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A Newly Discovered Cousin Of T. Rex Is Being Called The ‘reaper Of Death’

A Newly Discovered Cousin Of T. Rex Is Being Called The ‘reaper Of Death’
Posted at 9:55 AM, Feb 12, 2020
and last updated 2020-10-25 21:40:29-04

A new tyrannosaur species has just been found in Canada, and paleontologists say that it is the oldest Tyrannosaurus rex ever found in the country. Thanatotheristes degrootorium, who lived nearly 80 million years ago during the late Cretaceous Period, is the first new dinosaur to have been discovered in Canada in 50 years.

In findings published in the journal Cretaceous Research last month, a Canadian team of geoscientists and paleontologists say that the discovery gives “insight into the evolution and biogeography of tyrannosaurids” because it proves the tyrannosaurus population in the Alberta region was more diverse than previously known and because it adds to knowledge about the tyrannosaurus family tree.

Tyrannosaurids are the family of coelurosaurian (theropod dinosaurs that includes the infamous T. Rex. (Coelurosaurian means “hollow-tailed lizard”; they are characterized by having a skeletal structure similar to birds, while a theropod signifies a type of dinosaur with hollow bones and three-toed limbs).

Canada’s Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology shared the exciting news on their Twitter page, too:

The researchers studied two partial skills and jaws of the newly-found species. It’s smaller than T. Rex, although without hind limbs they can’t estimate exactly how massive it was. However, they could still declare it a new species, making Thanatotheristes the newest addition to the coelurosaurian theropod dinosaur family.

The meaning of the name Thanatotheristes is quite apt for this monstrous, carnivorous dinosaur: It means “reaper of death” in Greek. But the 26-foot long dino doesn’t exactly resemble the familiar T. Rex you may be picturing.

“Thanatotheristes can be distinguished from all other tyrannosaurs by numerous characteristics of the skull, but the most prominent are vertical ridges that run the length of the upper jaw,” said Jared Voris, University of Calgary doctorate student and lead author of the new study, in an interview with Royal Tyrell Museum of Paleontology.

Voris posted an artist’s rending of what the dinosaur’s head might have looked like to his Instagram account at @jared_voris. Fearsome, right?

Like other T. rex skulls which are often scarred from their ferocious lifestyles, one of the Thanatotheristes skulls found in Canada has a 4-inch scar along its jawline. The scars on the newly-discovered Thanatotheristes skull prove it was equally mighty.

Dr. François Therrien, curator of dinosaur palaeoecology at the Royal Tyrrell Museum said, “The discovery is significant because it fills in a gap in our understanding of tyrannosaur evolution.”

The Edmonton Journal also shared the exciting news of the discovery:

The discovery of the Thanatotheristes skull fragments first was made by Alberta farmer John De Groot. The second part of the Thanatotheristes’s name, Thanatotheristes degrootorum, honors the man who first came upon the fossilized bones. De Groot has always been a paleontology fan, so having a species of T. rex named after him is no doubt a momentous honor.

“John always said that one day he would find a dinosaur skull. Finding the jaw was exciting,” said wife Sandra DeGroot to the Royal Tyrrell Museum. “Hearing that it is a new species, and seeing it given our family name, was beyond belief.”

What an interesting discovery! Do you love dinosaurs?

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