Description
Tyrannosaurus-rex-Profile-steveoc86 (coloured).png
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English:
A life restoration of the
theropod
dinosaur
Tyrannosaurus rex
.
-
• The proportions are based on a
Tyrannosaurus
skeletal reconstruction by Scott Hartman
[1]
-
• It's not clear whether derived tyrannosaurs would have been covered in scales, feathers, or a combanation of both. A few small skin impressions have been described for
Tyrannosaurus
which show small
pebbled
skin; close relatives,
Tarbosaurus
and
Gorgosaurus
are known to have similar pebbled skin.
[1]
[2]
Skin impressions from the closley related
Gorgosaurus
are reported to show both smooth, naked skin and scales.
[3]
[4]
A 2017 study looked at a variety of tyranosaurid skin impressions and came to the conclusion that derived tyrannosaurs were probably scaly over most their body.
[2]
-
What complicates the issue is that most
coelurosaur
fossils show feathers covering thier bodies and inference would suggest the same for tyrannosaurs. The smaller basal tyrannosauriod
Dilong
and the larger tyrannosauroid
Yutyrannus
also preserve feather impressions. This raises the probability that, derived tyrannosaurs had a mix of feathers and scales on different parts of the body or that feathers were lost as individuals reach maturity
[5]
[6]
-
A study published in 2017 looked at the texture of a tyrannosaurs skull bones and suggested that there may have been large, flat Crocodile-like skin cracks/scales on the front of the snout of tyrannosaurids.
[7]
The details on the head in this restoration are based on an similar interpetration of bone texture by Mark Witton in which he suggests that certain areas of the head were covered in a cornified sheath as well as scales.
[2]
I often update my images. If you want to post any of my images on a website, if possible, don’t host/save it to the website server. I’d prefer it if the image's Wikimedia URL is used or a link is provided to this page. This allows updates to be seen by future viewers. Thanks.
References
-
↑
Currie, Philip; Badamgarav, Demchig; Koppelhus, Eva. (2003). "
'The First Late Cretaceous Footprints from the Nemegt Locality in the Gobi of Mongolia'
" (PDF).
Ichnos
10
(1): 1-13.
-
↑
a
b
Bell, P R., et al (2017). "
Tyrannosauroid integument reveals conflicting patterns of gigantism and feather evolution
".
Biology Letters
.
DOI
:
10.1098/rsbl.2017.0092
.
-
↑
Currie, P. (2001). 2001 A. Watson Armour Symposium: The Paleobiology and Phylogenetics of Large Theropods. Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago.
-
↑
Carpenter, Kenneth (1997) "Tyrannosauridae" in
Currie, Philip J.
& Padian, Kevin (eds.). , ed.
Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs
,
San Diego
: Academic Press, pp. 768
ISBN
:
0-12-226810-5
.
-
↑
Xu, X., Norell, M. A., Kuang, X., Wang, X., Zhao, Q., Jia, C. (2004). "
Basal tyrannosauroids from China and evidence for protofeathers in tyrannosauroids
".
Nature
431
: 680–684.
DOI
:
10.1038/nature02855
.
-
↑
(2012). "
A gigantic feathered dinosaur from the Lower Cretaceous of China
" (PDF).
Nature
484
: 92–95.
DOI
:
10.1038/nature10906
.
PMID
22481363
.
-
↑
(2017). "A new tyrannosaur with evidence for anagenesis and crocodile-like facial sensory system".
Scientific Reports
7
: 44942.
DOI
:
10.1038/srep44942
.
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