Tyrannosaurus Rex 'hunted in packs'
 
The Tyrannosaurus Rex was not a lone operator as previously 
thought but hunted in packs, new research has found. 
 
Tyrannosaurus rex and its relatives were more intelligent 
than previously thought and hunted in gangs which included 
young and older members, researchers have claimed.
 
Scientists believe they have evidence that the top predator 
dinosaurs were highly intelligent pack animals, despite 
T-rex being popularly depicted as a dangerous but dim-witted 
loner.
 
This is a myth that has grown up because for many years 
their fossil skeletons tended to be found on their own, 
researchers say.
 
The new theory follows an analysis of skeletons of the 
tyrannosaur Tarbosaurus bataar from 90 sites in the Gobi 
Desert, Mongolia.
 
Tarbosaurus, a cousin of T-rex that lived around 70 million 
years ago, was a two-legged predator up to 12 metres long 
and weighing five tonnes.
 
At least half a dozen of the animals appear to have belonged 
to a single social group, including adults and juveniles, 
that died together. 
 
Lead researcher Professor Philip Currie found more possible 
evidence of social behaviour among tyrannosaurs on a 
previous expedition in Canada.
 
At a site on the Red Deer River, Alberta, his team uncovered 
the bones of up to two dozen Albertasaurus specimens.
There was insufficient evidence then to prove the dinosaurs 
were from a single group, but several of the Gobi Desert 
skeletons were found lying side-by-side in the same rock 
layers, implying that they died together.
 
Most experts have assumed that pack hunting evolved with the 
rise of mammals. Dinosaurs were not thought to have had 
enough intelligence to behave like modern-day wolves.
 
But according to Prof Currie, from the University of 
Alberta, tyrannosaurs had all the necessary qualifications 
for pack hunting, including speed, keen senses and a highly 
developed brain.
 
Further research involving CT scans of tyrannosaur skulls 
indicated highly developed senses for hunting, and enough 
brain power for co-ordinated pack behaviour.
 
"A dinosaur like the Tyrannosaurus Rex would have a much 
larger brain in proportion to its body size than a 
crocodile, and three times that of a plant-eating dinosaur 
like a Triceratops of the same size." 
 
Three-dimensional tyrannosaur skull casts showed that the 
creatures' brains were roughly three times larger than those 
of other dinosaurs living at the same time.
 
Prof Currie believes tyrannosaurs probably hunted in groups 
with adults and juveniles adopting different roles.
The swifter, more agile young dinosaurs would have chased 
down potential prey, leaving the adults to deliver crushing 
fatal bites.
 
Dr Philip Currie, of the University of Alberta, said that 
evidence from 90 skeletons of Tarbosaurus Bataar a cousin of 
the Tyrannosaurus Rex suggested strongly that about half a 
dozen of the dinosaurs were part of a social group that died 
together.
 
The close similarities between the Tyrannosaurid family – as 
well as evidence from a quarry site in South Dakota, USA 
where three Tyrannosaurus Rex skeletons were found in close 
proximity – mean that Tyrannosauruses would likely have been 
capable of the same behaviour as their cousins, Dr Currie 
said. 
 
He added: "We now have a lot of sites worldwide which show 
these Tyrannosaurids were grouping animals which at certain 
times did get together into gangs, either to hunt or move 
from one region to another. 
 
"Moving in gangs suggests that they were behaviourally more 
complex than we think dinosaurs should be, and CAT scans 
also show their brain size was about three times what you 
would expect for an animal of that size. 
 
"Tyrannosaurids, I believe, were far more complex and more 
dangerous than we ever could have imagined," said Prof 
Currie, whose theory and research are the subject of a new 
documentary film, Dino Gangs.
 
"I believe these tyrannosaurids hunted in deadly, 
bloodthirsty packs. It's definitely time to rewrite the 
dinosaur books."
 
Dino Gangs will be shown in the UK on the Discovery Channel 
on Sunday June 26.
 
A book entitled Dino Gangs by best-selling author Josh Young 
will be published by Harper Collins on May 26.
 
dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1388574/Tyrannosaurus-re
x-hunted-bloodthirsty-packs-researchers-claim.html

telegraph.co.uk/science/dinosaurs/8589113/Tyrannosaurus-Rex-
hunted-in-packs.html

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