'Like Godzilla but real': Study says 2.5b T-rex dinos walked the earth

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A 67 million year-old skeleton of a Tyrannosaurus rex nicknamed "Trix" on display at the French National Museum of Natural History in Paris in 2018. Researchers in the study published in the journal Science on Thursday calculated an average populatio

A 67 million year-old skeleton of a Tyrannosaurus rex nicknamed "Trix" on display at the French National Museum of Natural History in Paris in 2018. Researchers in the study published in the journal Science on Thursday calculated an average population density of about one T-rex for every roughly 100 sq km.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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WASHINGTON • If one Tyrannosaurus rex - the school bus-size meat-eating dinosaur that stalked the Cretaceous period landscape - seems impressive, how about 2.5 billion of them?
Researchers on Thursday unveiled the first calculation of the total T-rex population during the estimated 2.4 million years that this fearsome species inhabited western North America during the twilight of the age of dinosaurs.
They considered factors, including the size of its geographic range, its body mass, growth pattern, age at sexual maturity, life expectancy, duration of a single generation and the total time that T-rex existed before extinction 66 million years ago. They also heeded a doctrine called Damuth's law linking population to body mass: the bigger the animal, the fewer the individuals.
Their analysis put the total number of T-rex individuals that ever existed at about 2.5 billion, including approximately 20,000 adults alive at any one time.
Fossils of more than 40 T-rex individuals have been found since it was first described in 1905, providing a wealth of information about a beast that thrives in the popular imagination.
"Why iconic?" asked palaeontologist Charles Marshall, who led the study published in the journal Science. "Heck, a hugely massive killer with super-huge teeth, one that you would never dream up on your own if we didn't have the fossil record. So not only super-cool and beyond the imagination, but real. Like Godzilla, but actually real. And I think we like feeling small, and T-rex sure makes us feel small and vulnerable," he said.
It was among the largest carnivorous dinosaurs, possessing a skull about 1.5m long, massive and muscular jaws with a bite force capable of crushing bone, a mouthful of banana-size serrated teeth, a keen sense of smell, strong legs and puny arms with hands boasting just two fingers.
The new study put the weight of the average adult T-rex at 5.2 tonnes, average lifespan at 28 years, generation time at 19 years, total number of generations of the species at about 125,000, and its geographic range at roughly 2.3 million sq km.
They calculated an average population density of about one T-rex for every roughly 100 sq km.
While the uncertainties in the estimates were large and some of the assumptions may be challenged by other palaeontologists, the study was a worthwhile effort to expand the understanding of this famous dinosaur, said Professor Marshall, director of the University of California Museum of Palaeontology and a University of California, Berkeley professor of integrative biology.
REUTERS
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