Pack-Hunting Dinosaurs Found As Large As T-Rex 156
1369IC writes "The Washington Post is reporting that the recently unearthed Mapusaurus roseae was as large as a T-Rex and may have hunted in packs. The fossils were found in Patagonia, in Argentina, though not enough were found to reconstruct an entire specimen. The meat-eaters probably lived in the same time and place as the 125-foot-long Argentinosaurus, the largest known dinosaur." From the article: "T. rex was equipped to attack and destroy animals its own size, Currie said, but Mapusaurs perhaps could 'go in, strike, pull and see what to do next,' a strategy that could work against larger animals, especially if the predators attacked together -- the prehistoric equivalent of a pack of wolves cornering a bison."
One Step At A Time (Score:1)
We need a PhD in Dinosaur Psychology here.
Re:One Step At A Time (Score:2)
From TFA (Score:1)
So the herd idea is just that, an idea.
Re:From TFA (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:From TFA (Score:2)
"May have"... speculation, speculation, speculatio (Score:2)
Paleontology is full of crazy speculations that have very tentative grounds. When I was a kid, the biggest dinosaur known to man was the brontosaurus, which we later find was a mix of two or more sets of bones. Watch any Discovery Channel dinosaur documentary and you'll see that a fragment of a tooth gets extrapolated into an animal.
Re:"May have"... speculation, speculation, specula (Score:2)
And who discovered and fixed the problem? (Score:2)
Your problem with paleontologists is that you don't understand how science works. In many scientific fields you have to especulate in order to do any useful work.
Whoever in TFA... (Score:1)
...proposed that some larger macropredators would have needed to revert from predation to scavenging in adulthood is guilty of dumbassery of the highest order.
A very simple counter-example exists. Watch a documentary about a large, muscle-bound, lumbering grizzly bear snatching a leaping fish out of thin air.
Otherwise a neat find marred by an article economical on content.
-GleePredators and scavenging. (Score:2, Interesting)
[Whoever] proposed that some larger macropredators would have needed to revert from predation to scavenging in adulthood is guilty of dumbassery of the highest order. A very simple counter-example exists. Watch a documentary about a large, muscle-bound, lumbering grizzly bear snatching a leaping fish out of thin air.
Obviously you know very little about predators. First and foremost, grizzlies are not "muscle-bound and lumbering", they are surprisingly quick and agile, and I'm willing to bet your life t
T Rex May Have Been A Pack Hunter (Score:3, Interesting)
This is commonly mentioned on the Science Channel [discovery.com].
Re:T Rex May Have Been A Pack Hunter (Score:1)
Re:T Rex May Have Been A Pack Hunter (Score:2)
Not so. Although small, those arms are large enough to brace itself against something well enough to give it traction, and with that it can get back on its feet again.
Re:T Rex May Have Been A Pack Hunter (Score:2)
Of course not, but it doesn't need to. It braces itself with its arms so that when it tries to get a foot under itself and lift, it doesn't slide forward. You don't need that much strength for that. Imagine lying on the floor with your hands tied behind you, but able to slither over to a wall. Once you've got your head braced, you can get a foot under you and lift. Your head provides no lift, it
Animal Thought Processes (Score:1)
Perhaps, given sufficient numbers, prehistoric cockroaches could take out much larger animals, too...like the T-Rex.
Aah...that would be a sight to see.
Re:Animal Thought Processes (Score:1)
Pack-Hunting Dinosaurs Found As Large As T-Rex (Score:1)
Umm , no. (Score:2)
"I've got agro!" (Score:2, Funny)
Re:"I've got agro!" (Score:1)
Dino Warrior: Ok, when you get to about halfway back here, fall down and play dead.
Dino Wizard: They'll think you died of a heart attack or something!
Dino Warrior: Right. Then, when the majority of the brontos chasing you turn around and head back to the herd, I'll run to you and wave my ass at the one in the back. He'll be so pissed he won't call for backup and he'll come alone.
Dino Monk: Right! feign death 4tw~!
Re:"I've got agro!" (Score:1)
TFA: loada crap (Score:2, Interesting)
Yeah, and every woman is equipped to be a hooker. The facts on T-Rex show the animal very unlikely to have been a predator. The general concensus of the predation deissenters is that the T-Rex eyes were small and likely couldn't have seen and tracked prey; the arms were too small to hold prey, and its oversized legs would slow the beast too much to be a decent predator. This last point may not be as important considering some of the larger spe
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:3, Insightful)
If the scientists of the future still have any brains left, they will look at all the teeth and be able to say that the Elephant was a herbivore... Those tusks were probably for defense.
Granted, you may be right about the fossils found together: it may have been a d
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:1)
parent: loada crap (Score:3, Informative)
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:5, Insightful)
Arms? I don't need no steenking arms to be a predator! If small arms == scavenger, most of the big theropod dinosaurs would have been scavengers. Not likely. Sight? The brain of T. rex seems to indicate it had an excellent sense of sight. Smell and sense of balance, too. Feet? Yeah, T. rex probably wasn't a sprinter. But it was very heavily built, which could mean a position as a top predator that took on the biggest, slowest and heaviest herbivores. As you already mentioned yourself, it may not have needed to be quick. It's neck is as strong as anything found in dinosaurs, but apparently at the same time it was able to make very fast and coordinated movements. Predators can also get big to be able to hunt big prey, and dinosaur prey-predator ecology was very likely to be different from its mammalian equivalent. Yes, T. rex was around right up until the KT extinction, but it wasn't there since the dawn of dinosaurs. It was actually one of the last dinosaur species known to have evolved, along with the likes of Triceratops and other late Cretaceous dinosaurs.
So, make of these facts what you will. The only true fact, though, is that T. rex could have been an active predator or a scavenger. We simply don't and cannot know for sure. My take is it was probably both. A carnivore that big should have eaten tonnes of dead meat regularly to stay alive, and I find it unlikely that dead dinosaurs big enough to satisfy a T. rex's hunger were lying around in that large numbers. Just like lions today, it would be happy with a carcass in case such was easily available. As for pack hunting, that's mostly pure speculation.
Oh, and the carnivorous fossil elephants of tomorrow. As it was already pointed out in another reply, the future paleontologists would look at the molars of the elephants and make the right conclusion that the animal was a herbivore. Size doesn't make animals carnivores, neither elephants nor dinosaurs.
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:2)
Personally, I think they will look at the size of their trunks and
conclude they were pack rats.
(that is a joke - get it?)
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:2)
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:2)
No soft tissues of T. rex have ever been found. All we know is the average size of the brain of T.rex, and very little about the prominent parts of that brain and its function. So I think it is too much of a stretch to say that the brain of T.rex indicates that it had an excellent sense of sight, smell etc.
You can make a model of the brain. (Score:2)
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:2)
Case in point - consider the panther and the lion. Panthers are shy solitary hunters, while lions typically live in a pride and do hunt in packs. However, the fossil remains won't indicate anything about this.
Think again. (Score:2)
You are more likely to find remains of lions in groups if a catastrophy (volcano eruption, sudden flood) catches them all up.
From this you can make some informed guesses.
Re:Think again. (Score:2)
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:2)
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:2)
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:2)
Right. Like the rapacious pack-hunting elephant and kangaroo.
Down boy! (Score:2)
In addition, the two feeding styles aren't exclusive: modern predators are certainly willing to still other's kills and just generally scavenge when they have to - and while your remark about no healed wounds seems to be wid
Re:Down boy! (Score:3, Interesting)
Others have mentioned modern lions, and that could be a partial answer to this question.
Field researchers studying lions have reported that, in many areas, they rarely find instances of lions killing their own prey. Rather, lions mostly steal the prey of smaller predators like hyenas and wild dogs. If you're as big as a lion, that can be an easier way of making a living than hunting and bringing down your own prey. This
Also an interesting point. (Score:2)
Actually, on reflection, that actually supports your point - it's easy to imagine T.Rex having a simple pattern of "smell meat, locate meat, chase away anything between you and the meat, eat."
Good points. (Score:2)
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:1)
I dunno, the T-rex looks ALL predator to me, It could Grab with its teeth while giving blows with its legs and sharp claws.
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:2)
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:1)
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:2)
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, 80% recovery of an organism is nothing to sneeze at. (And where did you pull that number from? I haven't seen it anywhere and I just scanned through the paper.) Consider how many species are known only through teeth, skull fragments, and t
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:1)
Yes, T-Rex's vision may not have been great, and the forelimbs are human-sized (as in, you'd have a 50/50 chance of beating T-Rex in arm wrestling...). None of this really argues against predation though.
T-Rex may not h
Re:TFA: loada crap (Score:2)
Others have addressed the nonsense about tusks/teeth, but I should point out that the distribution of different sized specimens (read: different ages) is strongly indicative of a living pack
Hello MODs (Score:2)
Maybe that should change?
Always a Bigger Fish (Score:2)
[...]
the prehistoric equivalent of a pack of wolves cornering a bison"
Yikes - where's this fossilized bison that's 10x as big as a T. Rex?
Re:Always a Bigger Fish (Score:2)
> > [...]
> > the prehistoric equivalent of a pack of wolves cornering a bison"
>
> Yikes - where's this fossilized bison that's 10x as big as a T. Rex?
Never mind that. T-Rex hunted in packs? Where's the pack big enough to hold a T-Rex and one of these megabiso- oh, never mind, I see the pack.
(It's the one Chuck Norris is wearing.)
Re:Always a Bigger Fish (Score:1)
The answer is there in the article (actually in the summary itself).
On an average - Tyrannosaurus rex was roughly 5 to 7 tons in weight.
FTA
Researchers said that by working together the dinosaurs may have been able to kill animals much bigger than themselves, including the 125-foot, 100-ton Argentinosaur
Re:Always a Bigger Fish (Score:2)
BTW, I made a joke only of the wolf [wikipedia.org]:bison [nhptv.org] ratio, 137.5:1175 pounds, or 8.5 - roughly 10x. If Mapusauruses cornered their prey like wolves cornering bison, that prey would be 10x the size of the Mapusaurus, said to be the size of a T. Rex, therefore 10x the size of a T. Rex.
Keep you ininformed, uninsightful, obnoxious sarcasm to yourself.
Re:Always a Bigger Fish (Score:2)
Mapusaurus = "slightly larger than T. Rex" = 7 tons
Argentinosaur = 100 tons
7:100 = 1:14.3
wolf:bison = 1:8.5
my original post: 10x
You're not even close. Uninformed, uninsughtful, insensitive, innumerate and unrepentant.
BTW, your insults hurt me less than a wolf might an Argentinosaur - more like a bison vs T. Rex.
Re:Always a Bigger Fish (Score:2)
In Sauropoda. It's interesting to see that in early to middle Creataceous South America there are plenty of huge sauropods, while elsewhere in the world they were on a decline at those times. And along with the huge sauropods there were loads of huge predators, more than elsewhere. The late Cretaceous North-American Tyrannosaurus looks like quite an anomaly, a huge predator where it seems it didn't need to be, but there's nothing out o
At least they didn't name it... (Score:2, Funny)
- Andrew
Trudat! (Score:1)
Jurassic Park 4 (Score:2)
Am I the only one who saw a trailer for Jurassic Park 4 beginning to flash before my eyes as I read this ?-)
Hey, let's make even better ! Let's make Star Wars Episode 7, complete with a final battle with a whole fleet of Death Stars (Death Cluster ?-) !
Re:Jurassic Park 4 (Score:2, Funny)
Sun Crusher (Score:2)
Anyone else see a plot here? (Score:1)
Lions vs Tigers (Score:2, Insightful)
I'd love to be proven wrong, but I doubt there is any way you can tell that from looking at their skeletons, or even a dead body.
Animal fossils can tell us a lot about past species. But there is also a lot they can't possibly tell us.
Re:Lions vs Tigers (Score:1)
If (when) something major causes a mass die-off of lions and tigers a pride of lion's bones would later be discoverd together, while tiger bones will be found alone.
Re:Lions vs Tigers (Score:2, Interesting)
Works for people too, now you mention it (Score:2)
This argument is made particularly for the human species and its relations. Neanderthal skeletons showing extreme arthritis, healed broken bones that would have incapacitated the individual at
Re:Lions vs Tigers (Score:3, Interesting)
Bones from several specimens were found together, apparently contemporaneous; and no other animals. The supposition is they were together and killed suddenly, perhaps a flood. They wouldn't be socialising unless they had a good reason -- if they were lone hunters or scavengers they would keep well apart and guard theie terr
Dinosaurs rock! (Score:3, Insightful)
With all that said, dinosaurs have always been really interesting to me. (Often) big, different, not around any more, lack of details (the mystery), (did I mention many of the cool ones were BIG? Well, maybe compys are pretty cool, too...) - all good ingredients for imaginative fuel. I digress. Sorry...
I always take news releases and articles like these with a grain of salt. Much of the publicized (read: made more interesting and made less dry) aspects of dig findings are generally lots of intelligent conjecture. That's OK with me, provided that folks don't assign the gloss (of the articles) to be factual. Did they hunt in packs? Did they hunt or scavenge? Were they gray or were they colorful? Some things we may never know... but for now, discoveries like these are just like candy - lots of fun.
Sheesh, what a name... (Score:2)
And people accuse us yanquis of hubris?
Did it inhabit the Malvinas?
You find it, you name it. (Score:2)
At least this is an original discovery.
Investigate the history of poinsettia o see how some USians just steal the names of things they did not discovered themselves
Komodo Dragon-style attacks? (Score:2)
The Komodo's teeth are positively filled (in fact there's special grooves to retain the bacteria!) with pathogenic bacteria.
I wonder if these new dino's have similar grooves in their teeth?
We know from the math, that a predator of this size can't take too many falls, as their own weight is mor
Re:Komodo Dragon-style attacks? (Score:2)
I saw this supposed behaviour on "Discovery Channel". It looked pretty convincing to me. The theory was that only very large prey was subject to this kind of attack. It seemed sound with the addition of the tooth grooves which would provide a safe harbour for the bacteria.
Re:Capitalism at its finest (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Capitalism at its finest (Score:2)
I'm sure a Communist Archealogist could have found a dinosaur, but they would have named it "Stalin-saurus" or maybe "The People's Dinosaur".
Re:Capitalism at its finest (Score:2)
Re:Comet Halley (Score:1)
Beat THAT!
Re:Comet Halley (Score:2)
Re:Comet Halley (Score:1)
Good thing you told me; I would never have guessed it.
Re:Capitalism at its finest (Score:2, Insightful)
Speaking of science, it is nice how these folks can find a collection of bones from seven or eight animals and create a whole set of hunting behaviors and lifestyles. The scientists admit this is conjecture, but fortunately, the reporters and editors writing these stories don't let a little science get in the way of just writing the juicy bits.
Re:Science at its funnest (Score:2, Funny)
Scientists long ago ran out of names for "Big Meat-Eating Mofo".
I For One (Score:2)
Re:Capitalism at its finest (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Capitalism at its finest (Score:2)
Re:Capitalism at its finest (Score:2)
loop {p "lovin\' ruby"}
Re:Capitalism at its finest (Score:3, Interesting)
My personal favourite (relevent, too!) is "Tyrannasorus rex Ratcliffe and Ocampo, 2001 (Miocene hybosorid scarab from Dominican amber) The dinosaur is spelled Tyrannosaurus." Tyrant King beetle?
Re:Capitalism at its finest (Score:1)
O. snap! (Score:1)
Re:O. snap! (Score:2)
And so that six weeks from now, people will not think it is funny, because everyone will have forgotten that people used to say, Oh, snap.
Re:Capitalism at its finest (Score:2)
Like, say, the woman who funded the research that discovered this new dinosaur species? Sounds like a pretty scientific naming convention to me. After all, without her interest and support, the thing wouldn't be getting named at all.
And really, who cares? The discoverer gets the credit, the financier gets the name, and the whole world gets the scientific discovery itself. Sounds like win-win, not win-whine, to me.
This is gratitude and not economics. (Score:3, Insightful)
If the researcher who did this felt enough gratitude to his sponsor to name it after her
Re:Capitalism at its finest (Score:1, Interesting)
No, it was named by Osborn to be descriptive. There's no requirement that names be descriptive. Naming things after people or places is common, and usually a bit of an honor, although it could be a biological joke to name something after somebody who looks a bit like the creature in question, or name something ugly after someone you don't like
Sometimes
Re:Capitalism at its finest (Score:2, Interesting)
Anyway, I prefer, the wooly lemur avahi cleesei, named for John Cleese, and having an ironically funny walk.
Re:The sharing of information in the scientific co (Score:1)
That was called peer review last time I checked.
Re:The sharing of information in the scientific co (Score:2)
Re:The sharing of information in the scientific co (Score:2)
Don't piss them off, they're huge!
Re:The sharing of information in the scientific co (Score:2, Funny)
Judging by your posts you must suffer by accute http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissociative_identity _disorder [wikipedia.org].
Scientific peer review is the phrase you've been looking for. God man grow up or go assume another person's identity on a less involved forum.
It's Pronounced "I'm Not" (Score:2)
Re:pack hunting (Score:1)
It's conjecture; until they find evidence to support the claim, that's all it'll be.
Re:pack hunting (Score:2)
Why else would you find multiple of the same kind of animal at various stages of growth dead in the same place if they weren't social animals?
The FSM did it (Score:2)
Re:pack hunting (Score:2)
Maybe they were all trampled to death by a heard of wild ponies?
Re:T-Rex Stomps Revisionists (Score:2)
I am familiar with this finding. Some points which you might want to consider:
1. This so-called "evidence" of the duckbill dinosaur is shaky at best. There are numerous problems with the theor