Cape Times

Scary T. rex now even bigger, better

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THE world’s biggest T. rex is getting ready for a cutting-edge makeover.

The Field Museum in Chicago said it will take down and remount the 12.3-metre Tyrannosau­rus nicknamed Sue, perhaps the world’s most famous dinosaur fossil, in a way that embodies the latest understand­ing of this ferocious Cretaceous Period predator.

The big T. rex will move to a new exhibition space in the museum, while a cast of the skeleton of the largest-known dinosaur, Patagotita­n mayorum, will take the spot Sue now occupies in the museum’s Stanley Field Hall.

Patagotita­n, a long-necked, four-legged plant-eater that was 37.2m long and weighed 70 tons, lived in Argentina 100 million years ago, more than 30 million years before T. rex stalked western North America. The biggest land animal on record, the Patagotita­n was a member of a dinosaur group called titanosaur­s.

Next spring, the museum will unveil the fibreglass Patagotita­n skeleton, which is being cast from fossils of seven Patagotita­n individual­s and for two years will display some of the genuine fossils, including a 2.4metre thighbone.

Named after the woman who discovered the fossils in South Dakota in 1990, Sue is the largest, most complete and best-preserved Tyrannosau­rus rex unearthed.

The museum bought the fossils at auction for $8.4 million (R108m).

Sue will be taken down in February and put up again with noteworthy changes in anatomy and stance in its new exhibition hall in 2019, museum scientists said.

“We are making several adjustment­s to the skeleton to reflect new and improved knowledge,” said palaeontol­ogist Pete Makovicky, the museum’s associate curator of dinosaurs.

The most striking change, Makovicky said, will be the addition of gastralia, bones resembling an additional set of ribs spanning the belly that may have provided structural support to help the dinosaur breathe. Adding these bones will illustrate just how massive Sue was and that it boasted a bulging belly, he added.

The scientists concluded that the bone mounted as Sue’s wishbone was misidentif­ied in 2000 and they will replace it with the dinosaur’s actual wishbone, or furcula, the fused collar bones typical of meat-eating dinosaurs and their evolutiona­ry descendant­s the birds.

They also will adjust the ribs to produce a slimmer, less barrel-shaped chest, and arrange the right leg, so Sue is not crouching as much.

“Often when you do something as expensive as mounting a vertebrate fossil skeleton for display, you only get one shot at it. I‘m happy we’re going to fix and update this incredible fossil,” said palaeontol­ogist Bill Simpson, who is head of the museum’s geological collection­s.

Makovicky noted the accumulati­on of knowledge about T. rex and its cousins since 2000: “We now know more about tyrannosau­r lifespans – around 30 years; how they grew – very fast as teenagers; and using computer models of Sue, we revised their body mass upwards to nine or more tons, from five to seven tons.”

Ongoing research is examining the molecular compositio­n of cartilage preserved in T. rex bones and recent studies have shown it possessed the most powerful bite of any land animal, Makovicky added.

When the Patagotita­n skeleton is mounted, visitors will be able to walk underneath it and touch it. Its head will reach the museum’s second-floor balcony, nearly 9m up.

Another Patagotita­n skeleton is displayed at the American Museum of Natural History in New York.

The changes coincide with the museum’s 125th anniversar­y in 2018.

‘I’m happy that we’re going to fix and update this incredible T. rex fossil.’

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? CAPTIVATIN­G: Field Museum scientists Pete Makovicky (left), associate curator of dinosaurs, and Bill Simpson, head of Geological Collection­s, use a cast of one of the T. rex Sue’s gastralia a set of bones that look like an additional set of ribs show...
Picture: REUTERS CAPTIVATIN­G: Field Museum scientists Pete Makovicky (left), associate curator of dinosaurs, and Bill Simpson, head of Geological Collection­s, use a cast of one of the T. rex Sue’s gastralia a set of bones that look like an additional set of ribs show...

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