Friday, February 14, 2020

Argentine researchers find distant Tyrannosaurus relative


The new dinosaur is called Tralkasaurus, which means "thunder reptile" in the indigenous Mapuche language common in Pa
The new dinosaur is called Tralkasaurus, which means "thunder reptile" in the indigenous Mapuche language common in Patagonia. In this file photo, a boy in Melbourne, Australia inspects the teeth of a theropod dinosaur
The remains of a 90-million-year-old carnivorous dinosaur distantly related to Tyrannosaurus rex has been discovered in Argentine Patagonia by a team of paleontologists.

The four-meter-long (13-foot-long) theropod was discovered in February 2018 in the central Argentine province of Rio Negro.
Scientists have christened it Tralkasaurus cuyi, the National University of La Matanza's Scientific Disclosure Agency said on Thursday.
Tralkasaurus means "thunder reptile" in the indigenous Mapuche language common in Patagonia. Cuyi relates to the place the  were found, El Cuy.
Tralkasaurus would have been dwarfed by its distant cousin Tyrannosaurus rex which could grow to 14 meters in length.
"The size of the Tralkasaurus body is smaller than other carnivores in its group—the abelisaurids," said Dr Federico Agnolin, an investigator from the Argentine Museum of Natural Sciences.
Other abelisaurids usually measured seven to 11 meters.
This "demonstrates that the group of abelisaurid theropods encompassed a much wider ecological niche than we thought," said Mauricio Cerroni, another researcher.
The team found a skull, teeth, ribs and part of the hip and tail.
Just like Tyrannosaurus, it was a short-necked and muscular biped with four claws on each of its , and arms that were very short in comparison to the rest of its body. The bones of its extremities were light and hollow.
"This new discovery helps us to define the ecological habits of carnivorous dinosaurs as well as herbivores," said Cerroni.
According to the researchers, Tralkasaurus possibly fed on small herbivore  called iguanodonts that have been found nearby by the same team of researchers.
Fossils of largest theropod to date found in Australia

© 2020 AFP

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