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Chinese scientists discover new tyrannosaur species

CGTN

Photo of the skull fossil of the dinosaur Asiatyrannus xui. /Courtesy of Zheng Wenjie
Photo of the skull fossil of the dinosaur Asiatyrannus xui. /Courtesy of Zheng Wenjie

Photo of the skull fossil of the dinosaur Asiatyrannus xui. /Courtesy of Zheng Wenjie

A Chinese paleontological research team has identified a new species of tyrannosaur that lived during the Late Cretaceous period, approximately 72 to 66 million years ago.

Researchers from the Zhejiang Museum of Natural History named the dinosaur Asiatyrannus xui in honor of Xu Xing, a Chinese scientist dedicated to dinosaur research.

The fossil specimen includes a nearly complete skull, along with tail vertebrae and hind limb bones, marking the first deep-snouted tyrannosaur discovered in southeastern China, according to Zheng Wenjie, a researcher from the museum.

Reconstruction picture of the dinosaur Asiatyrannus xui. /Courtesy of Zheng Wenjie
Reconstruction picture of the dinosaur Asiatyrannus xui. /Courtesy of Zheng Wenjie

Reconstruction picture of the dinosaur Asiatyrannus xui. /Courtesy of Zheng Wenjie

Histological analysis revealed that the holotype of Asiatyrannus xui was not a fully mature adult but had passed through its most rapid growth stages.

Zheng added that the skull measures 47.5 centimeters in length, and the body length was approximately half that of Qianzhousaurus, which is estimated to reach around nine meters at similar growth stages.

Reconstruction picture of the dinosaur's head. /Courtesy of Zheng Wenjie
Reconstruction picture of the dinosaur's head. /Courtesy of Zheng Wenjie

Reconstruction picture of the dinosaur's head. /Courtesy of Zheng Wenjie

The earliest tyrannosaurs appeared in the Middle Jurassic, around 165 million years ago. They became the apex predators in their respective ecologies during the final 20 million years of the Cretaceous in Asia and North America.

The findings were published online in the journal Scientific Reports on July 25. The study was carried out by four paleontological researchers from the museum, including Zheng Wenjie, Jin Xingsheng, Xie Junfang and Du Tianming.

Source(s): Xinhua News Agency
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