lo fi samurai

Home
Get Email Updates
A Mad Poem Addressed to My Nephews and Nieces
reading recommendations
Email Me

Admin Password

Remember Me

163841 Curiosities served
Share on Facebook

Death of a Giant
Previous Entry :: Next Entry

Read/Post Comments (2)

There's something about this story... Hmmm, I wonder what else it could be applied to? A giant brought down not by another giant, but rather by tiny, unseeable pathogens. An enemy from within that corrodes and kills. Does that sound familiar to anyone?

T. Rex Likely Cut Down by Tiny Parasite

Sept. 30, 2009 -- Tyrannosaurus rex and its close relatives suffered from the potentially life-threatening disease trichomonosis, which is still carried by pigeons, a study published Wednesday showed.

Some of the world's most famous T.rex specimens, such as "Sue" at the Field Museum in Chicago and the specimen at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, have holes in the lower jaw, which is a classic symptom of trichomonosis, the study by a team of U.S. and Australian researchers showed.

"The holes in tyrannosaur jaws occur in exactly the same place as in modern birds with trichomonosis," said Ewan Wolff, a paleontologist from the University of Wisconsin-Madison who worked on the study.

"The shape of the holes and the way that they merge into the surrounding bone is very similar in both animals," Wolff said.

Trichomonosis is carried mainly by pigeons these days, but they are generally immune to the disease. Birds of prey are particularly susceptible to trichomonosis if they eat infected pigeons.

Paleontologists previously thought the holes in T.rex were caused by tooth gouges or bacterial infections, but according to the study, which was published in the peer-reviewed open-access PLoS ONE, the position and nature of the holes indicate that the dinosaur had a trichomonosis-type disease.

The disease appeared to be quite common in tyrannosaurs and could have been deadly to those that were infected.

"As the parasites take hold in serious infections, lesions form around the jaw and inside the throat, eventually eating away the bone. As the lesions grow, the animal has trouble swallowing food and may eventually starve to death," said Steve Salisbury of the University of Queensland.

Researchers have found no other dinosaurs that had the disease, and believe it was spread between tyrannosaurs by biting or even through cannibalism.


It's hard to know for sure what really killed the mighty Tyrannosaurus, but this is a powerful metaphor about the temporary power of brute strength.


Read/Post Comments (2)

Previous Entry :: Next Entry

Back to Top

Powered by JournalScape © 2001-2010 JournalScape.com. All rights reserved.
All content rights reserved by the author.
custsupport@journalscape.com