June 7, 2017
by Chuck Bednar
Although its ancestors probably
did have feathers, as recent research has suggested, a new study published this
week in the journal Biology Letters has concluded that the
Tyrannosaurus rex did not, and was in fact covered in scales similar to those
found on modern-day lizards.
In the new study, Phil R. Bell, a
paleontologist from the University
of New England in Australia, and his colleagues analyzed skin
impressions from a T.rex skeleton found in Montana, as well as from four
related species (Albertosaurus, Daspletosaurus, Gorgosaurus
and Tarbosaurus) late in the tyrannosaur’s history, according to BBC News and the Washington Post.
While recent studies had found
that two tyrannosauroids that preceded the T. rex by around 50 million years
(Dilong and Yutyrannus) were covered in feathers, the new analysis of the
T. rex itself revealed that the creature’s abdomen, chest, pelvis, neck, and
tail were covered exclusively in scales. If it had feathers, they were limited
to its back or spines, the authors said.
“With all the hype about
feathered theropods, it's easy to forget that actually, most dinosaurs had
scaly, reptilian-like skin,” Bell told the Post via email. However, he noted,
the new study “shows without question that had scaly skin.” The reasons
for this trait remain a mystery, although size may have played a role.
“Big animals have trouble
shedding excess heat, so being covered in feathers is not a good idea unless
you live somewhere cold,” he explained. However, while Dilong was much smaller
than the T. rex, Yutyrannus was closer to the size of the larger dinosaur,
lived in similar climates and still had feathers. “So what's the reason for
this difference? We really don't know.”
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