JazzCorner.com
  Facebook  Twitter

HomeRosterForumsPodcastsNewsJukeboxShopContact

 




Results 1 to 7 of 7
  1. #1
    The Bluegrass Gary Sisco's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    no country for old men
    Posts
    31,114

    bite much worse than bark

    T. rex’s secret weapon? A stout snout
    Fused bones turned dinosaur’s nose into a killing machine, experts say
    By Jeanna Bryner
    LiveScience
    Updated: 9:47 p.m. ET May 18, 2007
    A paleo-bully of sorts, Tyrannosaurus rex could chomp down on prey with the force needed to lift a semitrailer, tearing apart a victim's bones. Now researchers have discovered the dino's secret weapon: It was hard-headed.

    "Fused, archlike nasal bones are a unique feature of tyrannosaurids," said lead scientist Eric Snively of the University of Alberta. "This adaptation, for instance, was keeping the T. rexes from breaking their own skull while breaking the bones of their prey."

    Tyrannosaurids are known to have robust teeth and skulls as well as enlarged areas for attachment and expansion of jaw muscles, which suggests they swiftly crush the flesh and bones of prey. And though other researchers had noticed T. rex's fused nasal bone, how the feature added to the animal's brute strength or what role it played had remained a mystery.

    The new study, published in the journal Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, used 21st-century technologies to look at the biomechanics of the ancient creatures.

    Bone crunch
    Snively and his colleagues, including physicist Donald Henderson of the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Alberta and Doug Phillips of the University of Calgary, compared the skulls and teeth of a number of tyrannosaurids to non-tyrannosaurids.

    They used computerized tomography scans to look at such structural mechanics factors as teeth-bending strength and nose and skull strength. The nasal bones form a sort of arch atop the tooth-bearing bones of the upper jaw and take a hit whenever a dinosaur bites down.

    The CT scans showed that the fused tyrannosaurid nasals were stronger than unfused nasal bones found in other carnivorous dinosaurs. "When T. rex bit down, the forces from the upper teeth would be channeled right to the [fused] nasal bones," Snively said. The resulting bite would have splintered the bones of unlucky prey.

    For a non-tyrannosaurid but still carnivorous dinosaur with unfused nasal bones connected with stretchy ligaments, some of the bite force would cause the nasal bones to give a little and slide against each other. The flexing would zap some of that dinosaur's bite energy.

    "Because the nasals [of T. rex] were fused, all of the bite force was transmitted to the food instead of some of the force being distorting the skull," Snively said. "The T. rex especially had a very strong skull and jaw muscles that would turn it into a zoological superweapon."

    Perfect ingredients
    T. rex would likely not back down from bigger beasts either. A medium-sized T. rex boasted even more skull strength than a larger carnivorous creature, such as Carcharadontosaurus saharicus, whose head was about one and a half times as long as that of T. rex.

    The scientists used conservative estimates of muscle force when comparing the overall strengths of the animals. "We kept the muscle numbers down because we thought they couldn't possibly be that powerful," Snively said. He noted that colleagues at the Tyrrell museum have shown that a T. rex's lower jaw could apply 200,000 newtons of force, or enough strength to lift a tractor-trailer.


    With that whopping bite, sometimes T. rex likely got its deeply-entrenched teeth stuck in prey. "If the teeth were embedded in the prey and T. rex wasn't able to extract the food, it couldn't eat very well," Snively told LiveScience.

    That's why, Snively suggests, T. rex had such a powerful neck. In a split second, the dino could swing its head and toss large chunks of meat up and into its throat. The scientists calculated that a T. rex could fling a 100-pound person more than 15 feet into the air.

    The tossing power also meant T. rex could tear from side to side, ripping chunks of meat from another dinosaur. "The tossing showed us how easily T. rex could feed; it would toss food back in the throat," Snively said. "But the overall power also shows us how T. rex could remove flesh and bone from prey."

    He added, "All of the T. rex's features came together to give it the strongest bite of any land animal. The T. rex just blows everyone out of the water when it comes to strength."

    © 2007 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

  2. #2
    Registered User claude's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    New Brunswick
    Posts
    2,707
    Quote Originally Posted by Gary Sisco View Post
    Tyrannosaurus rex could chomp down on prey with the force needed to lift a semitrailer, tearing apart a victim's bones.
    This description could also apply to my oldest cat. I call her hydraulic-jaws, I swear she could break human bones with her teeth!! Luckily she's a real sweetheart, but don't piss her off.

  3. #3
    I'm the face. Gentle Giant's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    Malden, MA
    Posts
    10,091
    And yet extinct.


  4. #4
    The Bluegrass Gary Sisco's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    no country for old men
    Posts
    31,114
    True, but only after having been not extinct for millions of years.

    Humans are only at 50k or so, at the moment.

    Dinosaurs were my first real fascination as a kid, and the reason my mother taught me how to read before I went to school. Gave her a break, I guess.

  5. #5
    I'm the face. Gentle Giant's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    Malden, MA
    Posts
    10,091
    I was a big dinosaur freak, too, but I learned recently that the Brontosaurus is no longer called that, or looks like they thought it did or something like that, and it bummed me out.

    So I'm sticking with the Loch Ness Monster.

    PS: I also liked Land of the Lost.


  6. #6
    Six decades Chris D's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    Capital City
    Posts
    13,332

  7. #7
    The Bluegrass Gary Sisco's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    no country for old men
    Posts
    31,114
    Just how willfully stupid would you have to be?

    PETERSBURG, Ky (Reuters) - Like many modern museums, the newest U.S. tourist attraction includes some awesome exhibits -- roaring dinosaurs and a life-sized ship.

    But only at the Creation Museum in Kentucky do the dinosaurs sail on the ship -- Noah's Ark, to be precise.

    The Christian creators of the sprawling museum, unveiled on Saturday, hope to draw as many as half a million people each year to their state-of-the-art project, which depicts the Bible's first book, Genesis, as literal truth.

    While the $27 million museum near Cincinnati has drawn snickers from media and condemnation from U.S. scientists, those who believe God created the heavens and the Earth in six days about 6,000 years ago say their views are finally being represented.

    "What we've done here is to give people an opportunity to hear information that is not readily available ... to challenge them that really you can believe the Bible's history," said Ken Ham, president of the group Answers in Genesis that founded the museum.

    Here exhibits show the Grand Canyon took just days to form during Noah's flood, dinosaurs coexisted with humans and had a place on Noah's Ark, and Cain married his sister to people the earth, among other Biblical wonders.

    **********

    Wonder what they fed them T. Rex's?

    So, the human population is the result of, well, incest. I guess it is the only "rational" conclusion one could draw if stupid enough to believe the thing literally to begin with.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
This jazz site is part of