‘Deep-snouted’ tyrannosaur fossils uncovered at construction site

‘Asiatyrannus xui’ may have been first of its kind to stomp across southeastern China.
Asiatyrannus xui skull close up

‘A. xui’ is named after one of the world’s most famous paleontologists. Credit: Scientific Reports

As one of the most iconic dinosaurs to ever roam the planet, the Tyrannosaurus rex gets more than its fair share of attention—so much fanfare, in fact, that many people still may not know T. rex had many evolutionary siblings. After first arriving roughly 165 million years ago, the Tyrannosauridae subfamily eventually grew to include at least 30 tyrannosaurid species. And according to a team of paleontologists, there’s at least one more species to add to the list: a “deep-snouted” tyrannosaurid they are calling Asiatyrannus xui.

Detailed in a new study published July 25 in the journal Scientific Reports, researchers at China’s Zhejiang Museum of Natural History believe fossil remains recovered in 2017 at a construction site in Ganzhou City belong to this new, smaller A. xui species. Dating indicates the dinosaur lived somewhere between 66 and 72 million years ago during the Late Cretaceous epoch, and can be considered a “small to-medium-sized” tyrannosaurine. After examining the tail, hind legs, partial vertebrae, and 47.5 cm (18.7 in) skull, experts believe A. xui grew as long as 13-feet from nose-to-tail—about half the size of its regional relative, Qianzhousaurus.

Diagram of A. xui skeleton findings
Fossil remains of Asiatyrannus xui. Credit: Scientific Reports

Further review indicates that compared to QianzhousaurusA. xui featured a “proportionally deeper snout, longer premaxilla, deeper maxilla, and deeper dentary” while lacking a “discrete horn” development. Paleontologists do note, however, that their specimen does not appear to be a fully grown adult, although it likely already passed through most growth stages. Examiners also believe these physical differences are what helped ensure A. xui’s survival in the region for millions of years. Because of its size and features, A. xui likely preyed on smaller, faster animals than its larger tyrannosaur family members.

“In southeastern China, the Qianzhousaurus undoubtedly occupied the apex predator [role],” the team writes in their study, “but Asiatyrannus might represent the small to medium-sized theropod niche between the large-bodied Qianzhousaurus and the diversified small-bodied oviraptorosaurs.”

[Related: Scaly lips may have hidden the T-rex’s fearsome teeth.]

A. xui is also notable in that it represents the first deep-snouted tyrannosaur found in southern China. Due to this new location, the team believes their new dinosaur may bolster the theory that tyrannosaurids migrated to the region later than previously estimated. It is widely believed tyrannosaurids first originated on an island known as Laramidia, which existed in what is now North America’s west coast.

As to the origins of A. xui’s name—it may not be the “king” of the dinosaurs, but it does pay homage to researcher Xu Xing, credited for naming more dinosaurs than any living paleontologist.