T. rex was not feathery, study says

Binary_Bark

Forging
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Feb 24, 2016
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Tyrannosaurus rex had scales, not feathers, said a study Wednesday which rescues the giant lizard's reputation as a fearsome killer with a rough-and-tough hide.
Recent research has claimed to provide evidence for feathers in ancestors of T. rex, and suggested the iconic carnivore may itself have sported bird-like plumage rather than reptilian scales.
Those findings challenged a long-held contention that large-bodied dinos had no feathers, requiring them for neither warmth nor flight.
For the new study, an international team of scientists tracked down museum samples of skin from T. rex and several of its cousins in the tyrannosaurid family, and compiled a database of fossilised hide impressions.
These included skin patches of the neck, pelvis and tail of a T. rex from the Houston Museum of Natural Science, as well as samples from four other members of the extended tyrannosaurid family.
That group roamed the planet during the Late Cretaceous, which extended from 99 million to 65.5 million years ago, when an asteroid slammed into Earth and wiped out all land-dwelling dinos.
The team concluded that "extensive feather coverings" in tyrannosaurids—which lived much earlier—were already lost in the common forefather of T. rex and its cousins about the time the Late Cretaceous began.


Read more at: https://phys.org/news/2017-06-rex-feathery.html#jCp
 

Creag

The Boar's Rock
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May 19, 2009
Messages
43,526
The studios got it right then, ie. the Jurassic themed movies. That aside, it is always interesting how definite the research is in respect of things millions and millions of years ago.
 
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