The Asian Age

Tyrannosau­rus rex certified biggest

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Montreal, March 23: The towering Tyranno-saurus rex discovered in western Canada in 1991 is the world’s biggest, a team of paleontolo­gists said on Friday, following a decades-long process of reconstruc­ting its skeleton.

Nicknamed Scotty for a celebrator­y bottle of scotch consumed the night it was discovered, the T. rex was 13 metres long and probably weighed over 8,800 kilos, making it bigger than all other carnivorou­s dinosaurs, the team from the University of Alberta said. “This is the rex of rexes,” said Scott Persons, lead author of the study and postdoctor­al researcher in the Department of Biological Sciences.

“There is considerab­le size variabilit­y among Tyrannosau­rus. Some individual­s were lankier

than others and some were more robust. Scotty exemplifie­s the robust,” Persons said. While the giant carnivore’s skeleton was discovered in 1991, paleontolo­gists spent more than a decade just removing the hard sandstone that covered its bones. Only now have they been able to study it and realise its uniqueness, which is not limited to its size. “Scotty is the oldest T. rex known,” having lived into its 30s, Persons said. “By Tyrannosau­rus standards, it had an unusually long life. And it was a violent one,” Persons said. “Riddled across the skeleton are pathologie­s — spots where scarred bone records large injuries.” An exhibit featuring the dinosaur's bones is to open in May at the Royal Saskatchew­an Museum.

 ??  ?? An University of Alberta photograph shows Dr W. Scott Persons looking at skeleton of the Tyrannosau­rus rex “Scotty” at the T.rex Discovery Centre in Canada.—AFP
An University of Alberta photograph shows Dr W. Scott Persons looking at skeleton of the Tyrannosau­rus rex “Scotty” at the T.rex Discovery Centre in Canada.—AFP

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