Santa Fe New Mexican

T. rex ancestor solves mystery

Bones discovered 30 years ago at Elephant Butte are from new species of dinosaur

- By Margaret O’Hara mohara@sfnewmexic­an.com

Question: What’s toothy, about 73 million years old, and hails from south-central New Mexico?

The answer: A new species of dinosaur, discovered by a team of paleontolo­gists associated with the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science.

The new species, known as

Tyrannosau­rus mcraeensis, is an older relative of the world’s most famous dinosaur — the Tyrannosau­rus rex. The discovery, published by a group of researcher­s spanning New Mexico, the U.S., Canada and England, fundamenta­lly changes paleontolo­gists’ understand­ing of how tyrannosau­rs first arrived in North America, museum Executive Director Anthony Fiorillo announced at a

news conference Thursday.

“We’re very proud of the fact that we’re a museum that serves all of New Mexico, and it’s really terrific to see people around the state come here to learn about and celebrate New Mexico’s natural heritage,” Fiorillo said. “And today we’re going to talk about New Mexico’s newest dinosaur.”

The path to discoverin­g the new species began about 30 years ago when Las Cruces residents found some fossil remains while boating at Elephant Butte Reservoir and reported their finding to the museum, said Spencer Lucas, paleontolo­gy curator at the museum.

Paleontolo­gists then excavated about a quarter of a fossilized dinosaur skull, which Fiorillo described as a “big toothy thing.” At the time, they identified it as once belonging to a T. rex, he said.

But as time marched on — and scientists learned a whole lot more — they realized parts of the jaw, the teeth and the boney structures around its eyes didn’t match a T. rex, although the massive dinosaurs were about the same size, paleontolo­gist Sebastian Dalman said during Thursday’s news conference.

In 2013, Dalman set about studying the fossil, and he was soon joined by eight more paleontolo­gists from institutio­ns across New Mexico, Pennsylvan­ia, Utah, the District of Columbia, Canada and England.

“What we knew about Tyrannosau­rus rex in the 1980s was very small compared to what we know about T. rex now. ... We’re looking at it through new eyes, through a lot more knowledge than was available in the ’80s,” Lucas said.

Based on difference­s in the fossil’s jaw and skull, the researcher­s determined the fossil was not a Tyrannosau­rus rex but a previously unknown close relative of T. rex that roamed what’s now the American Southwest and perhaps Mexico.

Fiorillo illustrate­d the difference between T. rex’s and T. mcraeensis’ jaws using a cinematic exemplar: the moment in Jurassic Park in which a T. rex sinks its teeth into the park’s sturdy safari cars.

“Tyrannosau­rus [rex] is a big, bone-chewing, Jeep-crunching dinosaur from Jurassic Park,” he said. “The more slender jaw here means that it [T. mcraeensis] might have been a bone-chewing, Fiat-crunching dinosaur.”

Geological findings confirmed the paleontolo­gists’ analysis, Lucas said. Rock structures surroundin­g the fossil determined its age to be about 73 million years old — 5 million years older than T. rex.

The discovery shifts scientists’ understand­ing of how T. rex came to be in North America. Although paleontolo­gists have unearthed plenty of T. rexes in Montana, Wyoming, the Dakotas, Saskatchew­an and Alberta, it long seemed that, lacking close relatives in North America, the famous dinosaur appeared from out of nowhere — its arrival and evolution in the continent a mystery.

This finding indicates the American Southwest or parts of central America served as the “epicenter of tyrannosau­r evolution,” said Nick Longrich, another paleontolo­gist who worked on the project.

It shows more primitive tyrannosau­rs — like T. mcraeensis — once lived in southern North America, eventually evolving and moving north to become T. rex.

“We’d been looking in the wrong place all along,” Longrich said Thursday. “The origin of these things is not up in Montana; it’s down here in New Mexico and Mexico.”

In case scientific impacts aren’t your thing, discoverie­s like T. mcraeensis also fuel New Mexico’s arts and culture economy, said Debra Garcia y Griego, Cabinet secretary of the Department of Cultural Affairs, the agency that oversees staterun museums.

New exhibits — like the fossil of a newly discovered species of dinosaur — entice local, outof-state and foreign travelers to visit the state’s cultural institutio­ns, a $741 million sector of New Mexico’s economy responsibl­e for more than 10,000 jobs statewide, Garcia y Griego said.

“Discoverie­s expand our collective knowledge while ensuring our exhibits and our museums are not static,” she said.

It’ll be up to future generation­s, Lucas said, to learn more about New Mexico’s newest species of dinosaur.

“Any good piece of science should raise more questions than it answers, and this does just that,” he said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY GABRIELA CAMPOS/THE NEW MEXICAN ?? San Felipe de Neri School fifth graders Sofia Garcia, 10, from left; Sofia Bowerman, 11; Isabella Sedillo, 11; Amanda Vigil, 11; and Olivia Salinas, 10, look in wonder at the jawbone from a Tyrannosau­rus mcraeensis after its unveiling Thursday at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science in Albuquerqu­e. The dinosaur lived in New Mexico millions of years ago and was a precursor to Tyrannosau­rus Rex.
PHOTOS BY GABRIELA CAMPOS/THE NEW MEXICAN San Felipe de Neri School fifth graders Sofia Garcia, 10, from left; Sofia Bowerman, 11; Isabella Sedillo, 11; Amanda Vigil, 11; and Olivia Salinas, 10, look in wonder at the jawbone from a Tyrannosau­rus mcraeensis after its unveiling Thursday at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science in Albuquerqu­e. The dinosaur lived in New Mexico millions of years ago and was a precursor to Tyrannosau­rus Rex.
 ?? ?? Toby Archuleta, who works with the Sandia Mountain Natural History Center, looks at a rendering of what the Tyrannosau­rus mcraeensis may have looked like.
Toby Archuleta, who works with the Sandia Mountain Natural History Center, looks at a rendering of what the Tyrannosau­rus mcraeensis may have looked like.
 ?? GABRIELA CAMPOS/THE NEW MEXICAN ?? Sebastian Dalman holds a piece of the skull of the Tyrannosau­rus mcraeensis following an unveiling ceremony Thursday at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science in Albuquerqu­e. Dalman was one of the people who identified the dinosaur as a unique species.
GABRIELA CAMPOS/THE NEW MEXICAN Sebastian Dalman holds a piece of the skull of the Tyrannosau­rus mcraeensis following an unveiling ceremony Thursday at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science in Albuquerqu­e. Dalman was one of the people who identified the dinosaur as a unique species.

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