What
if everything we know about T. rex growth is wrong? A complete tyrannosaur
skeleton has just ended one of paleontology's longest-running debates—whether
Nanotyrannus is a distinct species, or just a teenage version of Tyrannosaurus
rex.
The fossil, part of the legendary
"Dueling Dinosaurs" specimen unearthed in Montana, contains two
dinosaurs locked in prehistoric combat: a Triceratops and a small-bodied
tyrannosaur. That tyrannosaur is now confirmed to be a fully grown Nanotyrannus
lancensis—not a teenage T. rex, as many scientists once believed.
"This fossil doesn't just settle
the debate. It flips decades of T. rex research on its head," says Lindsay
Zanno, associate research professor at North Carolina State University, head of
paleontology at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences and co-author of
the study published in Nature.
Using growth rings, spinal fusion data and developmental anatomy, the researchers demonstrated that the specimen was around 20 years old and physically mature when it died. Its skeletal features—including larger forelimbs, more teeth, fewer tail vertebrae, and distinct skull nerve patterns—are features fixed early in development and biologically incompatible with T. rex.
"For
Nanotyrannus to be a juvenile T. rex, it would need to defy everything we know
about vertebrate growth," says James Napoli, anatomist at Stony Brook
University and co-author of the study. "It's not just unlikely—it's
impossible."
The implications are profound. For
years, paleontologists used Nanotyrannus fossils to model T. rex growth and
behavior. This new evidence reveals that those studies were based on two
entirely different animals—and that multiple tyrannosaur species inhabited the
same ecosystems in the final million years before the asteroid impact.
As part of their research, Zanno and
Napoli examined over 200 tyrannosaur fossils. They discovered that one
skeleton, formerly thought to represent a teenage T. rex, was slightly
different than the Dueling Dinosaurs' Nanotyrannus lancensis.
They named this fossil a new species of Nanotyrannus, dubbed N. lethaeus. The name references the River Lethe from Greek mythology—a nod to how this species remained hidden in plain sight and "forgotten" for decades.
"This discovery paints a richer,
more competitive picture of the last days of the dinosaurs," Zanno says.
"With enormous size, a powerful bite force and stereoscopic vision, T. rex
was a formidable predator, but it did not reign uncontested. Darting alongside
was Nanotyrannus—a leaner, swifter and more agile hunter."
Source: Nanotyrannus confirmed: Dueling dinosaurs fossil rewrites the story of T. rex






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