-
Loaf behind bars: Aussie inmate says Vegemite a human right
-
In film's second act, 'Wicked' goes beyond Broadway musical
-
Asian markets track Wall St down with Nvidia, US jobs in view
-
Scott Boland: the best 'spare' fast bowler around
-
Fire and Ashes: England bank on fast bowling barrage in Australia
-
North Korea says Seoul-US sub deal will trigger 'nuclear domino' effect
-
Education for girls hit hard by India's drying wells
-
Haitian gangs getting rich off murky market for baby eels
-
Trump says will talk to Venezuela's Maduro, 'OK' with US strikes on Mexico
-
Oscar Piastri wins Australia's top sports honour
-
'Severely restricted': Russia's Saint Petersburg faces cultural crackdown
-
Polish PM denounces 'sabotage' of railway supply line to Ukraine
-
UK toughens asylum system with radical overhaul
-
Carney's Liberals pass budget, avoiding snap Canada election
-
LeBron back in training, edges closer to Lakers return
-
Climate talks run into night as COP30 hosts seek breakthrough
-
Germany and Netherlands lock up World Cup spots in style
-
Germany's Woltemade hopes for 2026 World Cup spot after scoring again
-
Germany 'send message' with Slovakia rout to reach 2026 World Cup
-
Trump unveils fast-track visas for World Cup ticket holders
-
Netherlands qualify for World Cup, Poland in play-offs
-
Germany crush Slovakia to qualify for 2026 World Cup
-
Stocks gloomy on earnings and tech jitters, US rate worries
-
'In it to win it': Australia doubles down on climate hosting bid
-
Former NFL star Brown could face 30 yrs jail for shooting case: prosecutor
-
Fate of Canada government hinges on tight budget vote
-
New research measures how much plastic is lethal for marine life
-
Mbappe, PSG face off in multi-million lawsuit
-
EU defends carbon tax as ministers take over COP30 negotiations
-
McCartney to release silent AI protest song
-
Stocks tepid on uncertainty over earnings, tech rally, US rates
-
Louvre shuts gallery over ceiling safety fears
-
'Stranded, stressed' giraffes in Kenya relocated as habitats encroached
-
US Supreme Court to hear migrant asylum claim case
-
Western aid cuts could cause 22.6 million deaths, researchers say
-
Clarke hails Scotland 'legends' ahead of crunch World Cup qualifier
-
S.Africa says 'suspicious' flights from Israel show 'agenda to cleanse Palestinians'
-
South Korea pledges to phase out coal plants at COP30
-
Ex-PSG footballer Hamraoui claims 3.5m euros damages against club
-
Mbappe, PSG in counterclaims worth hundreds of millions
-
Two newly discovered Bach organ works unveiled in Germany
-
Stocks lower on uncertainty over earnings, tech rally, US rates
-
Barca to make long-awaited Camp Nou return on November 22
-
COP30 talks enter homestretch with UN warning against 'stonewalling'
-
France makes 'historic' accord to sell Ukraine 100 warplanes
-
Delhi car bombing accused appears in Indian court, another suspect held
-
Emirates orders 65 more Boeing 777X planes despite delays
-
Ex-champion Joshua to fight YouTube star Jake Paul
-
Bangladesh court sentences ex-PM to be hanged for crimes against humanity
-
Trade tensions force EU to cut 2026 eurozone growth forecast
'Appetite for drumsticks': First prey found in a tyrannosaur stomach
Prey has been discovered inside the stomach of a tyrannosaur skeleton for the first time, scientists said Friday, revealing that the mighty dinosaurs had an "appetite for drumsticks" when they were young.
The skeleton of the Gorgosaurus, a member of the tyrannosaurid family that also includes the T-Rex, sheds light on how these dinosaurs grew from fairly slender juveniles into gigantic, bone-crushing, apex-predator adults, they added.
The Gorgosaurus -- which means "dreadful lizard" -- was around six years old when it died more than 75 million years ago, according to a new study in the journal Science Advances.
The fossil was discovered in 2009 at the Dinosaur Provincial Park, east of the Canadian city of Calgary. But when they got the skeleton back to the lab, the scientists noticed something strange.
The study's lead author, Francois Therrien of the Royal Tyrrell Museum, told AFP they were amazed to "discover the remains of the last meal of this young tyrannosaur still preserved in place".
What was most surprising, he added, was that the small leg bones sticking out of the tyrannosaur's ribcage belonged to two young, bird-like dinosaurs called Citipes.
Citipes are thought to have had feathers, wings and a beak and walk on two feet, somewhat resembling modern-day cassowaries, Therrien said.
They are far smaller than the massive plant-eating dinosaurs that adult tyrannosaurs had been known to eat.
Study co-author Darla Zelenitsky, a paleontologist at the University of Calgary, told AFP that this particular "fussy eater" used its sharp teeth to carve itself only the legs of the two baby Citipes.
"This teenage Gorgosaurus seems to have had an appetite for drumsticks," she said.
- Not always an apex predator -
The discovery also offers a rare clue into how tyrannosaurs grew from one-metre-long at birth to some of the biggest predators to have ever walked the Earth.
"This fossil is the first solid evidence that tyrannosaurids drastically changed their diet as they grew from teenagers to adults," Zelenitsky said.
Young tyrannosaurs had slender heads and legs, sharp knife-like teeth for dissecting carcasses, and could probably run quite fast to catch their turkey-like prey.
These youths probably looked more similar to the velociraptors depicted in the movie "Jurassic Park" than the giant T-Rex, Zelenitsky said.
But at roughly 11 years old, as the tyrannosaurs hit their middle-age, their bodies grew almost ten times in size, ending up weighing more than 3,000 kilogrammes (6,600 pounds).
Their heads broadened and their teeth thickened into what Therrien called "killer bananas" capable of crunching through huge bones.
This transformation was driven by a change in diet, as the dinosaurs ditched the drumsticks of their youth and started preying on giant plant-eating dinosaurs.
These kind of drastic dietary changes are not necessarily rare in the animal kingdom -- crocodiles and Komodo dragons start out eating insects before switching to rodents and eventually large mammals, Therrien said.
The researchers said the Gorgosaurus fossil supports the theory that young tyrannosaurs -- including the T-Rex -- filled a role in the food chain known as "mesopredators", before later growing into apex predators.
This change is "probably the reason why tyrannosaurs were so successful and dominated their ecosystems at the end of the Cretaceous in North America and Asia," Therrien said.
S.Abdullah--SF-PST