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Raptorex: Dinosaur of the Day 8 лет назад


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Raptorex: Dinosaur of the Day

Raptorex: Dinosaur of the Day I Know Dino: The big dinosaur podcast. News, interviews, and discussions about dinosaurs. Are you a dinosaur enthusiast? Learn more at   / iknowdino  . You can also visit http://www.IknowDino.com for more information including a link to dinosaur sites near you. Raptorex Name means thief king Dubious tyrannosaurid genus Type species is Raptorex kriegsteini Species name is in honor of Roman Kriegstein, a Holocaust survivor (son Henry donate the specimen to the University of Chicago to be studied) Described in 2009 by Paul Sereno and others Tyrannosaurid Skeletal Design First Evolved at Small Body Size, published in 2009 Reanalysis of “Raptorex kriegsteini”: A Juvenile Tyrannosaurid Dinosaur from Mongolia, published in 2011 Considered by many to be a nomen dubium because tyrannosaurids tend to change a lot while growing, and there’s no adult skeleton to compare it to (it looks similar to juvenile Tarbosaurus); also originally it was thought to be from the Yixian Formation in China, and about 125 million years old, but now that’s thought to be unlikely Specimen was collected illegally and smuggled out of Asia Pete Larson, who tried to figure out the origins of the specimen, said an American businessman bought it from a Mongolian fossil dealer, and then sold it at the Tucson Gem, Mineral and Fossil Show. Dr. Henry Kriegstein, a fossil collector, bought it (at the time it was described as a juvenile Tarbosaurus) and he told paleontologist Paul Sereno about it, who said it was a subadult of a new species from the Yixian Formation. He published a description and arranged to send the fossil back to China, where he thought it had been smuggled from Sereno said it was about 6 years old and nearly an adult If this is true, it would mean that tyrannosaurs started as small animals with a large head, long legs, and two-fingered hands, instead of evolving into giants with those features. But previous evidence found that primitive tyrannosaurs had small skulls and long arms with three fingers on each hand In 2010 Pete Larson looked into the fossil and said it was probably a juvenile Tarbosaurus, and probably didn’t come from the Yixian Formation (which Sereno had concluded based on a fish fossil found alongside it). Larson said it may have come from Mongolia instead, from formations only 70 million years old, and said they needed “a more detailed analysis of the fossil matrix, including dating any pollen associated with the fossil.” Sereno said he still believed in his original analysis In June 2011, a detailed second study was published in PLOS ONE by Denver Fowler, Pete Larson, and others, and they found that the specimen was only 3 years old instead of 6, and found that the fossil Sereno used to date Raptorex, of a Lycoptera, was actually bigger than any known Lycoptera and was probably part of an ellimichthyiform fish, which lived during the entire Cretaceous period, so it’s unclear how old the Raptorex fossil is. Fowler and Larson and others said Raptorex was probably a juvenile tyrannosaurid, similar to Tarbosaurus, though it’s unclear what genera it belongs to exactly until more is known about tyrannosaurid growth patterns as well as more information about how old the Raptorex fossil actually is. If this conclusion is true, then Sereno’s hypothesis that tyrannosaurid features were in smaller versions of tyrannosaurs first would not be true In 2013, Newbrey and others said the fish fossil (formerly thought to be Lycoptera) found near Raptorex was actually a hiodontid, probably similar to the ones found in the Nemegt Formation in Mongolia (lived in the Late Cretaceous). This means Raptorex probably came from the Nemegt Formation and lived in the Late Cretaceous To learn more about dinosaurs and I Know Dino, connect with us on the following sites: Facebook:   / iknowdino   Twitter:   / iknowdino   Tumblr:   / iknowdino   Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/100785970... Pinterest:   / dinosauria   LinkedIn:   / i-know-dino   Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/review/list... iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/i... Sound Cloud:   / iknowdino   Stitcher: http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/i-kno... For more I Know Dino videos, subscribe to our YouTube channel at    / @iknowdino  

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