Secrets behind T. Rex’s Bone Crushing Bites: T. Rex Could Crush with 8,000 Pound Bite Forces

The giant Tyrannosaurus rex pulverized bones by biting down with forces equaling the weight of three small cars while simultaneously generating world record tooth pressures, according to a new study by research team, according to Science daily.

In a study Professor of Biological Science Gregory Erickson and Paul Gignac, assistant professor of Anatomy and Vertebrate Paleontology, explain how T. rex could pulverize bones — a capacity known as extreme osteophagy that is typically seen in living carnivorous mammals such as wolves and hyenas, but not reptiles whose teeth do not allow for chewing up bones.

 Erickson and Gignac found that this prehistoric reptile could chow down with nearly 8,000 pounds of force, which is more than two times greater than the bite force of the largest living crocodiles — today’s bite force champions. At the same time, their long, conical teeth generated an astounding 431,000 pounds per square inch of bone-failing tooth pressures.

This allowed T. rex to drive open cracks in bone during repetitive, mammal-like biting and produce high-pressure fracture arcades, leading to a catastrophic explosion of some bones.

“It was this bone-crunching acumen that helped T. rex to more fully exploit the carcasses of large horned-dinosaurs and duck-billed hadrosaurids whose bones, rich in mineral salts and marrow, were unavailable to smaller, less equipped carnivorous dinosaurs,” Gignac said.

The researchers built on their extensive experience testing and modeling how the musculature of living crocodilians, which are close relatives of dinosaurs, contribute to bite forces. They then compared the results with birds, which are modern-day dinosaurs, and generated a model for T. rex.

From their work on crocodilians, they realized that high bite forces were only part of the story. To understand how the giant dinosaur consumed bone, Erickson and Gignac also needed to understand how those forces were transmitted through the teeth, a measurement they call tooth pressure.

“Having high bite force doesn’t necessarily mean an animal can puncture hide or pulverize bone, tooth pressure is the biomechanically more relevant parameter,” Erickson said. “It is like assuming a 600 horsepower engine guarantees speed. In a Ferrari, sure, but not for a dump truck.”

In current day, well-known bone crunchers like spotted hyenas and gray wolves have occluding teeth that are used to finely fragment long bones for access to the marrow inside — a hallmark feature of mammalian osteophagy. Tyrannosaurus rex appears to be unique among reptiles for achieving this mammal-like ability but without specialized, occluding dentition.

The new study is one of several by the authors and their colleagues that now show how sophisticated feeding abilities, most like those of modern mammals and their immediate ancestors, actually first appeared in reptiles during the Age of the Dinosaurs.

N.H.Kh

You might also like
Latest news
Equestrian Yasser Al Masry wins the Grand Prix title at the Virtus International Show Jumping Champi... Baghaei: Iran continues its strong support for Syria and Lebanon in the face of Israeli attacks Ministry of Social Affairs and Labor discusses with UNRWA the work plan for the coming year Students interrupt the Czech Foreign Minister and accuse him of supporting the Israeli genocide agai... The Syrian national football team faces its Russian counterpart in a friendly match A Demonstration in the Czech capital in support of Palestine Pakistani aid plane lands at Damascus airport The Syrian army destroys 15 terrorist drones in the countryside of Aleppo, Latakia and Idlib Civil Defense in Gaza: 85 martyrs and 301 injured since the start of genocide war Dozens of martyrs and wounded as a result of the continued Israeli aggression on Lebanon New testimonies of prisoners from Gaza reveal that the occupation continues to commit atrocities The hero martyr Lieutenant Shaaban Hamoud Al-Akkari Occupation forces detain 11 Palestinians, demolish 5 facilities in the occupied West Bank Président Al-Assad Congratulates Sultan Al Said on the Occasion of the 54th National Day of the Sult... Four martyrs and a number of wounded due to the occupation's bombing of Khan Yunis 4 Martyrs and 14 wounded in an Israeli air raid on Mar Elias Street in downtown Beirut Defense Minister meets his Iranian counterpart, Brigadier General Aziz Nasirzadeh Yemeni forces target Israeli enemy sites in Jaffa and Ashkelon with drones Lebanese National Resistance targets Israeli enemy with missiles in Kiryat Shmona settlement Hezbollah confirms martyrdom of its media relations chief