A large fossil leg bone hints at T. rex’s origins, but scientists disagree

When it comes to identifying fossil species, a lone leg bone isn’t much to go on. Yet a new analysis of a large fossil tibia suggests it offers a clue to the origins of Tyrannosaurus rex, the hulking, sharp-toothed apex predator that dominated the twilight of the Age of Dinosaurs.

The bone’s sheer size hints that it was a tyrannosaurid, a group that includes the most massive members of the tyrannosaur family tree, researchers claim in a study published March 12 in Scientific Reports. Tyrannosaurids lived late in the Cretaceous Period, between 83 million and 66 million years ago, and have been found only in Asia and North America.

→ Continue reading at Science News

More from author

Related posts

Advertisment

Latest posts

Make It Make Sense: What needs to happen for oil & gas prices to drop? | CNN Business

CNN's Wolf Blitzer speaks with CNN Business Executive Editor David Goldman as we break down economic headlines to help you make sense of it...

Largest housing affordability package in a generation passes in the Senate

A bipartisan group of senators passed a bill Thursday aimed at improving housing affordability. The measure contains roughly 40 provisions intended...

Mortgage rates climb to 6.11% as Iran war roils markets

Washington  —  US mortgage rates climbed this week as investors fret the economic impact of President Donald Trump’s war...