ScratchData LogoScratchData
Back to Raptor_Saurus's profile

Tarbosaurus Vector

RARaptor_Saurus•Created June 13, 2025
Tarbosaurus Vector
14
15
32 views
View on Scratch

Description

Tarbosaurus Vector ————————————————————————— Control: T-> Roar 1 A-> Roar 2 R-> Roar 3 B-> Call 1 O-> Call 2 —————————Description——————————— Tarbosaurus (/ˌtɑːrbəˈsɔːrəs/ TAR-bə-SOR-əs; meaning "alarming lizard") is a genus of large tyrannosaurid dinosaur that lived in Asia during the Late Cretaceous epoch, about 70 million years ago (Maastrichtian age). It contains the single type species: Tarbosaurus bataar, which is known from the Nemegt Formation of Mongolia, with more fragmentary remains found further afield in the Subashi Formation of China. Tarbosaurus is represented by dozens of fossil specimens, including several complete skulls and skeletons. These remains have allowed studies focusing on its phylogeny, skull mechanics, and brain structure. Further fossil remains have been reported from other geologic formations of Asia, however, these remains are fragmentary and cannot be confidently assigned to Tarbosaurus or the type species. Like most known tyrannosaurids, Tarbosaurus was a large bipedal predator, with the type specimen measuring approximately 10 metres (33 ft) long, 3 metres (9.8 ft) tall at the hips, and weighing up to 4.5–5 metric tons (5.0–5.5 short tons). It had a unique locking mechanism in its jaw, equipped with about sixty large teeth, and the smallest arms relative to body size of all tyrannosaurids, renowned for their disproportionately tiny, two-fingered hands. Although many species have been named, modern paleontologists recognize only one species, T. bataar. Some experts see this species as an Asian representative of the North American genus Tyrannosaurus, which would make the genus Tarbosaurus redundant. Tarbosaurus and Tyrannosaurus, if not synonymous, are considered to be very closely related genera. Alioramus, also from Mongolia, has previously been thought by some authorities to be the closest relative of Tarbosaurus, though this has since been disproven with the discovery of Qianzhousaurus and the description of the tyrannosaurine tribe Alioramini. Tarbosaurus lived in a humid floodplain dominated by deserts, forests and plains, and criss-crossed by river channels. In this environment, it was an apex predator preying on other large dinosaurs, like ankylosaurids, such as Tarchia and Saichania, hadrosaurids, such as Saurolophus and Barsboldia, and sauropods, such as Nemegtosaurus and Opisthocoelicaudia. Although slightly smaller than Tyrannosaurus, Tarbosaurus was one of the largest tyrannosaurines, with the type specimen PIN 551–1 measuring approximately 10 metres (33 ft) long, 3 metres (9.8 ft) tall at the hips, and weighing up to 4.5–5 metric tons (5.0–5.5 short tons). Other adult specimens were a bit smaller, as MPC-D 107/2, ZPAL.MgD-I/4 and PIN 552-1 likely weighed around 2.2 metric tons (2.4 short tons) to 3.4 metric tons (3.7 short tons). The largest known Tarbosaurus skull is about 1.35 m (4.4 ft) long, which is larger than that of all other tyrannosaurids, aside from Tyrannosaurus. ——————————Credits——————————— firebolt_9 Earth Museum Scientists Cretaceous Tarbosaurus Raptor_Saurus If Used, Credit Me. Music: Path of Titans —————————————————————————

Project Details

Project ID1188208485
CreatedJune 13, 2025
Last ModifiedJune 15, 2025
SharedJune 15, 2025
Visibilityvisible
CommentsAllowed

Remix Information

Parent ProjectView Parent
Root ProjectView Root