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Tyrannosaurus Rex: Dominant Predator In The Late Cretaceous Period

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Tyrannosaurus Rex: Dominant Predator In The Late Cretaceous Period
Tyrannosaurus Rex was the dominant predator in the late Cretaceous period. The Tyrannosaurus Rex, or T-Rex for short, lived about 85 million to 65 million years ago. T-Rex often resided in moist, humid, semi-tropical areas, usually near rivers or forested swamps. T-Rex fossils have been found in North America and Mongolia. The T-Rex was a large, dangerous predator that walked on two powerful legs. It had tiny arms with two fingers each. Their feet resembled birds and were fully equipped with gargantuan claws. Its tail was stiff and pointed, which helped it run. Tyrannosaurus was not a very fast runner and it needed all the help it could get. T-Rex had a solid, muscular body that was up to 40 feet long and 20 feet tall. This beast was estimated to have weighed five to seven tons! …show more content…
Its jaws were up to four feet long and had around 50 bone crushing teeth that ranged from one to nine inches. A T-Rex could eat up to 500 pounds of meat–in one bite! The T-Rex's jaw was designer to had upper overbite. This meant that when the jaws closed, the upper jaw fit inside of the parts of the lower jaw. The Tyrannosaurus' skin was much like the skin of an alligator, having a scaly, hard texture. The T-Rex's head was made for hunting. It had large visual lobes in its brain that processed information quickly. This allowed for depth perception. The T-Rex also had large areas of the brain that processed

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