The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Monster lessons from the past

Michael Alexander learns about the new dinosaur exhibition Tyrannosau­rs at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh

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When the Tyrannosau­rus Rex roared onto cinema screens in Steven Spielberg’s 1993 blockbuste­r Jurassic Park, it captured the public’s imaginatio­n as the “king of the dinosaurs” which reigned during the late Cretaceous period some 65 million years ago.

But as the most comprehens­ive exhibition ever mounted on tyrannosau­rs makes its only European appearance at the National Museum of Scotland (NMS) in Edinburgh, the museum’s keeper of natural science, Dr Nick Fraser, said real-life knowledge of these eight-tonne behemoths is relatively new, with more fossils being found almost every year.

“The first T-rex skeleton was only found in 1900,” said Dr Fraser, who explained that T-rexes lived throughout what is now western North America.

“And 120 years on, we’ve gone from finding one, to 20-odd different forms, and that is still increasing. They have a history going back 150 million years ago to 65 million years ago.

“So they were incredibly successful. Some of the earlier ones were quite small – maybe a metre, two metres long. They were quite lightly built. But they all shared a few features in common.

“If you look in cross-sections, their teeth are D-shaped, which is a classic feature of tyrannosau­rs.

“They also have this very peculiar arrangemen­t of their hip bones, with a great big swelling on them, which is hugely exaggerate­d. They are a distinct group of animals but very diverse in their own right. And of course they died out in a mass extinction!”

Tyrannosau­rs, which opened at the National Museum of Scotland on January 23, explores the most feared and revered of all dinosaurs, bringing the latest palaeontol­ogical discoverie­s to life and challengin­g preconcept­ions about these ferocious predators.

The exhibition features rare fossil specimens, cast skeletons – including one of “Scotty”, one of the largest and most complete T-rex skeletons in the world – and incredible models of feathered dinosaurs.

While the most famous of the species is the mighty T-rex, tyrannosau­rs came in all shapes and sizes, and from many parts of the world.

But while most people associate the wiping out of the dinosaurs with the legendary asteroid hitting Earth some 65 million years ago, Dr Fraser hopes that visitors will also think about the significan­ce of mass extinction­s to the world today.

“We’ve recognised five mass extinction­s in the history of life on Earth and are potentiall­y hitting the sixth now,” he said.

“So it’s important to remember they are not just archaic animals from which we developed all sorts of myths and stories. They are real animals living in time and there’s something to be learned from them about today’s way of life and what’s going on in the world. They are all inter-connected.”

Dr Fraser said it was quite a coup that this is the only European outing for the exhibition, created by the Australian Museum and toured internatio­nally by Flying Fish.

Tyrannosau­r research is one of the hottest areas in palaeontol­ogy and exciting new discoverie­s are regularly re-drawing the family tree.

The exhibition includes T-rex bones from the Carnegie Museum of Natural History – including those found a couple of years before the naming of T-rex in 1904.

But Dr Fraser admits that away from the grandeur of the T-rex, the standout highlight for him is the smallest skeleton on display.

The exhibition includes detail of two species discovered recently in China, Dilong and Guanlong, which date to nearly 100 million years before T-rex.

Dr Fraser grew up in Lewes, Sussex, which was the home of Gideon Mantell, who found the first dinosaur fossils in the 1820s.

The chalk cliffs in that area are Cretaceous in age. They have fossils in them that includes dinosaurs but also lots of marine animals from that same period.

The term dinosauria (meaning “terrible reptile”) was coined by Richard Owen in 1841, and with this heritage on his doorstep, it helped spark Dr Fraser’s interest in natural history. He went on to study zoology as an undergradu­ate and geology as a postgradua­te at Aberdeen University.

Tyrannosau­rs runs at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh until May 4. Prices for the ticketed exhibition are: Adult – £12; over-60s – £10; student, unemployed, disabled – £9; child (5-15) – £6; under-5s – free; family of 3 – £22, family of 4 – £29; carers of disabled people – free.

 ??  ?? Rosa Connolly takes a close look during a preview of the Tyrannosau­rs exhibition at the National Museum of Scotland, containing some of the world’s most complete fossils and skeletons. Pictures: PA.
Rosa Connolly takes a close look during a preview of the Tyrannosau­rs exhibition at the National Museum of Scotland, containing some of the world’s most complete fossils and skeletons. Pictures: PA.
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