En nuestro último programa hablamos de la reciente monografía sobre Eotyrannus lengi, del Cretácico inglés (artículo aquí: https://t.co/JWjdVbvxcf). Escucha "Prehistoric Dominion" si todavía no lo has hecho! https://t.co/QGObnLhQuN https://t.co/KQrfLNrJbq
As @TetZoo wrote in the paper: https://t.co/6bgSJRY2tt, ischium and pubis bones are unknown for Eotyrannus, but we have ilium. So I post an ilium photograph from the paper cause it is truly important: THE ONLY KNOWN part of a pelvis in the single Eotyrannus holotype. WOW!!! https://t.co/BVXPJRKY5C
arms with a sickle-like claw for striking prey, whereas the classic tyrannosaurids evolved short two-fingered arms whose exact mechanism of action remains unclear.
https://t.co/HpZv223qDC