-
EU launches antitrust probe into Google's data use for AI
-
Cambodia-Thailand clashes spread on border as toll rises
-
Billionaire Trump fan Babis returns to power as Czech prime minister
-
German exports tread water as US, China shipments fall
-
England fast bowler Wood out of Ashes tour with injury
-
South Korea's president begins move back to historic Blue House
-
SEA Games to open in Thailand with tightened security
-
Honduran presidential candidate decries vote 'theft' in race against Trump-backed rival
-
Owners fled after Indian nightclub blaze killed 25: police
-
CERN upbeat as China halts particle accelerator mega-project
-
2025 on track to tie second hottest year on record: EU monitor
-
Chile to vote for president as hard-right Kast tipped to win
-
Chargers edge reigning champions Eagles after defensive show
-
RSF says Israel killed highest number of journalists again this year
-
Suns, Spurs win in last tuneups for NBA Cup showdowns
-
Hay to debut for New Zealand as Blundell out of 2nd West Indies Test
-
World record winning streak sets up Morocco for AFCON challenge
-
All Blacks face France in first Test at new Christchurch stadium
-
Cambodia and Thailand clash at border as civilian toll rises
-
South Korea police raid e-commerce giant Coupang over data leak
-
Most markets track Wall St losses as jitters set in ahead of Fed
-
Kenya deploys more police officers to control Haiti's gangs
-
Somali TikToker deported from US for spy kidnapping may be innocent
-
Indian pride as Asiatic lions roar back
-
Australia quick Hazlewood ruled out of Ashes after injury setback
-
Rising living costs dim holiday sparkle for US households
-
Data centers: a view from the inside
-
Long-serving Russian envoy to North Korea dies
-
Reddit says Australia's under-16 social media ban 'legally erroneous'
-
10 reported hurt after big Japan quake, warning of more tremors
-
Jimmy Kimmel extends late night contract for a year
-
Trump says US will allow sale of Nvidia AI chips to China
-
NBA fines Magic's Bane $35,000 for hurling ball at Anunoby
-
Pulisic quick-fire double sends AC Milan top of Serie A
-
Man Utd back on track after Fernandes inspires Wolves rout
-
Syria's Sharaa vows to promote coexistence, one year after Assad's ousting
-
World stocks mostly lower as markets await Fed decision
-
Palmer misses Chelsea's Champions League clash with Atalanta
-
Trump says Europe heading in 'bad directions'
-
Benin hunts soldiers behind failed coup
-
Salah a 'disgrace' for Liverpool outburst: Carragher
-
Peace deal at risk as DR Congo, Burundi slam Rwanda and M23 advances
-
Feminists outraged at video of French first lady's outburst against activists
-
Suspect arrested in theft of Matisse artworks in Brazil: officials
-
Troubled Liverpool host Barnsley in FA Cup third round
-
Slot has 'no clue' whether rebel star Salah has played last Liverpool game
-
Liverpool boss Slot says Salah relationship not broken
-
Powerful 7.6 quake strikes off Japan, tsunami warning lifted
-
100 abducted Nigerian children handed over to state officials
-
Lula orders road map to cut fossil-fuel use in Brazil
'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.
G.Teles--PC