The Guardian (USA)

Prehistori­c fast food: fossil reveals final meal of young tyrannosau­r

- Nicola Davis Science correspond­ent

A remarkable fossil preserving the last meal of a young tyrannosau­r has been discovered in Canada, revealing the dinosaur had a taste for prehistori­c fast food.

While tyrannosau­rs were some of the most fearsome dinosaurs to roam the planet, with adults boasting massive bodies, huge heads and bonecrushi­ng bites, juveniles were rather more puny, with long, skinny legs, blade-like teeth and narrow skulls.

The transforma­tion has long been thought to be associated with a shift in diet as the tyrannosau­rs matured and required more energy: while evidence including bite marks on bones has suggested adults hunted and feasted upon enormous herbivores, such as duck-billed and horned dinosaurs, youngsters did not have the dental apparatus to tackle such prey.

But just what the juveniles did munch on has been something of a mystery.

Now a spectacula­r fossil featuring the preserved stomach contents of a young tyrannosau­r has offered a rare insight into their diet.

“This is really the first solid evidence that we have of what the diet or feeding behaviour was in a juvenile tyrannosau­r,” said Dr Darla Zelenitsky, the co-author of the study at the University of Calgary.

Thought to date to about 75m years ago, the fossil of the young Gorgosauru­s libratus was discovered in the badlands of Dinosaur Provincial Park, Canada, in 2009 by Darren Tanke, a technician working at the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontol­ogy.

The team say the young tyrannosau­r had weighed about 350kg, with analysis of growth rings in the fossilised bones suggesting it died young, at five to seven years old.

But it didn’t die hungry.

“It was during the preparatio­n process in late 2010 that Darren noticed small knuckle bones that were protruding out of the ribcage of the tyrannosau­r,” said Dr François Therrien, the curator of dinosaur palaeoecol­ogy at the Royal Tyrrell Museum and coauthor of the research.

Writing in the journal Science Advances, the team report that inside the ribcage they discovered the remains of two juvenile citipes: turkey-sized creatures with a parrot-like head that would have been speedy on their feet, rather like an emu.

Difference­s in the extent of stomach acid damage suggested the citipes were consumed in two separate sittings. However, the remains were largely limited to the hind legs, suggesting the young tyrannosau­r did not eat all of its prey.

“This juvenile tyrannosau­rus seems to have had an appetite for drumsticks of citipes,” said Zelenitsky, adding that one possibilit­y is that the legs were the meatiest part of the prey, with the skull of the young gorgosauru­s enabling precision feeding.

While the team said it was unclear how the tyrannosau­r died, it appears to have perished within a week of its last meal.

The discovery is the first time the fossil of a tyrannosau­r has been found with the contents of its stomach preserved. And there is another bonus to

the find.

“The legs present in the stomach represent the most complete citipes skeleton known,” said Therrien.

Prof Stephen Brusatte, a palaeontol­ogist at the University of Edinburgh, who is not involved in the work, said the fossil was direct evidence of what a tyrannosau­r was eating.

“Not guesswork or a series of assumption­s based on interpreta­tion of bite marks or coprolites – fossil faeces – but actual direct in-the-gut evidence,” he said. “This is a tyrannosau­r’s last meal, preserved in stone.”

Brusatte said the fossil supported the idea that tyrannosau­rs changed their diets as they got older, shifting from small to huge prey.

While Brusatte added the insights make intuitive sense, he said it was not inevitable, noting an alternativ­e possibilit­y was that young tyrannosau­rs simply feasted on prey killed by adults.

“But that doesn’t seem to be the case here – the little tyrannosau­rs ate little prey, so they probably actively hunted their own food and changed the prey they targeted as they got bigger,” he said. “This means that tyrannosau­rs filled different roles in the food web as they grew up, which is pretty neat.”

 ?? Photograph: Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontol­ogy/ Reuters ?? The discovery offers a rare insight into the diet of young tyrannosau­rs.
Photograph: Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontol­ogy/ Reuters The discovery offers a rare insight into the diet of young tyrannosau­rs.

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