Montreal Gazette

Was T. rex a stand-up guy? Many young people think so

Researcher­s blame pop culture, toys for posture myth

- MALCOLM RITTER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — Here’s a test of your dinosaur knowledge: Did Tyrannosau­rus rex stand upright, with its tail on the ground?

The answer: No. But a lot of young people seem to think so, and the authors of a study are blaming toys like Barney and other pop influences for that misconcept­ion.

Scientists used to think T. rex stood tall, but they abandoned that idea decades ago. Now, the ferocious dinosaur is depicted in a bird-like posture, tail in the air and head pitched forward.

The change led major museums to update their T. rex displays, study authors said, and popular books have largely gotten the posture right since around 1990. So did the Jurassic Park movies.

But when the researcher­s asked college students and children to draw a T. rex, most gave it an upright posture instead. Why? They’d soaked up the wrong idea from toys like Barney, games and other pop culture items, the researcher­s conclude.

“It doesn’t matter what they see in science books or even in Jurassic Park,” says Warren Allmon, a paleontolo­gy professor at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, and an author of the study.

It struck him when he saw a box of dinosaur chicken nuggets at a grocery store.

If the explanatio­n is correct, Allmon said, it’s a sobering reminder of how people can get wrong ideas about science. The study will be published in the Journal of Geoscience Education.

The authors examined 316 T. rex drawings made by stu- dents at Ithaca College and kids who visited an Ithaca museum. Most of the college students weren’t science majors. Seventy-two per cent of the college students and 63 per cent of the children drew T. rex as being too upright. Because the sample isn’t representa­tive of the general population, the results don’t necessaril­y apply to young people in general.

When the authors looked at other depictions of T. rex, they found the obsolete standing posture remains in pop culture items like toys, games, cookie cutters, clothing, comics and movies.

Mark Norell, a paleontolo­gist at New York’s American Museum of Natural History who didn’t participat­e in the study, said he doesn’t know if the posture myth is as widespread as the study indicates.

But he said it makes sense that children’s first impression­s persist. If they don’t study dinosaurs later, “that’s what they’re stuck with.”

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