The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Tyrannosau­rus babies born ready to hunt

- WILL DUNHAM

Scientists for the first time have found embryonic remains from the group of ferocious meat-eating dinosaurs that includes Tyrannosau­rus Rex — fossilized jaw and claw bones that show these recordsize babies looked a lot like adults and were "born ready" to hunt.

The fossils, the researcher­s said, represente­d two species from the group called tyrannosau­rs, the apex predators in Asia and North America during the Cretaceous Period toward the end of the dinosaur age.

The bones indicated that these were bigger than any other known dinosaur babies (one metre long, or the size of a medium dog) and hatched from what must have been enormous eggs, perhaps exceeding the 43-centimetre length of the largest dinosaur eggs currently known.

The roughly 77-millionyea­r-old jawbone, about three cm in length, was unearthed in Montana and may belong to a species called Daspletosa­urus.

The roughly 72-millionyea­r-old wedge-shaped claw came from Alberta and may belong to a species called Albertosau­rus.

Both are slightly smaller cousins of Tyrannosau­rus Rex. The largest-known tyrannosau­rs topped 12 metres long and eight tons in weight.

The jaw possesses distinctiv­e tyrannosau­r traits, including a deep groove inside and a prominent chin.

University of Edinburgh paleontolo­gist Greg Funston, lead author of the research published in the Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, said the scientists were amazed at how similar the embryonic bones were to older juvenile and adult tyrannosau­rs and noted that the jaws boasted functional teeth.

"So although we can't get a complete picture, what we can see looks very similar to the adults," Funston said.

It appears that tyrannosau­rs, Funston added, were "born ready to hunt, already possessing some of the key adaptation­s that gave tyrannosau­rs their powerful bites. So it's likely that they were capable of hunting fairly quickly after birth, but we need more fossils to tell exactly how fast that was."

 ?? HANDOUT VIA REUTERS ?? A baby tyrannosau­r from the Cretaceous Period of North America, based on partial fossils unearthed in Montana and Alberta, is seen in an undated artist's rendition.
HANDOUT VIA REUTERS A baby tyrannosau­r from the Cretaceous Period of North America, based on partial fossils unearthed in Montana and Alberta, is seen in an undated artist's rendition.

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