A long forgotten fossil skull in the collections of the Natural History Museum in London has now provided crucial clues to the early stages of the lengthy evolutionary history of Tyrannosaurus rex and related large carnivorous dinosaurs.
Tyrannosaurus rex and related large carnivorous dinosaurs together form the family Tyrannosauridae. A long forgotten fossil skull in the collections of the Natural History Museum in London has now provided crucial clues to the early stages of the lengthy evolutionary history of these fearsome predators. Almost a century after its discovery, the specimen, named Proceratosaurus, has now been recognized as the oldest known relative of the Tyrannosauridae.
(Image: Ghedo)
With the help of an ultramodern imaging
technique, a team of researchers led by Dr. Oliver Rauhut from LMU
Munich and Dr. Angela Milner from the Natural History Museum London,
have been able to show that Proceratosaurus resembled its approximately
100-million-years younger descendant T. rex in a number of ways. The
teeth, the jaws, and the structure of the cranial cavity of the two
species have many features in common. Proceratosaurus weighed only
about 40 kg, says Rauhut. Nevertheless, like the later tyrannosauroids,
the animal obviously depended on its powerful biting apparatus. Later
modifications of the jaw muscles and the overall structure of the
cranium then gave rise to the perfect hunting weapon wielded by T. rex.
(Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society online, 4 November 2009).
Among
the dinosaur specimen housed in the collections of the Natural History
Museum in London is an almost complete skull that was found in the West
of England about 100 years ago. The fossil was initially misclassified,
but was later recognized as representing an otherwise unknown genus,
which was named Proceratosaurus. The skull has only recently been
subject to detailed study by a team led by the palaeontologist Dr.
Oliver Rauhut, who holds dual appointments in the Department of
Geological and Environmental Sciences at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität
(LMU) in Munich and the Bavarian State Collection for Paleontology and
Geology, and Dr Angela Milner, Associate Keeper of Palaeontology at the
Natural History Museum in London.
This skull, which had been
overlooked for so long, turns out to be a spectacular find.
Proceratosaurus is the earliest known ancestor of the family
Tyrannosauridae (named after its most famous representative
Tyrannosaurus rex). Proceratosaurus and T. rex were both bipedal
carnivores and each had a massive body, short and stubby forelimbs, a
powerful tail, and sharp teeth set in a bulky skull. The best known
members of the family, T. rex, lived during the late cretaceous period,
although smaller species are known from the earlier Jurassic era.
Little
is known about the origins and later evolution of this important group
of dinosaurs. Proceratosaurus could now cast much needed light on the
process. “It is quite astonishing that this fossil has received so
little attention, since it is one of the best preserved dinosaur skulls
in Europe”, reports Rauhut. Parts of the skull that were still embedded
in the rock matrix and these had to be exposed carefully by preparator
Scott Moore-Fay at the Natural Histsory Museum in London; the team also
used an advanced imaging technique to probe the detailed structure of
the fossil.
“Computerized tomography is a wonderful method,
because it offers us a non-destructive means of visualizing the
internal structures of fossils”, says Angela Milner, the researcher
responsible for the specimen at the Natural History Museum, who
personally took the fossil to Texas, where the tomographic scan was
performed. Detailed studies of the resulting images and of the skull
itself were subsequently carried out back in London.
The
investigations uncovered a wide range of features in the cranial
cavity, teeth and jaws that Proceratosaurus shares with the huge T.
rex, despite the fact that the Proceratosaurus skull is about 100
million years older and much smaller. The Proceratosaurus cranium was
about five times less massive than that of its mighty relative, and the
intact animal appears to have weighed only about 40 kg. Mature
specimens of Tyrannosaurus, in contrast, weighed in at up to eight tons.
Because
the Proceratosaurus skull already displays characteristics that are
typical of its later descendants, the powerful jaw with its slicing
teeth was probably the animal’s most important weapon. “It is likely
that this hunting strategy developed first”, says Rauhut. The basic
tool kit was perfected in later tyrannosaurids: The skull became more
robust and the jaw muscles larger and, overall, the body increased
enormously in size. Proceratosaurus also confirms that the
tyrannosauridae developed over a very long stretch of time, and gave
rise to a great diversity of forms. Further members of the family
surely await discovery.”
The study was financially supported by the SYNTHESIS program of the European Union. (suwe)



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