 1970Deinodon lancensis Gilmore 1946 Kuhn 1965Aublysodon lancensis Gilmore 1946 Charig in Appleby Charig Cox Kermack amp Tarlo 1967Nanotyrannus lancensis Gilmore 1946 Bakker Williams amp Currie 1988Albertosaurus megagracilis Paul 1988a nomen nudum Dinotyrannus megagracilis Olshevsky 1995Aublysodon molnaris Paul 1988aAublysodon molnari Paul 1988a emend Paul 1990Stygivenator molnari Paul 1988a emend Paul 1990 Olshevsky 1995Like other tyrannosaurids Tyrannosaurus was a bipedal carnivore with a massive skull balanced by a long heavy tail Relative to its large and powerful hind limbs the forelimbs of Tyrannosaurus were short but unusually powerful for their size and they had two clawed digits The most complete specimen measures up to 12 3 12 4 m 40 41 ft in length but according to most modern estimates Tyrannosaurus could have exceeded sizes of 13 m 43 ft in length 3 7 4 m 12 13 ft in hip height and 8 8 tonnes 8 7 long tons 9 7 short tons in mass Although some other theropods might have rivaled or exceeded Tyrannosaurus in size it is still among the largest known land predators with an estimated bite force being the largest among all terrestrial animals By far the largest carnivore in its environment Tyrannosaurus rex was most likely an apex predator preying upon hadrosaurs juvenile armored herbivores like ceratopsians and ankylosaurs and possibly sauropods Some experts have suggested the dinosaur was primarily a scavenger The question of whether Tyrannosaurus was an apex predator or a pure scavenger was among the longest debates in paleontology Most paleontologists today accept that Tyrannosaurus was both an active predator and a scavenger Specimens of Tyrannosaurus rex include some that are nearly complete skeletons Soft tissue and proteins have been reported in at least one of these specimens The abundance of fossil material has allowed significant research into many aspects of its biology including its life history and biomechanics The feeding habits physiology and potential speed of Tyrannosaurus rex are a few subjects of debate Its taxonomy is also controversial as some scientists consider Tarbosaurus bataar from Asia to be a second Tyrannosaurus species while others maintain Tarbosaurus is a separate genus Several other genera of North American tyrannosaurids have also been synonymized with Tyrannosaurus At present two species of Tyrannosaurus are considered valid the type species T rex and the earlier and more recently discovered T mcraeensis As the archetypal theropod Tyrannosaurus has been one of the best known dinosaurs since the early 20th century and has been featured in film advertising postal stamps and many other media Contents 1 History of research 1 1 Earliest finds 1 2 Skeleton discovery and naming 1 3 Resurgent interest 1 4 Footprints 2 Description 2 1 Size 2 2 Skull 2 3 Skeleton 3 Classification 3 1 Additional species 3 2 Tyrannosaurus mcraeensis 3 3 Nanotyrannus 4 Paleobiology 4 1 Life history 4 2 Skin and possible filamentous feathering 4 3 Sexual dimorphism 4 4 Posture 4 5 Arms 4 6 Thermoregulation 4 7 Soft tissue 4 8 Speed 4 9 Possible footprints 4 10 Brain and senses 4 11 Social behavior 4 12 Feeding strategies 4 12 1 Cannibalism 4 13 Parenting 4 14 Pathology 5 Paleoecology 5 1 Population estimates 6 Cultural significance 7 See also 8 Explanatory notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External links 11 1 ExhibitsHistory of researchSee also Specimens of Tyrannosaurus Earliest finds nbsp Type specimen AMNH 3982 of Manospondylus gigasTeeth from what is now documented as a Tyrannosaurus rex were found in 1874 by Arthur Lakes near Golden Colorado In the early 1890s John Bell Hatcher collected postcranial elements in eastern Wyoming The fossils were believed to be from the large species Ornithomimus grandis now Deinodon but are now considered T rex remains 1 In 1892 Edward Drinker Cope found two vertebral fragments of a large dinosaur Cope believed the fragments belonged to an agathaumid ceratopsid dinosaur and named them Manospondylus gigas meaning giant porous vertebra in reference to the numerous openings for blood vessels he found in the bone 1 The M gigas remains were in 1907 identified by Hatcher as those of a theropod rather than a ceratopsid 2 Henry Fairfield Osborn recognized the similarity between Manospondylus gigas and T rex as early as 1917 by which time the second vertebra had been lost Owing to the fragmentary nature of the Manospondylus vertebrae Osborn did not synonymize the two genera instead considering the older genus indeterminate 3 In June 2000 the Black Hills Institute found around 10 of a Tyrannosaurus skeleton BHI 6248 at a site that might have been the original M gigas locality 4 Skeleton discovery and naming nbsp Outdated skeletal restoration by William D Matthew from 1905 published alongside Osborn s description paperBarnum Brown assistant curator of the American Museum of Natural History found the first partial skeleton of T rex in eastern Wyoming in 1900 Brown found another partial skeleton in the Hell Creek Formation in Montana in 1902 comprising approximately 34 fossilized bones 5 Writing at the time Brown said Quarry No 1 contains the femur pubes humerus three vertebrae and two undetermined bones of a large Carnivorous Dinosaur not described by Marsh I have never seen anything like it from the Cretaceous 6 Henry Fairfield Osborn president of the American Museum of Natural History named the second skeleton T rex in 1905 The generic name is derived from the Greek words tyrannos tyrannos meaning tyrant and saῦros sauros meaning lizard Osborn used the Latin word rex meaning king for the specific name The full binomial therefore translates to tyrant lizard the king or King Tyrant Lizard emphasizing the animal s size and presumed dominance over other species of the time 5 nbsp Dynamosaurus imperiosus holotype Natural History MuseumOsborn named the other specimen Dynamosaurus imperiosus in a paper in 1905 5 In 1906 Osborn recognized that the two skeletons were from the same species and selected Tyrannosaurus as the preferred name 7 The original Dynamosaurus material resides in the collections of the Natural History Museum London 8 In 1941 the T rex type specimen was sold to the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania for 7 000 6 Dynamosaurus would later be honored by the 2018 description of another species of tyrannosaurid by Andrew McDonald and colleagues Dynamoterror dynastes whose name was chosen in reference to the 1905 name as it had been a childhood favorite of McDonald s 9 From the 1910s through the end of the 1950s Barnum s discoveries remained the only specimens of Tyrannosaurus as the Great Depression and wars kept many paleontologists out of the field 4 Resurgent interest nbsp Specimen Sue Field Museum of Natural History ChicagoBeginning in the 1960s there was renewed interest in Tyrannosaurus resulting in the recovery of 42 skeletons 5 80 complete by bone count from Western North America 4 In 1967 Dr William MacMannis located and recovered the skeleton named MOR 008 which is 15 complete by bone count and has a reconstructed skull displayed at the Museum of the Rockies The 1990s saw numerous discoveries with nearly twice as many finds as in all previous years including two of the most complete skeletons found to date Sue and Stan 4 Sue Hendrickson an amateur paleontologist discovered the most complete approximately 85 and largest Tyrannosaurus skeleton in the Hell Creek Formation on August 12 1990 The specimen Sue named after the discoverer was the object of a legal battle over its ownership In 1997 the litigation was settled in favor of Maurice Williams the original land owner The fossil collection was purchased by the Field Museum of Natural History at auction for 7 6 million making it the most expensive dinosaur skeleton until the sale of Stan for 31 8 million in 2020 10 From 1998 to 1999 Field Museum of Natural History staff spent over 25 000 hours taking the rock off the bones 11 The bones were then shipped to New Jersey where the mount was constructed then shipped back to Chicago for the final assembly The mounted skeleton opened to the public on May 17 2000 in the Field Museum of Natural History A study of this specimen s fossilized bones showed that Sue reached full size at age 19 and died at the age of 28 the longest estimated life of any tyrannosaur known 12 nbsp Scotty the largest known specimen exhibited in JapanAnother Tyrannosaurus nicknamed Stan BHI 3033 in honor of amateur paleontologist Stan Sacrison was recovered from the Hell Creek Formation in 1992 Stan is the second most complete skeleton found with 199 bones recovered representing 70 of the total 13 This tyrannosaur also had many bone pathologies including broken and healed ribs a broken and healed neck and a substantial hole in the back of its head about the size of a Tyrannosaurus tooth 14 In 1998 Bucky Derflinger noticed a T rex toe exposed above ground making Derflinger who was 20 years old at the time the youngest person to discover a Tyrannosaurus The specimen dubbed Bucky in honor of its discoverer was a young adult 3 0 metres 10 ft tall and 11 metres 35 ft long Bucky is the first Tyrannosaurus to be found that preserved a furcula wishbone Bucky is permanently displayed at The Children s Museum of Indianapolis 15 nbsp The specimens Sue AMNH 5027 Stan and Jane to scale with a human In the summer of 2000 crews organized by Jack Horner discovered five Tyrannosaurus skeletons near the Fort Peck Reservoir 16 In 2001 a 50 complete skeleton of a juvenile Tyrannosaurus was discovered in the Hell Creek Formation by a crew from the Burpee Museum of Natural History Dubbed Jane BMRP 2002 4 1 the find was thought to be the first known skeleton of a pygmy tyrannosaurid Nanotyrannus but subsequent research revealed that it is more likely a juvenile Tyrannosaurus and the most complete juvenile example known 17 Jane is exhibited at the Burpee Museum of Natural History 18 In 2002 a skeleton named Wyrex discovered by amateur collectors Dan Wells and Don Wyrick had 114 bones and was 38 complete The dig was concluded over 3 weeks in 2004 by the Black Hills Institute with the first live online Tyrannosaurus excavation providing daily reports photos and video 4 In 2006 Montana State University revealed that it possessed the largest Tyrannosaurus skull yet discovered from a specimen named MOR 008 measuring 5 feet 152 cm long 19 Subsequent comparisons indicated that the longest head was 136 5 centimetres 53 7 in from specimen LACM 23844 and the widest head was 90 2 centimetres 35 5 in from Sue 20 Footprints nbsp Probable footprint from New MexicoTwo isolated fossilized footprints have been tentatively assigned to T rex The first was discovered at Philmont Scout Ranch New Mexico in 1983 by American geologist Charles Pillmore Originally thought to belong to a hadrosaurid examination of the footprint revealed a large heel unknown in ornithopod dinosaur tracks and traces of what may have been a hallux the dewclaw like fourth digit of the tyrannosaur foot The footprint was published as the ichnogenus Tyrannosauripus pillmorei in 1994 by Martin Lockley and Adrian Hunt Lockley and Hunt suggested that it was very likely the track was made by a T rex which would make it the first known footprint from this species The track was made in what was once a vegetated wetland mudflat It measures 83 centimeters 33 in long by 71 centimeters 28 in wide 21 A second footprint that may have been made by a Tyrannosaurus was first reported in 2007 by British paleontologist Phil Manning from the Hell Creek Formation of Montana This second track measures 72 centimeters 28 in long shorter than the track described by Lockley and Hunt Whether or not the track was made by Tyrannosaurus is unclear though Tyrannosaurus is the only large theropod known to have existed in the Hell Creek Formation 22 23 A set of footprints in Glenrock Wyoming dating to the Maastrichtian stage of the Late Cretaceous and hailing from the Lance Formation were described by Scott Persons Phil Currie and colleagues in 2016 and are believed to belong to either a juvenile T rex or the dubious tyrannosaurid Nanotyrannus lancensis From measurements and based on the positions of the footprints the animal was believed to be traveling at a walking speed of around 2 8 to 5 miles per hour and was estimated to have a hip height of 1 56 m 5 1 ft to 2 06 m 6 8 ft 24 25 26 A follow up paper appeared in 2017 increasing the speed estimations by 50 80 27 DescriptionSize nbsp Size in blue compared with selected giant theropods and a humanT rex was one of the largest land carnivores of all time One of the largest and the most complete specimens nicknamed Sue FMNH PR2081 is located at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago Sue measured 12 3 12 4 m 40 4 40 7 ft long 28 29 was 3 66 3 96 meters 12 13 ft tall at the hips 30 31 32 and according to the most recent studies using a variety of techniques maximum body masses have been estimated approximately 8 4 8 46 metric tons 9 26 9 33 short tons 33 34 A specimen nicknamed Scotty RSM P2523 8 located at the Royal Saskatchewan Museum is reported to measure 13 m 43 ft in length Using a mass estimation technique that extrapolates from the circumference of the femur Scotty was estimated as the largest known specimen at 8 87 metric tons 9 78 short tons in body mass 33 35 Not every adult Tyrannosaurus specimen recovered is as big Historically average adult mass estimates have varied widely over the years from as low as 4 5 metric tons 5 0 short tons 36 37 to more than 7 2 metric tons 7 9 short tons 38 with most modern estimates ranging between 5 4 metric tons 6 0 short tons and 8 0 metric tons 8 8 short tons 28 39 40 41 42 Skull nbsp Profile view of a skull AMNH 5027 The largest known T rex skulls measure up to 1 54 meters 5 ft in length 19 30 Large fenestrae openings in the skull reduced weight as in all carnivorous theropods In other respects Tyrannosaurus s skull was significantly different from those of large non tyrannosaurid theropods It was extremely wide at the rear but had a narrow snout allowing unusually good binocular vision 43 44 The skull bones were massive and the nasals and some other bones were fused preventing movement between them but many were pneumatized contained a honeycomb of tiny air spaces and thus lighter These and other skull strengthening features are part of the tyrannosaurid trend towards an increasingly powerful bite which easily surpassed that of all non tyrannosaurids 45 46 47 The tip of the upper jaw was U shaped most non tyrannosauroid carnivores had V shaped upper jaws which increased the amount of tissue and bone a tyrannosaur could rip out with one bite although it also increased the stresses on the front teeth 48 nbsp Skull replica of specimen Sue showing dentitionThe teeth of T rex displayed marked heterodonty differences in shape 49 50 The premaxillary teeth four per side at the front of the upper jaw were closely packed D shaped in cross section had reinforcing ridges on the rear surface were incisiform their tips were chisel like blades and curved backwards The D shaped cross section reinforcing ridges and backwards curve reduced the risk that the teeth would snap when Tyrannosaurus bit and pulled The remaining teeth were robust like lethal bananas rather than daggers more widely spaced and also had reinforcing ridges 51 Those in the upper jaw twelve per side in mature individuals 49 were larger than their counterparts of the lower jaw except at the rear The largest found so far is estimated to have been 30 5 centimeters 12 in long including the root when the animal was alive making it the largest tooth of any carnivorous dinosaur yet found 52 The lower jaw was robust Its front dentary bone bore thirteen teeth Behind the tooth row the lower jaw became notably taller 49 The upper and lower jaws of Tyrannosaurus like those of many dinosaurs possessed numerous foramina or small holes in the bone Various functions have been proposed for these foramina such as a crocodile like sensory system 53 or evidence of extra oral structures such as scales or potentially lips 54 55 56 with subsequent research on theropod tooth wear patterns supporting such a proposition 57 Skeleton nbsp Life restoration showing scaly skin with sparse feathering and lipped jaws nbsp Skeletal reconstruction of specimen Sue The vertebral column of Tyrannosaurus consisted of ten neck vertebrae thirteen back vertebrae and five sacral vertebrae The number of tail vertebrae is unknown and could well have varied between individuals but probably numbered at least forty Sue was mounted with forty seven of such caudal vertebrae 49 The neck of T rex formed a natural S shaped curve like that of other theropods Compared to these it was exceptionally short deep and muscular to support the massive head The second vertebra the axis was especially short The remaining neck vertebrae were weakly opisthocoelous i e with a convex front of the vertebral body and a concave rear The vertebral bodies had single pleurocoels pneumatic depressions created by air sacs on their sides 49 The vertebral bodies of the torso were robust but with a narrow waist Their undersides were keeled The front sides were concave with a deep vertical trough They had large pleurocoels Their neural spines had very rough front and rear sides for the attachment of strong tendons The sacral vertebrae were fused to each other both in their vertebral bodies and neural spines They were pneumatized They were connected to the pelvis by transverse processes and sacral ribs The tail was heavy and moderately long in order to balance the massive head and torso and to provide space for massive locomotor muscles that attached to the thighbones The thirteenth tail vertebra formed the transition point between the deep tail base and the middle tail that was stiffened by a rather long front articulation processes The underside of the trunk was covered by eighteen or nineteen pairs of segmented belly ribs 49 nbsp Right forelimb of specimen Sue The shoulder girdle was longer than the entire forelimb The shoulder blade had a narrow shaft but was exceptionally expanded at its upper end It connected via a long forward protrusion to the coracoid which was rounded Both shoulder blades were connected by a small furcula The paired breast bones possibly were made of cartilage only 49 The forelimb or arm was very short The upper arm bone the humerus was short but robust It had a narrow upper end with an exceptionally rounded head The lower arm bones the ulna and radius were straight elements much shorter than the humerus The second metacarpal was longer and wider than the first whereas normally in theropods the opposite is true The forelimbs had only two clawed fingers 49 along with an additional splint like small third metacarpal representing the remnant of a third digit 58 nbsp Pelvic girdle of specimen MOR 555The pelvis was a large structure Its upper bone the ilium was both very long and high providing an extensive attachment area for hindlimb muscles The front pubic bone ended in an enormous pubic boot longer than the entire shaft of the element The rear ischium was slender and straight pointing obliquely to behind and below 49 In contrast to the arms the hindlimbs were among the longest in proportion to body size of any theropod In the foot the metatarsus was arctometatarsalian meaning that the part of the third metatarsal near the ankle was pinched The third metatarsal was also exceptionally sinuous 49 Compensating for the immense bulk of the animal many bones throughout the skeleton were hollowed reducing its weight without significant loss of strength 49 Classification nbsp Skull casts of different Tyrannosaurus specimensTyrannosaurus is the type genus of the superfamily Tyrannosauroidea the family Tyrannosauridae and the subfamily Tyrannosaurinae in other words it is the standard by which paleontologists decide whether to include other species in the same group Other members of the tyrannosaurine subfamily include the North American Daspletosaurus and the Asian Tarbosaurus 17 59 both of which have occasionally been synonymized with Tyrannosaurus 60 Tyrannosaurids were once commonly thought to be descendants of earlier large theropods such as megalosaurs and carnosaurs although more recently they were reclassified with the generally smaller coelurosaurs 48 Many phylogenetic analyses have found Tarbosaurus bataar to be the sister taxon of T rex 59 The discovery of the tyrannosaurid Lythronax further indicates that Tarbosaurus and Tyrannosaurus are closely related forming a clade with fellow Asian tyrannosaurid Zhuchengtyrannus with Lythronax being their sister taxon 61 62 A further study from 2016 by Steve Brusatte Thomas Carr and colleagues also indicates that Tyrannosaurus may have been an immigrant from Asia as well as a possible descendant of Tarbosaurus 63 Below is the cladogram of Tyrannosauridae based on the phylogenetic analysis conducted by Loewen and colleagues in 2013 61 Tyrannosauridae Albertosaurinae Gorgosaurus libratus nbsp Albertosaurus sarcophagus nbsp Tyrannosaurinae Dinosaur Park tyrannosauridDaspletosaurus torosus nbsp Two Medicine tyrannosauridTeratophoneus curriei nbsp Bistahieversor sealeyiLythronax argestes nbsp Tyrannosaurus rex nbsp Tarbosaurus bataar nbsp Zhuchengtyrannus magnus nbsp In their 2024 description of Tyrannosaurus mcraeensis Dalman et al recovered similar results to previous analyses with Tyrannosaurus as the sister taxon to the clade formed by Tarbosaurus and Zhuchengtyrannus called the Tyrannosaurini They also found support for a monophyletic clade containing Daspletosaurus and Thanatotheristes typically referred to as the Daspletosaurini 64 65 Albertosaurus sarcophagus nbsp Gorgosaurus libratus nbsp Daspletosaurus horneriThanatotheristesDaspletosaurus torosus nbsp Daspletosaurus wilsoniTeratophoneus nbsp Nanuqsaurus nbsp BistahieversorLythronax nbsp Tyrannosaurini Tyrannosaurus mcraeensisTyrannosaurus rex nbsp Zhuchengtyrannus nbsp Tarbosaurus nbsp Additional species nbsp Diagram showing the differences between a generalized Tarbosaurus A and Tyrannosaurus Rex B skullIn 1955 Soviet paleontologist Evgeny Maleev named a new species Tyrannosaurus bataar from Mongolia 66 By 1965 this species was renamed as a distinct genus Tarbosaurus bataar 67 While most palaeontologists continue to maintain the two as distinct genera some authors such as Thomas Holtz Kenneth Carpenter and Thomas Carr argue that the two species are similar enough to be considered members of the same genus with the Mongolian taxon having the resulting binomial of Tyrannosaurus bataar 48 68 53 In 2001 various tyrannosaurid teeth and a metatarsal unearthed in a quarry near Zhucheng China were assigned by Chinese paleontologist Hu Chengzhi to the newly erected species Tyrannosaurus zhuchengensis However in a nearby site a right maxilla and left jawbone were assigned to the newly erected tyrannosaurid genus Zhuchengtyrannus in 2011 It is possible that T zhuchengensis is synonymous with Zhuchengtyrannus In any case T zhuchengensis is considered to be a nomen dubium as the holotype lacks diagnostic features below the level Tyrannosaurinae 69 In a 2022 study Gregory S Paul and colleagues argued that Tyrannosaurus rex as traditionally understood actually represents three species the type species Tyrannosaurus rex and two new species T imperator meaning tyrant lizard emperor and T regina meaning tyrant lizard queen The holotype of the former T imperator is the Sue specimen and the holotype of the latter T regina is Wankel rex The division into multiple species was primarily based on the observation of a very high degree of variation in the proportions and robusticity of the femur and other skeletal elements across catalogued T rex specimens more so than that observed in other theropods recognized as one species Differences of general body proportions representing robust and gracile morphotypes were also used as a line of evidence in addition to the number of small slender incisiform teeth in the dentary as based on tooth sockets Specifically the paper s T rex was distinguished by robust anatomy a moderate ratio of femur length vs circumference and the possession of a singular slender incisiform dentary tooth T imperator was considered to be robust with a small femur length to circumference ratio and two of the slender teeth and T regina was a gracile form with a high femur ratio and one of the slender teeth It was observed that variation in proportions and robustness became more extreme higher up in the sample stratigraphically This was interpreted as a single earlier population T imperator speciating into more than one taxon T rex and T regina 70 However several other leading paleontologists including Stephen Brusatte Thomas Carr Thomas Holtz David Hone Jingmai O Connor and Lindsay Zanno criticized the study or expressed skepticism of its conclusions when approached by various media outlets for comment 71 72 73 Their criticism was subsequently published in a technical paper 74 Holtz and Zanno both remarked that it was plausible that more than one species of Tyrannosaurus existed but felt the new study was insufficient to support the species it proposed Holtz remarked that even if Tyrannosaurus imperator represented a distinct species from Tyrannosaurus rex it may represent the same species as Nanotyrannus lancensis and would need to be called Tyrannosaurus lancensis O Connor a curator at the Field Museum where the T imperator holotype Sue is displayed regarded the new species as too poorly supported to justify modifying the exhibit signs Brusatte Carr and O Connor viewed the distinguishing features proposed between the species as reflecting natural variation within a species Both Carr and O Connor expressed concerns about the study s inability to determine which of the proposed species several well preserved specimens belonged to Another paleontologist Philip J Currie originally co authored the study but withdrew from it as he did not want to be involved in naming the new species 71 Paul rejected the objections raised by critics insisting that they are unwilling to consider that Tyrannosaurus might represent more than one species 75 In a subsequent paper awaiting publication Paul maintained the conclusion that Tyrannosaurus consists of three species He pointed out that the criticism of the study naming T imperator and T regina only focused on two of the features used to distinguish the two new species the number of small incisiform teeth and femur robustness while the original study also compared the robustness of other bones as well the maxilla dentary humerus ilium and metatarsals Furthermore Paul argued that Tyrannosaurus can be separated into three different species based on the shape of knob like bumps postorbital bosses behind the eyes Paul also argued that past research concluding that Tyrannosaurus only consists of one species T rex has simply assumed that all Tyrannosaurus skeletons are a single species and that many new dinosaur species have been named on the basis of fewer differences than he and his colleagues used when proposing T imperator and T regina 76 Tyrannosaurus mcraeensis nbsp Reconstructed skull of T mcraeensisIn 2024 Dalman and colleagues described the remains of a tyrannosaur discovered in 1983 in the Campanian early Maastrichtian Hall Lake Formation in New Mexico Reposited at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science the fossil material NMMNH P 3698 consists of the right postorbital right squamosal left palatine and an incomplete maxilla from the skull the left dentary right splenial right prearticular right angular and right articular from the lower jaws isolated teeth and chevrons 64 Some of the bones were briefly mentioned in 1984 as belonging to T rex 77 and described in 1986 78 Dalman et al 2024 proposed the new name Tyrannosaurus mcraeensis for the holotype referencing the McRae Group the rock layers to which the Hall Lake Formation belongs These rock layers were estimated to date to between 72 7 and 70 9 Ma correlating to the latest Campanian or earliest Maastrichtian This is approximately 5 7 million years before T rex which existed at the end of the Maastrichtian T mcraeensis was estimated at 12 metres 39 ft long which is similar to the size of an adult T rex The two are distinguished by characters of the skull Amongst these the dentary of T mcraeensis is proportionately longer and possesses a less prominent chin and the lower jaw shallower than that of T rex suggesting a weaker bite The teeth are likewise blunter and more laterally compressed while the post orbital crests are less prominent Likewise the skeletal anatomy showcases shared characteristics with Tarbosaurus and Zhuchengtyrannus 64 79 Nanotyrannus nbsp Holotype of Nanotyrannus lancensis now interpreted as a juvenile TyrannosaurusOther tyrannosaurid fossils found in the same formations as T rex were originally classified as separate taxa including Aublysodon and Albertosaurus megagracilis 60 the latter being named Dinotyrannus megagracilis in 1995 80 These fossils are now universally considered to belong to juvenile T rex 81 A small but nearly complete skull from Montana 60 centimeters 2 0 ft long might be an exception This skull CMNH 7541 was originally classified as a species of Gorgosaurus G lancensis by Charles W Gilmore in 1946 82 In 1988 the specimen was re described by Robert T Bakker Phil Currie and Michael Williams then the curator of paleontology at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History where the original specimen was housed and is now on display Their initial research indicated that the skull bones were fused and that it therefore represented an adult specimen In light of this Bakker and colleagues assigned the skull to a new genus named Nanotyrannus meaning dwarf tyrant for its apparently small adult size The specimen is estimated to have been around 5 2 meters 17 ft long when it died 83 However In 1999 a detailed analysis by Thomas Carr revealed the specimen to be a juvenile leading Carr and many other paleontologists to consider it a juvenile T rex individual 84 85 nbsp Reconstructed skeleton of Jane Burpee Museum of Natural HistoryIn 2001 a more complete juvenile tyrannosaur nicknamed Jane catalog number BMRP 2002 4 1 belonging to the same species as the original Nanotyrannus specimen was uncovered This discovery prompted a conference on tyrannosaurs focused on the issues of Nanotyrannus validity at the Burpee Museum of Natural History in 2005 Several paleontologists who had previously published opinions that N lancensis was a valid species including Currie and Williams saw the discovery of Jane as a confirmation that Nanotyrannus was in fact a juvenile T rex 86 87 88 Peter Larson continued to support the hypothesis that N lancensis was a separate but closely related species based on skull features such as two more teeth in both jaws than T rex as well as proportionately larger hands with phalanges on the third metacarpal and different wishbone anatomy in an undescribed specimen He also argued that Stygivenator generally considered to be a juvenile T rex may be a younger Nanotyrannus specimen 89 90 Later research revealed that other tyrannosaurids such as Gorgosaurus also experienced reduction in tooth count during growth 84 and given the disparity in tooth count between individuals of the same age group in this genus and Tyrannosaurus this feature may also be due to individual variation 85 In 2013 Carr noted that all of the differences claimed to support Nanotyrannus have turned out to be individually or ontogenetically variable features or products of distortion of the bones 91 nbsp Adult T rex skeleton the specimen AMNH 5027 at American Museum of Natural History In 2016 analysis of limb proportions by Persons and Currie suggested Nanotyrannus specimens to have differing cursoriality levels potentially separating it from T rex 92 However paleontologist Manabu Sakomoto has commented that this conclusion may be impacted by low sample size and the discrepancy does not necessarily reflect taxonomic distinction 93 In 2016 Joshua Schmerge argued for Nanotyrannus validity based on skull features including a dentary groove in BMRP 2002 4 1 s skull According to Schmerge as that feature is absent in T rex and found only in Dryptosaurus and albertosaurines this suggests Nanotyrannus is a distinct taxon within the Albertosaurinae 94 The same year Carr and colleagues noted that this was not sufficient enough to clarify Nanotyrannus validity or classification being a common and ontogenetically variable feature among tyrannosauroids 95 A 2020 study by Holly Woodward and colleagues showed the specimens referred to Nanotyrannus were all ontogenetically immature and found it probable that these specimens belonged to T rex 96 The same year Carr published a paper on T rex s growth history finding that CMNH 7541 fit within the expected ontogenetic variation of the taxon and displayed juvenile characteristics found in other specimens It was classified as a juvenile under 13 years old with a skull less than 80 cm 31 in No significant sexual or phylogenetic variation was discernible among any of the 44 specimens studied with Carr stating that characters of potential phylogenetic importance decrease throughout age at the same rate as growth occurs 97 Discussing the paper s results Carr described how all Nanotyrannus specimens formed a continual growth transition between the smallest juveniles and the subadults unlike what would be expected if it were a distinct taxon where the specimens would group to the exclusion of Tyrannosaurus Carr concluded that the nanomorphs are not all that similar to each other and instead form an important bridge in the growth series of T rex that captures the beginnings of the profound change from the shallow skull of juveniles to the deep skull that is seen in fully developed adults 98 However a 2024 paper published by Nick Longrich and Evan Thomas Saitta reexamined the holotype and referred specimens of Nanotyrannus Based on several factors including differences in morphology ontogeny and phylogeny Longrich and Saitta suggest that Nanotyrannus is a distinct taxon which may fall outside of Tyrannosauridae based on some of their phylogenetic analyses 99 PaleobiologyLife history nbsp Illustration of a juvenile Tyrannosaurus rexThe identification of several specimens as juvenile T rex has allowed scientists to document ontogenetic changes in the species estimate the lifespan and determine how quickly the animals would have grown The smallest known individual LACM 28471 the Jordan theropod is estimated to have weighed only 30 kg 66 lb while the largest adults such as FMNH PR2081 Sue most likely weighed about 5 650 kg 12 460 lb Histologic analysis of T rex bones showed LACM 28471 had aged only 2 years when it died while Sue was 28 years old an age which may have been close to the maximum for the species 39 nbsp A graph showing the hypothesized growth curve body mass versus age drawn in black with other tyrannosaurids for comparison Based on Erickson and colleagues 2004Histology has also allowed the age of other specimens to be determined Growth curves can be developed when the ages of different specimens are plotted on a graph along with their mass A T rex growth curve is S shaped with juveniles remaining under 1 800 kg 4 000 lb until approximately 14 years of age when body size began to increase dramatically During this rapid growth phase a young T rex would gain an average of 600 kg 1 300 lb a year for the next four years At 18 years of age the curve plateaus again indicating that growth slowed dramatically For example only 600 kg 1 300 lb separated the 28 year old Sue from a 22 year old Canadian specimen RTMP 81 12 1 39 A 2004 histological study performed by different workers corroborates these results finding that rapid growth began to slow at around 16 years of age 100 A study by Hutchinson and colleagues in 2011 corroborated the previous estimation methods in general but their estimation of peak growth rates is significantly higher it found that the maximum growth rates for T rex during the exponential stage are 1790 kg year 28 Although these results were much higher than previous estimations the authors noted that these results significantly lowered the great difference between its actual growth rate and the one which would be expected of an animal of its size 28 The sudden change in growth rate at the end of the growth spurt may indicate physical maturity a hypothesis which is supported by the discovery of medullary tissue in the femur of a 16 to 20 year old T rex from Montana MOR 1125 also known as B rex Medullary tissue is found only in female birds during ovulation indicating that B rex was of reproductive age 101 Further study indicates an age of 18 for this specimen 102 In 2016 it was finally confirmed by Mary Higby Schweitzer and Lindsay Zanno and colleagues that the soft tissue within the femur of MOR 1125 was medullary tissue This also confirmed the identity of the specimen as a female The discovery of medullary bone tissue within Tyrannosaurus may prove valuable in determining the sex of other dinosaur species in future examinations as the chemical makeup of medullary tissue is unmistakable 103 Other tyrannosaurids exhibit extremely similar growth curves although with lower growth rates corresponding to their lower adult sizes 104 nbsp Diagram showing growth stagesAn additional study published in 2020 by Woodward and colleagues for the journal Science Advances indicates that during their growth from juvenile to adult Tyrannosaurus was capable of slowing down its growth to counter environmental factors such as lack of food The study focusing on two juvenile specimens between 13 and 15 years old housed at the Burpee Museum in Illinois indicates that the rate of maturation for Tyrannosaurus was dependent on resource abundance This study also indicates that in such changing environments Tyrannosaurus was particularly well suited to an environment that shifted yearly in regards to resource abundance hinting that other midsize predators might have had difficulty surviving in such harsh conditions and explaining the niche partitioning between juvenile and adult tyrannosaurs The study further indicates that Tyrannosaurus and the dubious genus Nanotyrannus are synonymous due to analysis of the growth rings in the bones of the two specimens studied 105 106 Over half of the known T rex specimens appear to have died within six years of reaching sexual maturity a pattern which is also seen in other tyrannosaurs and in some large long lived birds and mammals today These species are characterized by high infant mortality rates followed by relatively low mortality among juveniles Mortality increases again following sexual maturity partly due to the stresses of reproduction One study suggests that the rarity of juvenile T rex fossils is due in part to low juvenile mortality rates the animals were not dying in large numbers at these ages and thus were not often fossilized This rarity may also be due to the incompleteness of the fossil record or to the bias of fossil collectors towards larger more spectacular specimens 104 In a 2013 lecture Thomas Holtz Jr suggested that dinosaurs lived fast and died young because they reproduced quickly whereas mammals have long life spans because they take longer to reproduce 107 Gregory S Paul also writes that Tyrannosaurus reproduced quickly and died young but attributes their short life spans to the dangerous lives they lived 108 Skin and possible filamentous feathering Main article Feathered dinosaur nbsp Fossilized skin impressions from the tail region of a Tyrannosaurus rex Houston Museum of Natural ScienceThe discovery of feathered dinosaurs led to debate regarding whether and to what extent Tyrannosaurus might have been feathered 109 110 Filamentous structures which are commonly recognized as the precursors of feathers have been reported in the small bodied basal tyrannosauroid Dilong paradoxus from the Early Cretaceous Yixian Formation of China in 2004 111 Because integumentary impressions of larger tyrannosauroids known at that time showed evidence of scales the researchers who studied Dilong speculated that insulating feathers might have been lost by larger species due to their smaller surface to volume ratio 111 The subsequent discovery of the giant species Yutyrannus huali also from the Yixian showed that even some large tyrannosauroids had feathers covering much of their bodies casting doubt on the hypothesis that they were a size related feature 112 A 2017 study reviewed known skin impressions of tyrannosaurids including those of a Tyrannosaurus specimen nicknamed Wyrex BHI 6230 which preserves patches of mosaic scales on the tail hip and neck 4 The study concluded that feather covering of large tyrannosaurids such as Tyrannosaurus was if present limited to the upper side of the trunk 109 A conference abstract published in 2016 posited that theropods such as Tyrannosaurus had their upper teeth covered in lips instead of bare teeth as seen in crocodilians This was based on the presence of enamel which according to the study needs to remain hydrated an issue not faced by aquatic animals like crocodilians 55 However there has been criticism where it favors the idea for lips with the 2017 analytical study proposing that tyrannosaurids had large flat scales on their snouts instead of lips just like modern crocodiles 53 113 But crocodiles possess rather cracked keratinized skin not flat scales by observing the hummocky rugosity of tyrannosaurids and comparing it to extant lizards researchers have found that tyrannosaurids had squamose scales rather than a crocodillian like skin 114 115 In 2023 Cullen and colleagues supported the idea that theropods like tyrannosaurids had lips based on anatomical patterns such as those of the foramina on their face and jaws more similar to those of modern squamates such as monitor lizards or marine iguanas than those of modern crocodilians like alligators By comparatively analysing the dentition of Daspletosaurus and the American alligator it was shown that the enamel of tyrannosaurids had no significant wear while that of modern crocodilians had erosion on the labial side and substantial wear This suggests that it is likely that theropod teeth existed under hydrated conditions i e extraoral tissues On the basis of the relationship between hydration and wear resistance the authors argued that it is unlikely that the teeth of theropods including tyrannosaurids would have remained unworn when exposed for a long time as it would have been difficult to maintain hydration The authors also performed regression analyses to demonstrate the relationship between tooth height and skull length and found that varanids like the crocodile monitor had substantially greater tooth height to skull length ratios than Tyrannosaurus indicating that the teeth of theropods were not too big to be covered by extraoral tissues when the mouth was closed 57 Sexual dimorphism nbsp Skeleton casts mounted in a mating position Jurassic Museum of AsturiasAs the number of known specimens increased scientists began to analyze the variation between individuals and discovered what appeared to be two distinct body types or morphs similar to some other theropod species As one of these morphs was more solidly built it was termed the robust morph while the other was termed gracile Several morphological differences associated with the two morphs were used to analyze sexual dimorphism in T rex with the robust morph usually suggested to be female For example the pelvis of several robust specimens seemed to be wider perhaps to allow the passage of eggs 116 It was also thought that the robust morphology correlated with a reduced chevron on the first tail vertebra also ostensibly to allow eggs to pass out of the reproductive tract as had been erroneously reported for crocodiles 117 In recent years evidence for sexual dimorphism has been weakened A 2005 study reported that previous claims of sexual dimorphism in crocodile chevron anatomy were in error casting doubt on the existence of similar dimorphism between T rex sexes 118 A full sized chevron was discovered on the first tail vertebra of Sue an extremely robust individual indicating that this feature could not be used to differentiate the two morphs anyway As T rex specimens have been found from Saskatchewan to New Mexico differences between individuals may be indicative of geographic variation rather than sexual dimorphism The differences could also be age related with robust individuals being older animals 49 Only a single Tyrannosaurus specimen has been conclusively shown to belong to a specific sex Examination of B rex demonstrated the preservation of soft tissue within several bones Some of this tissue has been identified as a medullary tissue a specialized tissue grown only in modern birds as a source of calcium for the production of eggshell during ovulation As only female birds lay eggs medullary tissue is only found naturally in females although males are capable of producing it when injected with female reproductive hormones like estrogen This strongly suggests that B rex was female and that she died during ovulation 101 Recent research has shown that medullary tissue is never found in crocodiles which are thought to be the closest living relatives of dinosaurs The shared presence of medullary tissue in birds and other theropod dinosaurs is further evidence of the close evolutionary relationship between the two 119 Posture nbsp Outdated reconstruction by Charles R Knight showing upright poseLike many bipedal dinosaurs T rex was historically depicted as a living tripod with the body at 45 degrees or less from the vertical and the tail dragging along the ground similar to a kangaroo This concept dates from Joseph Leidy s 1865 reconstruction of Hadrosaurus the first to depict a dinosaur in a bipedal posture 120 In 1915 convinced that the creature stood upright Henry Fairfield Osborn former president of the American Museum of Natural History further reinforced the notion in unveiling the first complete T rex skeleton arranged this way It stood in an upright pose for 77 years until it was dismantled in 1992 121 By 1970 scientists realized this pose was incorrect and could not have been maintained by a living animal as it would have resulted in the dislocation or weakening of several joints including the hips and the articulation between the head and the spinal column 122 The inaccurate AMNH mount inspired similar depictions in many films and paintings such as Rudolph Zallinger s famous mural The Age of Reptiles in Yale University s Peabody Museum of Natural History 123 until the 1990s when films such as Jurassic Park introduced a more accurate posture to the general public 124 Modern representations in museums art and film show T rex with its body approximately parallel to the ground with the tail extended behind the body to balance the head 125 To sit down Tyrannosaurus may have settled its weight backwards and rested its weight on a pubic boot the wide expansion at the end of the pubis in some dinosaurs With its weight rested on the pelvis it may have been free to move the hindlimbs Getting back up again might have involved some stabilization from the diminutive forelimbs 126 122 The latter known as Newman s pushup theory has been debated Nonetheless Tyrannosaurus was probably able to get up if it fell which only would have required placing the limbs below the center of gravity with the tail as an effective counterbalance Healed stress fractures in the forelimbs have been put forward both as evidence that the arms cannot have been very useful 127 128 and as evidence that they were indeed used and acquired wounds 129 like the rest of the body Arms nbsp The forelimbs might have been used to help T rex rise from a resting pose as seen in this cast Bucky specimen When T rex was first discovered the humerus was the only element of the forelimb known 5 For the initial mounted skeleton as seen by the public in 1915 Osborn substituted longer three fingered forelimbs like those of Allosaurus 3 A year earlier Lawrence Lambe described the short two fingered forelimbs of the closely related Gorgosaurus 130 This strongly suggested that T rex had similar forelimbs but this hypothesis was not confirmed until the first complete T rex forelimbs were identified in 1989 belonging to MOR 555 the Wankel rex 131 132 The remains of Sue also include complete forelimbs 49 T rex arms are very small relative to overall body size measuring only 1 meter 3 3 ft long and some scholars have labelled them as vestigial However the bones show large areas for muscle attachment indicating considerable strength This was recognized as early as 1906 by Osborn who speculated that the forelimbs may have been used to grasp a mate during copulation 7 Newman 1970 suggested that the forelimbs were used to assist Tyrannosaurus in rising from a prone position 122 Since then other functions have been proposed although some scholars find them implausible 128 Padian 2022 argued that the reduction of the arms in tyrannosaurids did not serve a particular function but was a secondary adaptation stating that as tyrannosaurids developed larger and more powerful skulls and jaws the arms got smaller to avoid being bitten or torn by other individuals particularly during group feedings 128 nbsp Diagram illustrating arm anatomyAnother possibility is that the forelimbs held struggling prey while it was killed by the tyrannosaur s enormous jaws This hypothesis may be supported by biomechanical analysis T rex forelimb bones exhibit extremely thick cortical bone which has been interpreted as evidence that they were developed to withstand heavy loads The biceps brachii muscle of an adult T rex was capable of lifting 199 kilograms 439 lb by itself other muscles such as the brachialis would work along with the biceps to make elbow flexion even more powerful The M biceps muscle of T rex was 3 5 times as powerful as the human equivalent A T rex forearm had a limited range of motion with the shoulder and elbow joints allowing only 40 and 45 degrees of motion respectively In contrast the same two joints in Deinonychus allow up to 88 and 130 degrees of motion respectively while a human arm can rotate 360 degrees at the shoulder and move through 165 degrees at the elbow The heavy build of the arm bones strength of the muscles and limited range of motion may indicate a system evolved to hold fast despite the stresses of a struggling prey animal In the first detailed scientific description of Tyrannosaurus forelimbs paleontologists Kenneth Carpenter and Matt Smith dismissed notions that the forelimbs were useless or that Tyrannosaurus was an obligate scavenger 133 The idea that the arms served as weapons when hunting prey have also been proposed by Steven M Stanley who suggested that the arms were used for slashing prey especially by using the claws to rapidly inflict long deep gashes to its prey 134 This was dismissed by Padian who have argued that Stanley based his conclusion on incorrectly estimated forelimb size and range of motion 128 Thermoregulation Main article Physiology of dinosaurs nbsp Restoration showing partial featheringTyrannosaurus like most dinosaurs was long thought to have an ectothermic cold blooded reptilian metabolism The idea of dinosaur ectothermy was challenged by scientists like Robert T Bakker and John Ostrom in the early years of the Dinosaur Renaissance beginning in the late 1960s 135 136 T rex itself was claimed to have been endothermic warm blooded implying a very active lifestyle 37 Since then several paleontologists have sought to determine the ability of Tyrannosaurus to regulate its body temperature Histological evidence of high growth rates in young T rex comparable to those of mammals and birds may support the hypothesis of a high metabolism Growth curves indicate that as in mammals and birds T rex growth was limited mostly to immature animals rather than the indeterminate growth seen in most other vertebrates 100 Oxygen isotope ratios in fossilized bone are sometimes used to determine the temperature at which the bone was deposited as the ratio between certain isotopes correlates with temperature In one specimen the isotope ratios in bones from different parts of the body indicated a temperature difference of no more than 4 to 5 C 7 to 9 F between the vertebrae of the torso and the tibia of the lower leg This small temperature range between the body core and the extremities was claimed by paleontologist Reese Barrick and geochemist William Showers to indicate that T rex maintained a constant internal body temperature homeothermy and that it enjoyed a metabolism somewhere between ectothermic reptiles and endothermic mammals 137 Other scientists have pointed out that the ratio of oxygen isotopes in the fossils today does not necessarily represent the same ratio in the distant past and may have been altered during or after fossilization diagenesis 138 Barrick and Showers have defended their conclusions in subsequent papers finding similar results in another theropod dinosaur from a different continent and tens of millions of years earlier in time Giganotosaurus 139 Ornithischian dinosaurs also showed evidence of homeothermy while varanid lizards from the same formation did not 140 In 2022 Wiemann and colleagues used a different approach the spectroscopy of lipoxidation signals which are byproducts of oxidative phosphorylation and correlate with metabolic rates to show that various dinosaur genera including Tyrannosaurus had endothermic metabolisms on par with that of modern birds and higher than that of mammals They also suggested that such a metabolism was ancestrally common to all dinosaurs 141 Even if T rex does exhibit evidence of homeothermy it does not necessarily mean that it was endothermic Such thermoregulation may also be explained by gigantothermy as in some living sea turtles 142 143 144 Similar to contemporary crocodilians openings dorsotemporal fenestrae in the skull roofs of Tyrannosaurus may have aided thermoregulation 145 Soft tissue nbsp T rex femur MOR 1125 from which demineralized matrix and peptides insets were obtainedIn the March 2005 issue of Science Mary Higby Schweitzer of North Carolina State University and colleagues announced the recovery of soft tissue from the marrow cavity of a fossilized leg bone from a T rex The bone had been intentionally though reluctantly broken for shipping and then not preserved in the normal manner specifically because Schweitzer was hoping to test it for soft tissue 146 Designated as the Museum of the Rockies specimen 1125 or MOR 1125 the dinosaur was previously excavated from the Hell Creek Formation Flexible bifurcating blood vessels and fibrous but elastic bone matrix tissue were recognized In addition microstructures resembling blood cells were found inside the matrix and vessels The structures bear resemblance to ostrich blood cells and vessels Whether an unknown process distinct from normal fossilization preserved the material or the material is original the researchers do not know and they are careful not to make any claims about preservation 147 If it is found to be original material any surviving proteins may be used as a means of indirectly guessing some of the DNA content of the dinosaurs involved because each protein is typically created by a specific gene The absence of previous finds may be the result of people assuming preserved tissue was impossible therefore not looking Since the first two more tyrannosaurs and a hadrosaur have also been found to have such tissue like structures 146 Research on some of the tissues involved has suggested that birds are closer relatives to tyrannosaurs than other modern animals 148 In studies reported in Science in April 2007 Asara and colleagues concluded that seven traces of collagen proteins detected in purified T rex bone most closely match those reported in chickens followed by frogs and newts The discovery of proteins from a creature tens of millions of years old along with similar traces the team found in a mastodon bone at least 160 000 years old upends the conventional view of fossils and may shift paleontologists focus from bone hunting to biochemistry Until these finds most scientists presumed that fossilization replaced all living tissue with inert minerals Paleontologist Hans Larsson of McGill University in Montreal who was not part of the studies called the finds a milestone and suggested that dinosaurs could enter the field of molecular biology and really slingshot paleontology into the modern world 149 The presumed soft tissue was called into question by Thomas Kaye of the University of Washington and his co authors in 2008 They contend that what was really inside the tyrannosaur bone was slimy biofilm created by bacteria that coated the voids once occupied by blood vessels and cells 150 The researchers found that what previously had been identified as remnants of blood cells because of the presence of iron were actually framboids microscopic mineral spheres bearing iron They found similar spheres in a variety of other fossils from various periods including an ammonite In the ammonite they found the spheres in a place where the iron they contain could not have had any relationship to the presence of blood 151 Schweitzer has strongly criticized Kaye s claims and argues that there is no reported evidence that biofilms can produce branching hollow tubes like those noted in her study 152 San Antonio Schweitzer and colleagues published an analysis in 2011 of what parts of the collagen had been recovered finding that it was the inner parts of the collagen coil that had been preserved as would have been expected from a long period of protein degradation 153 Other research challenges the identification of soft tissue as biofilm and confirms finding branching vessel like structures from within fossilized bone 154 Speed nbsp Femur thigh bone Tibia shin bone Metatarsals foot bones Dewclaw Phalanges toe bones nbsp Skeletal anatomy of a T rex right leg Scientists have produced a wide range of possible maximum running speeds for Tyrannosaurus mostly around 9 meters per second 32 km h 20 mph but as low as 4 5 6 8 meters per second 16 24 km h 10 15 mph and as high as 20 meters per second 72 km h 45 mph though it running this speed is very unlikely Tyrannosaurus was a bulky and heavy carnivore so it is unlikely to run very fast at all compared to other theropods like Carnotaurus or Giganotosaurus 155 Researchers have relied on various estimating techniques because while there are many tracks of large theropods walking none showed evidence of running 156 A 2002 report used a mathematical model validated by applying it to three living animals alligators chickens and humans and eight more species including emus and ostriches 156 to gauge the leg muscle mass needed for fast running over 40 km h or 25 mph 155 Scientists who think that Tyrannosaurus was able to run point out that hollow bones and other features that would have lightened its body may have kept adult weight to a mere 4 5 metric tons 5 0 short tons or so or that other animals like ostriches and horses with long flexible legs are able to achieve high speeds through slower but longer strides 156 Proposed top speeds exceeded 40 kilometers per hour 25 mph for Tyrannosaurus but were deemed infeasible because they would require exceptional leg muscles of approximately 40 86 of total body mass Even moderately fast speeds would have required large leg muscles If the muscle mass was less only 18 kilometers per hour 11 mph for walking or jogging would have been possible 155 Holtz noted that tyrannosaurids and some closely related groups had significantly longer distal hindlimb components shin plus foot plus toes relative to the femur length than most other theropods and that tyrannosaurids and their close relatives had a tightly interlocked metatarsus foot bones 157 The third metatarsal was squeezed between the second and fourth metatarsals to form a single unit called an arctometatarsus This ankle feature may have helped the animal to run more efficiently 158 Together these leg features allowed Tyrannosaurus to transmit locomotory forces from the foot to the lower leg more effectively than in earlier theropods 157 nbsp Only known tyrannosaurid trackway Bellatoripes fredlundi from the Wapiti Formation British ColumbiaAdditionally a 2020 study indicates that Tyrannosaurus and other tyrannosaurids were exceptionally efficient walkers Studies by Dececchi et al compared the leg proportions body mass and the gaits of more than 70 species of theropod dinosaurs including Tyrannosaurus and its relatives The research team then applied a variety of methods to estimate each dinosaur s top speed when running as well as how much energy each dinosaur expended while moving at more relaxed speeds such as when walking Among smaller to medium sized species such as dromaeosaurids longer legs appear to be an adaptation for faster running in line with previous results by other researchers But for theropods weighing over 1 000 kg 2 200 lb top running speed is limited by body size so longer legs instead were found to have correlated with low energy walking The results further indicate that smaller theropods evolved long legs as a means to both aid in hunting and escape from larger predators while larger theropods that evolved long legs did so to reduce the energy costs and increase foraging efficiency as they were freed from the demands of predation pressure due to their role as apex predators Compared to more basal groups of theropods in the study tyrannosaurs like Tyrannosaurus itself showed a marked increase in foraging efficiency due to reduced energy expenditures during hunting or scavenging This in turn likely resulted in tyrannosaurs having a reduced need for hunting forays and requiring less food to sustain themselves as a result Additionally the research in conjunction with studies that show tyrannosaurs were more agile than other large bodied theropods indicates they were quite well adapted to a long distance stalking approach followed by a quick burst of speed to go for the kill Analogies can be noted between tyrannosaurids and modern wolves as a result supported by evidence that at least some tyrannosaurids were hunting in group settings 159 160 A study published in 2021 by Pasha van Bijlert et al calculated the preferred walking speed of Tyrannosaurus reporting a speed of 1 28 meters per second 4 6 km h 2 9 mph While walking animals reduce their energy expenditure by choosing certain step rhythms at which their body parts resonate The same would have been true for dinosaurs but previous studies did not fully account for the impact the tail had on their walking speeds According to the authors when a dinosaur walked its tail would slightly sway up and down with each step as a result of the interspinous ligaments suspending the tail Like rubber bands these ligaments stored energy when they are stretched due to the swaying of the tail Using a 3 D model of Tyrannosaurus specimen Trix muscles and ligaments were reconstructed to simulate the tail movements This results in a rhythmic energy efficient walking speed for Tyrannosaurus similar to that seen in living animals such as humans ostriches and giraffes 161 A 2017 study estimated the top running speed of Tyrannosaurus as 17 mph 27 km h speculating that Tyrannosaurus exhausted its energy reserves long before reaching top speed resulting in a parabola like relationship between size and speed 162 163 Another 2017 study hypothesized that an adult Tyrannosaurus was incapable of running due to high skeletal loads Using a calculated weight estimate of 7 tons the model showed that speeds above 11 mph 18 km h would have probably shattered the leg bones of Tyrannosaurus The finding may mean that running was also not possible for other giant theropod dinosaurs like Giganotosaurus Mapusaurus and Acrocanthosaurus 164 However studies by Eric Snively and colleagues published in 2019 indicate that Tyrannosaurus and other tyrannosaurids were more maneuverable than allosauroids and other theropods of comparable size due to low rotational inertia compared to their body mass combined with large leg muscles As a result it is hypothesized that Tyrannosaurus was capable of making relatively quick turns and could likely pivot its body more quickly when close to its prey or that while turning the theropod could pirouette on a single planted foot while the alternating leg was held out in a suspended swing during a pursuit The results of this study potentially could shed light on how agility could have contributed to the success of tyrannosaurid evolution 165 Possible footprints nbsp Depiction of Tyrannosaurus rising from the ground based on fossil tracks described in 2021 Rare fossil footprints and trackways found in New Mexico and Wyoming that are assigned to the ichnogenus Tyrannosauripus have been attributed to being made by Tyrannosaurus based on the stratigraphic age of the rocks they are preserved in The first specimen found in 1994 was described by Lockley and Hunt and consists of a single large footprint Another pair of ichnofossils described in 2021 show a large tyrannosaurid rising from a prone position by rising up using its elbows in conjunction with the pads on their feet to stand These two unique sets of fossils were found in Ludlow Colorado and Cimarron New Mexico 166 Another ichnofossil described in 2018 perhaps belonging to a juvenile Tyrannosaurus or the dubious genus Nanotyrannus was uncovered in the Lance Formation of Wyoming The trackway itself offers a rare glimpse into the walking speed of tyrannosaurids and the trackmaker is estimated to have been moving at a speed of 4 5 8 0 kilometers per hour 2 8 5 0 mph significantly faster than previously assumed for estimations of walking speed in tyrannosaurids 167 168 Brain and senses nbsp The eye sockets faced mainly forwards giving it good binocular vision Sue specimen A study conducted by Lawrence Witmer and Ryan Ridgely of Ohio University found that Tyrannosaurus shared the heightened sensory abilities of other coelurosaurs highlighting relatively rapid and coordinated eye and head movements an enhanced ability to sense low frequency sounds which would allow tyrannosaurs to track prey movements from long distances and an enhanced sense of smell 169 A study published by Kent Stevens concluded that Tyrannosaurus had keen vision By applying modified perimetry to facial reconstructions of several dinosaurs including Tyrannosaurus the study found that Tyrannosaurus had a binocular range of 55 degrees surpassing that of modern hawks Stevens estimated that Tyrannosaurus had 13 times the visual acuity of a human and surpassed the visual acuity of an eagle which is 3 6 times that of a person Stevens estimated a limiting far point that is the distance at which an object can be seen as separate from the horizon as far as 6 km 3 7 mi away which is greater than the 1 6 km 1 mi that a human can see 43 44 170 Thomas Holtz Jr would note that high depth perception of Tyrannosaurus may have been due to the prey it had to hunt noting that it had to hunt ceratopsians such as Triceratops ankylosaurs such as Ankylosaurus and hadrosaurs He would suggest that this made precision more crucial for Tyrannosaurus enabling it to get in get that blow in and take it down In contrast Acrocanthosaurus had limited depth perception because they hunted large sauropods which were relatively rare during the time of Tyrannosaurus 107 Tyrannosaurus had very large olfactory bulbs and olfactory nerves relative to their brain size the organs responsible for a heightened sense of smell This suggests that the sense of smell was highly developed and implies that tyrannosaurs could detect carcasses by scent alone across great distances The sense of smell in tyrannosaurs may have been comparable to modern vultures which use scent to track carcasses for scavenging Research on the olfactory bulbs has shown that T rex had the most highly developed sense of smell of 21 sampled non avian dinosaur species 171 nbsp Cast of the braincase at the Australian Museum Sydney Somewhat unusually among theropods T rex had a very long cochlea The length of the cochlea is often related to hearing acuity or at least the importance of hearing in behavior implying that hearing was a particularly important sense to tyrannosaurs Specifically data suggests that T rex heard best in the low frequency range and that low frequency sounds were an important part of tyrannosaur behavior 169 A 2017 study by Thomas Carr and colleagues found that the snout of tyrannosaurids was highly sensitive based on a high number of small openings in the facial bones of the related Daspletosaurus that contained sensory neurons The study speculated that tyrannosaurs might have used their sensitive snouts to measure the temperature of their nests and to gently pick up eggs and hatchlings as seen in modern crocodylians 53 Another study published in 2021 further suggests that Tyrannosaurus had an acute sense of touch based on neurovascular canals in the front of its jaws which it could utilize to better detect and consume prey The study published by Kawabe and Hittori et al suggests that Tyrannosaurus could also accurately sense slight differences in material and movement allowing it to utilize different feeding strategies on different parts of its prey s carcasses depending on the situation The sensitive neurovascular canals of Tyrannosaurus also likely were adapted to performing fine movements and behaviors such as nest building parental care and other social behavior such as intraspecific communication The results of this study also align with results made in studying the related tyrannosaurid Daspletosaurus horneri and the allosauroid Neovenator which have similar neurovascular adaptations suggesting that the faces of theropods were highly sensitive to pressure and touch 172 173 However a more recent study reviewing the evolution of the trigeminal canals among sauropsids notes that a much denser network of neurovascular canals in the snout and lower jaw is more commonly encountered in aquatic or semiaquatic taxa e g Spinosaurus Halszkaraptor Plesiosaurus and taxa that developed a rhamphotheca e g Caenagnathasia while the network of canals in Tyrannosaurus appears simpler though still more derived than in most ornithischians and overall terrestrial taxa such as tyrannosaurids and Neovenator may have had average facial sensitivity for non edentulous terrestrial theropods although further research is needed The neurovascular canals in Tyrannosaurus may instead have supported soft tissue structures for thermoregulation or social signaling the latter of which could be confirmed by the fact that the neurovascular network of canals may have changed during ontogeny 174 A study by Grant R Hurlburt Ryan C Ridgely and Lawrence Witmer obtained estimates for Encephalization Quotients EQs based on reptiles and birds as well as estimates for the ratio of cerebrum to brain mass The study concluded that Tyrannosaurus had the relatively largest brain of all adult non avian dinosaurs with the exception of certain small maniraptoriforms Bambiraptor Troodon and Ornithomimus The study found that Tyrannosaurus s relative brain size was still within the range of modern reptiles being at most 2 standard deviations above the mean of non avian reptile EQs The estimates for the ratio of cerebrum mass to brain mass would range from 47 5 to 49 53 percent According to the study this is more than the lowest estimates for extant birds 44 6 percent but still close to the typical ratios of the smallest sexually mature alligators which range from 45 9 47 9 percent 175 Other studies such as those by Steve Brusatte indicate the encephalization quotient of Tyrannosaurus was similar in range 2 0 2 4 to a chimpanzee 2 2 2 5 though this may be debatable as reptilian and mammalian encephalization quotients are not equivalent 176 Social behavior nbsp Mounted skeletons of different age groups skeleton in lower left based on the juvenile formerly named Stygivenator Natural History Museum of Los Angeles CountyPhilip J Currie suggested that Tyrannosaurus may have been pack hunters comparing T rex to related species Tarbosaurus bataar and Albertosaurus sarcophagus citing fossil evidence that may indicate gregarious describing animals that travel in herds or packs behavior 177 A find in South Dakota where three T rex skeletons were in close proximity may suggest the formation of a pack 178 179 Cooperative pack hunting may have been an effective strategy for subduing prey with advanced anti predator adaptations which pose potential lethality such as Triceratops and Ankylosaurus 177 Currie s pack hunting T rex hypothesis has been criticized for not having been peer reviewed but rather was discussed in a television interview and book called Dino Gangs 180 The Currie theory for pack hunting by T rex is based mainly by analogy to a different species Tarbosaurus bataar Evidence of gregariousness in T bataar itself has not been peer reviewed and to Currie s own admission can only be interpreted with reference to evidence in other closely related species According to Currie gregariousness in Albertosaurus sarcophagus is supported by the discovery of 26 individuals with varied ages in the Dry Island bonebed He ruled out the possibility of a predator trap due to the similar preservation state of individuals and the near absence of herbivores 180 181 Additional support of tyrannosaurid gregariousness can be found in fossilized trackways from the Upper Cretaceous Wapiti Formation of northeastern British Columbia Canada left by three tyrannosaurids traveling in the same direction 182 183 According to scientists assessing the Dino Gangs program the evidence for pack hunting in Tarbosaurus and Albertosaurus is weak and based on group skeletal remains for which alternate explanations may apply such as drought or a flood forcing dinosaurs to die together in one place 180 Others researchers have speculated that instead of large theropod social groups some of these finds represent behavior more akin to Komodo dragon like mobbing of carcasses even going as far as to say true pack hunting behavior may not exist in any non avian dinosaurs due to its rarity in modern predators 184 Evidence of intraspecific attack was found by Joseph Peterson and his colleagues in the juvenile Tyrannosaurus nicknamed Jane Peterson and his team found that Jane s skull showed healed puncture wounds on the upper jaw and snout which they believe came from another juvenile Tyrannosaurus Subsequent CT scans of Jane s skull would further confirm the team s hypothesis showing that the puncture wounds came from a traumatic injury and that there was subsequent healing 185 The team would also state that Jane s injuries were structurally different from the parasite induced lesions found in Sue and that Jane s injuries were on its face whereas the parasite that infected Sue caused lesions to the lower jaw 186 Feeding strategies Main article Feeding behavior of Tyrannosaurus nbsp Tyrannosaurus tooth marks on bones of various herbivorous dinosaurs nbsp A Tyrannosaurus mounted next to a Triceratops at the Los Angeles Natural History MuseumMost paleontologists accept that Tyrannosaurus was both an active predator and a scavenger like most large carnivores 187 By far the largest carnivore in its environment T rex was most likely an apex predator preying upon hadrosaurs armored herbivores like ceratopsians and ankylosaurs and possibly sauropods 188 A study in 2012 by Karl Bates and Peter Falkingham found that Tyrannosaurus had the most powerful bite of any terrestrial animal that has ever lived finding an adult Tyrannosaurus could have exerted 35 000 to 57 000 N 7 868 to 12 814 lbf of force in the back teeth 189 190 191 Even higher estimates were made by Mason B Meers in 2003 46 This allowed it to crush bones during repetitive biting and fully consume the carcasses of large dinosaurs 20 Stephan Lautenschlager and colleagues calculated that Tyrannosaurus was capable of a maximum jaw gape of around 80 degrees a necessary adaptation for a wide range of jaw angles to power the creature s strong bite 192 193 A debate exists however about whether Tyrannosaurus was primarily a predator or a pure scavenger The debate originated in a 1917 study by Lambe which argued that large theropods were pure scavengers because Gorgosaurus teeth showed hardly any wear 194 This argument disregarded the fact that theropods replaced their teeth quite rapidly Ever since the first discovery of Tyrannosaurus most scientists have speculated that it was a predator like modern large predators it would readily scavenge or steal another predator s kill if it had the opportunity 195 Paleontologist Jack Horner has been a major proponent of the view that Tyrannosaurus was not a predator at all but instead was exclusively a scavenger 131 196 197 He has put forward arguments in the popular literature to support the pure scavenger hypothesis Tyrannosaur arms are short when compared to other known predators Horner argues that the arms were too short to make the necessary gripping force to hold on to prey 198 Other paleontologists such as Thomas Holtz Jr argued that there are plenty of modern day predators that do not use their forelimbs to hunt such as wolves hyenas and secretary birds as well as other extinct animals thought to be predators that would not have used their forelimbs such as phorusrhacids 199 200 Tyrannosaurs had large olfactory bulbs and olfactory nerves relative to their brain size These suggest a highly developed sense of smell which could sniff out carcasses over great distances as modern vultures do Research on the olfactory bulbs of dinosaurs has shown that Tyrannosaurus had the most highly developed sense of smell of 21 sampled dinosaurs 171 Tyrannosaur teeth could crush bone and therefore could extract as much food bone marrow as possible from carcass remnants usually the least nutritious parts Karen Chin and colleagues have found bone fragments in coprolites fossilized feces that they attribute to tyrannosaurs but point out that a tyrannosaur s teeth were not well adapted to systematically chewing bone like hyenas do to extract marrow 201 Since at least some of Tyrannosaurus s potential prey could move quickly evidence that it walked instead of ran could indicate that it was a scavenger 196 On the other hand recent analyses suggest that Tyrannosaurus while slower than large modern terrestrial predators may well have been fast enough to prey on large hadrosaurs and ceratopsians 155 23 Other evidence suggests hunting behavior in Tyrannosaurus The eye sockets of tyrannosaurs are positioned so that the eyes would point forward giving them binocular vision slightly better than that of modern hawks It is not obvious why natural selection would have favored this long term trend if tyrannosaurs had been pure scavengers which would not have needed the advanced depth perception that stereoscopic vision provides 43 44 In modern animals binocular vision is found mainly in predators nbsp The damage to the tail vertebrae of this Edmontosaurus annectens skeleton on display at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science indicates that it may have been bitten by a TyrannosaurusA skeleton of the hadrosaurid Edmontosaurus annectens has been described from Montana with healed tyrannosaur inflicted damage on its tail vertebrae The fact that the damage seems to have healed suggests that the Edmontosaurus survived a tyrannosaur s attack on a living target i e the tyrannosaur had attempted active predation 202 Despite the consensus that the tail bites were caused by Tyrannosaurus there has been some evidence to show that they might have been created by other factors For example a 2014 study suggested that the tail injuries might have been due to Edmontosaurus individuals stepping on each other 203 while another study in 2020 backs up the hypothesis that biomechanical stress is the cause for the tail injuries 204 There is also evidence for an aggressive interaction between a Triceratops and a Tyrannosaurus in the form of partially healed tyrannosaur tooth marks on a Triceratops brow horn and squamosal a bone of the neck frill the bitten horn is also broken with new bone growth after the break It is not known what the exact nature of the interaction was though either animal could have been the aggressor 205 Since the Triceratops wounds healed it is most likely that the Triceratops survived the encounter and managed to overcome the Tyrannosaurus In a battle against a bull Triceratops the Triceratops would likely defend itself by inflicting fatal wounds to the Tyrannosaurus using its sharp horns 206 Studies of Sue found a broken and healed fibula and tail vertebrae scarred facial bones and a tooth from another Tyrannosaurus embedded in a neck vertebra providing evidence for aggressive behavior 207 Studies on hadrosaur vertebrae from the Hell Creek Formation that were punctured by the teeth of what appears to be a late stage juvenile Tyrannosaurus indicate that despite lacking the bone crushing adaptations of the adults young individuals were still capable of using the same bone puncturing feeding technique as their adult counterparts 208 Tyrannosaurus may have had infectious saliva used to kill its prey as proposed by William Abler in 1992 Abler observed that the serrations tiny protuberances on the cutting edges of the teeth are closely spaced enclosing little chambers These chambers might have trapped pieces of carcass with bacteria giving Tyrannosaurus a deadly infectious bite much like the Komodo dragon was thought to have 209 210 Jack Horner and Don Lessem in a 1993 popular book questioned Abler s hypothesis arguing that Tyrannosaurus s tooth serrations as more like cubes in shape than the serrations on a Komodo monitor s teeth which are rounded 131 214 215 Tyrannosaurus and most other theropods probably primarily processed carcasses with lateral shakes of the head like crocodilians The head was not as maneuverable as the skulls of allosauroids due to flat joints of the neck vertebrae 211 Cannibalism Evidence also strongly suggests that tyrannosaurs were at least occasionally cannibalistic Tyrannosaurus itself has strong evidence pointing towards it having been cannibalistic in at least a scavenging capacity based on tooth marks on the foot bones humerus and metatarsals of one specimen 212 Fossils from the Fruitland Formation Kirtland Formation both Campanian in age and the Maastrichtian aged Ojo Alamo Formation suggest that cannibalism was present in various tyrannosaurid genera of the San Juan Basin The evidence gathered from the specimens suggests opportunistic feeding behavior in tyrannosaurids that cannibalized members of their own species 213 A study from Currie Horner Erickson and Longrich in 2010 has been put forward as evidence of cannibalism in the genus Tyrannosaurus 212 They studied some Tyrannosaurus specimens with tooth marks in the bones attributable to the same genus The tooth marks were identified in the humerus foot bones and metatarsals and this was seen as evidence for opportunistic scavenging rather than wounds caused by intraspecific combat In a fight they proposed it would be difficult to reach down to bite in the feet of a rival making it more likely that the bitemarks were made in a carcass As the bitemarks were made in body parts with relatively scantly amounts of flesh it is suggested that the Tyrannosaurus was feeding on a cadaver in which the more fleshy parts already had been consumed They were also open to the possibility that other tyrannosaurids practiced cannibalism 212 Parenting While there is no direct evidence of Tyrannosaurus raising their young the rarity of juvenile and nest Tyrannosaur fossils has left researchers guessing it has been suggested by some that like its closest living relatives modern archosaurs birds and crocodiles Tyrannosaurus may have protected and fed its young Crocodilians and birds are often suggested by some paleontologists to be modern analogues for dinosaur parenting 214 Direct evidence of parental behavior exists in other dinosaurs such as Maiasaura peeblesorum the first dinosaur to have been discovered to raise its young as well as more closely related Oviraptorids the latter suggesting parental behavior in theropods 215 216 217 218 219 Pathology nbsp Restoration of an individual based on MOR 980 with parasite infectionsIn 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 Of the 81 Tyrannosaurus foot bones examined in the study one was found to have a stress fracture while none of the 10 hand bones were found to have stress fractures The researchers found tendon avulsions only among Tyrannosaurus and Allosaurus An avulsion injury left a divot on the humerus of Sue the T rex apparently located at the origin of the deltoid or teres major muscles The presence of avulsion injuries being limited to the forelimb and shoulder in both Tyrannosaurus and Allosaurus suggests that theropods may have had a musculature more complex than and functionally different from those of birds The researchers concluded that Sue s tendon avulsion was probably obtained from struggling prey The presence of stress fractures and tendon avulsions in general provides evidence for a very active predation based diet rather than obligate scavenging 220 A 2009 study showed that smooth edged holes in the skulls of several specimens might have been caused by Trichomonas like parasites that commonly infect birds According to the study seriously infected individuals including Sue and MOR 980 Peck s Rex might therefore have died from starvation after feeding became increasingly difficult Previously these holes had been explained by the bacterious bone infection Actinomycosis or by intraspecific attacks 221 A subsequent study found that while trichomoniasis has many attributes of the model proposed osteolytic intra oral several features make the assumption that it was the cause of death less supportable by evidence For example the observed sharp margins with little reactive bone shown by the radiographs of Trichomonas infected birds are dissimilar to the reactive bone seen in the affected T rex specimens Also trichomoniasis can be very rapidly fatal in birds 14 days or less albeit in its milder form and this suggests that if a Trichomonas like protozoan is the culprit trichomoniasis was less acute in its non avian dinosaur form during the Late Cretaceous Finally the relative size of this type of lesions is much larger in small bird throats and may not have been enough to choke a T rex 222 A more recent study examining the pathologies concluded that the osseous alteration observed most closely resembles those around healing human cranial trepanations and healing fractures in the Triassic reptile Stagonolepis in the absence of infection The possible cause may instead have been intraspecific combat 223 One study of Tyrannosaurus specimens with tooth marks in the bones attributable to the same genus was presented as evidence of cannibalism 212 Tooth marks in the humerus foot bones and metatarsals may indicate opportunistic scavenging rather than wounds caused by combat with another T rex 212 224 Other tyrannosaurids may also have practiced cannibalism 212 Paleoecology nbsp Fauna of Hell Creek Tyrannosaurus in dark red left Tyrannosaurus lived during what is referred to as the Lancian faunal stage Maastrichtian age at the end of the Late Cretaceous Tyrannosaurus ranged from Canada in the north to at least New Mexico in the south of Laramidia 4 During this time Triceratops was the major herbivore in the northern portion of its range while the titanosaurian sauropod Alamosaurus dominated its southern range Tyrannosaurus remains have been discovered in different ecosystems including inland and coastal subtropical and semi arid plains nbsp Tyrannosaurus and other animals of the Hell Creek FormationSeveral notable Tyrannosaurus remains have been found in the Hell Creek Formation During the Maastrichtian this area was subtropical with a warm and humid climate The flora consisted mostly of angiosperms but also included trees like dawn redwood Metasequoia and Araucaria Tyrannosaurus shared this ecosystem with ceratopsians Leptoceratops Torosaurus and Triceratops the hadrosaurid Edmontosaurus annectens the parksosaurid Thescelosaurus the ankylosaurs Ankylosaurus and Denversaurus the pachycephalosaurs Pachycephalosaurus and Sphaerotholus and the theropods Ornithomimus Struthiomimus Acheroraptor Dakotaraptor Pectinodon and Anzu 225 Another formation with Tyrannosaurus remains is the Lance Formation of Wyoming This has been interpreted as a bayou environment similar to today s Gulf Coast The fauna was very similar to Hell Creek but with Struthiomimus replacing its relative Ornithomimus The small ceratopsian Leptoceratops also lived in the area 226 In its southern range Tyrannosaurus lived alongside the titanosaur Alamosaurus the ceratopsians Torosaurus Bravoceratops and Ojoceratops hadrosaurs which consisted of a species of Edmontosaurus Kritosaurus and a possible species of Gryposaurus the nodosaur Glyptodontopelta the oviraptorid Ojoraptosaurus possible species of the theropods Troodon and Richardoestesia and the pterosaur Quetzalcoatlus 227 The region is thought to have been dominated by semi arid inland plains following the probable retreat of the Western Interior Seaway as global sea levels fell 228 Tyrannosaurus may have also inhabited Mexico s Lomas Coloradas formation in Sonora Though skeletal evidence is lacking six shed and broken teeth from the fossil bed have been thoroughly compared with other theropod genera and appear to be identical to those of Tyrannosaurus If true the evidence indicates the range of Tyrannosaurus was possibly more extensive than previously believed 229 It is possible that tyrannosaurs were originally Asian species migrating to North America before the end of the Cretaceous period 230 Population estimates nbsp Chart of the time averaged census for large bodied dinosaurs from the entire Hell Creek Formation in the study areaAccording to studies published in 2021 by Charles Marshall et al the total population of adult Tyrannosaurus at any given time was perhaps 20 000 individuals with computer estimations also suggesting a total population no lower than 1 300 and no higher than 328 000 The authors themselves suggest that the estimate of 20 000 individuals is probably lower than what should be expected especially when factoring in that disease pandemics could easily wipe out such a small population Over the span of the genus existence it is estimated that there were about 127 000 generations and that this added up to a total of roughly 2 5 billion animals until their extinction 231 232 In the same paper it is suggested that in a population of Tyrannosaurus adults numbering 20 000 the number of individuals living in an area the size of California could be as high as 3 800 animals while an area the size of Washington D C could support a population of only two adult Tyrannosaurus The study does not take into account the number of juvenile animals in the genus present in this population estimate due to their occupation of a different niche than the adults and thus it is likely the total population was much higher when accounting for this factor Simultaneously studies of living carnivores suggest that some predator populations are higher in density than others of similar weight such as jaguars and hyenas which are similar in weight but have vastly differing population densities Lastly the study suggests that in most cases only one in 80 million Tyrannosaurus would become fossilized while the chances were likely as high as one in every 16 000 of an individual becoming fossilized in areas that had more dense populations 231 232 Meiri 2022 questioned the reliability of the estimates citing uncertainty in metabolic rate body size sex and age specific survival rates habitat requirements and range size variability as shortcomings Marshall et al did not take into account 233 The authors of the original publication replied that while they agree that their reported uncertainties were probably too small their framework is flexible enough to accommodate uncerainty in physiology and that their calculations do not depend on short term changes in population density and geographic range but rather on their long term averages Finally they remark that they did estimate the range of reasonable survivorship curves and that they did include uncertainty in the time of onset of sexual maturity and in the growth curve by incorporating the uncertainty in the maximum body mass 234 Cultural significanceMain article Tyrannosaurus in popular culture Since it was first described in 1905 T rex has become the most widely recognized dinosaur species in popular culture It is the only dinosaur that is commonly known to the general public by its full scientific name binomial name and the scientific abbreviation T rex has also come into wide usage 49 Robert T Bakker notes this in The Dinosaur Heresies and explains that a name like T rex is just irresistible to the tongue 37 See alsoHistory of paleontology Sue dinosaur FMNH PR 2081 TyrannosauridaeExplanatory notesReferences a b Breithaupt B H Southwell E H Matthews N A October 15 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 Geological Society of America 37 7 406 ISSN 0016 7592 Archived from the original on May 30 2012 Retrieved October 8 2008 Hatcher J B 1907 The Ceratopsia Monographs of the United States Geological Survey 49 113 114 ISSN 0886 7550 a b Osborn H F 1917 Skeletal adaptations of Ornitholestes Struthiomimus Tyrannosaurus Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 35 43 733 771 hdl 2246 1334 a b c d e f g Larson N L 2008 One hundred years of Tyrannosaurus rex the skeletons In Larson P Carpenter K eds Tyrannosaurus rex The Tyrant King Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 1 55 ISBN 978 0 253 35087 9 a b c d Osborn H F 1905 Tyrannosaurus and other Cretaceous carnivorous dinosaurs Bulletin of the AMNH 21 14 259 265 hdl 2246 1464 Retrieved October 6 2008 a b Dingus L Norell M May 3 2010 Barnum Brown The Man Who DiscoveredTyrannosaurus rex University of California Press pp 90 124 ISBN 978 0 520 94552 4 a b Osborn H F Brown B 1906 Tyrannosaurus Upper Cretaceous carnivorous dinosaur Bulletin of the AMNH 22 16 281 296 hdl 2246 1473 Breithaupt B H Southwell E H Matthews N A 2006 Lucas S G Sullivan R M eds Dynamosaurus imperiosus and the earliest discoveries of Tyrannosaurus rex in Wyoming and the West PDF New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 35 258 The original skeleton of Dynamosaurus imperiosus AMNH 5866 BM R7995 together with other T rex material including parts of AMNH 973 5027 and 5881 were sold to the British Museum of Natural History now The Natural History Museum in 1960 This material was used in an interesting half mount display of this dinosaur in London Currently the material resides in the research collections McDonald A T Wolfe D G Dooley A C Jr 2018 A new tyrannosaurid Dinosauria Theropoda from the Upper Cretaceous Menefee Formation of New Mexico PeerJ 6 6 e5749 doi 10 7717 peerj 5749 PMC 6183510 PMID 30324024 Small Zachary October 7 2020 T Rex Skeleton Brings 31 8 Million at Christie s Auction The New York Times Archived from the original on October 7 2020 Retrieved May 5 2021 Preparing Sue s bones Sue at the Field Museum The Field Museum 2007 Retrieved October 24 2014 Erickson G Makovicky P J Currie P J Norell M Yerby S Brochu C A May 26 2004 Gigantism and life history parameters of tyrannosaurid dinosaurs PDF Nature 430 7001 772 775 Bibcode 2004Natur 430 772E doi 10 1038 nature02699 PMID 15306807 S2CID 4404887 Stan The University of Manchester September 18 2010 Archived from the original on September 18 2010 Fiffer S 2000 Jurassic Farce TyrannosaurusSue W H Freeman and Company New York pp 121 122 ISBN 978 0 7167 4017 9 Meet Bucky The Teenage T Rex Children s Museum of Indianapolis July 7 2014 Archived from the original on December 27 2014 Retrieved December 2 2019 Dig pulls up five T rex specimens BBC News October 10 2000 Retrieved December 13 2008 a b Currie P J Hurum J H Sabath K 2003 Skull structure and evolution in tyrannosaurid dinosaurs PDF Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 48 2 227 234 Retrieved October 8 2008 Black Riley October 28 2015 Tiny terror Controversial dinosaur species is just an awkward tween 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