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Research suggests T. Rex was covered in scales instead of feathers

91ƵWhat we see here is actually evidence of feathers evolving and then being lost91Ƶ91Ƶ
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Research suggests Tyrannosaurus rex and some of its close relatives were covered in tiny scales and not feathers as many scientists previously thought.

An international team of researchers, including University of Alberta paleontologists, studied fossilized skin from massive carnivorous lizards known as tyrannosaurids.

Their ancestors, which were about the size of wolves or leopards, were coated in feathery fuzz, but somewhere along the way their descendants seem to have lost that attribute, said paleontologist Scott Persons, who contributed to the study.

91ƵWhat we see here is actually evidence of feathers evolving and then being lost 91Ƶ or at least greatly reduced in terms of their number 91Ƶ in this one lineage of dinosaurs, which is strange,91Ƶ he said.

A completely separate branch of the dinosaur family tree included an uninterrupted line of feathered carnivores, including the Velociraptor, that are related to today91Ƶs birds.

Persons91Ƶ interest was piqued when his U of A colleague and mentor, renowned paleontologist Philip Currie, showed him a skin sample from a specimen found in Alberta.

A team of U of A researchers got to work, but soon got wind of another group studying a different skin fossil.

91ƵRather than competing with each other in a rush to see who could be the first to publish on it, we all pooled our resources and, as a result, we have a really cool study that talks about skin in multiple species of tyrannosaurids, which is pretty gosh darn cool.91Ƶ

The combined team included researchers from Canada, the United States and Australia.

It91Ƶs rare to find fossilized dinosaur skin, but advances in preparation techniques are making discoveries more common. Often, a researcher won91Ƶt even know there is skin attached to a fossil until after it91Ƶs taken back to the lab.

The scientists can91Ƶt say for certain why feathers went by the wayside in tyrannosaurids, but Persons said he suspects it has to do with the animals91Ƶ size, as the bigger you are, the harder it is to stay cool.

He notes elephants and rhinos today have little in the way of hair.

91ƵYou91Ƶre better off not being out in the savannah in the hot sun while wearing a down jacket.91Ƶ

Because the skin specimens were relatively small, it91Ƶs impossible to say whether the dinosaurs were entirely featherless, or if they had isolated patches on their bodies, such as a crest atop their heads.

To know for sure, Persons said paleontologists would need to find a tyrannosaurid that had been completely mummified.

91ƵThey91Ƶre probably buried somewhere out there and it91Ƶs really just a matter of time before we get lucky enough and uncover one.91Ƶ

The Canadian Press



About the Author: Ashley Wadhwani-Smith

I began my journalistic journey at Black Press Media as a community reporter in my hometown of Maple Ridge, B.C.
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