[NEW] Scientists Discover a Gigantic Feathered Tyrannosaur | yutyrannus – Australia.xemloibaihat

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The skull of Yutyrannus

Science is awesome. I know this because paleontologists have just announced the discovery of a giant, feather-covered tyrannosaur.

The freshly described dinosaur—dubbed Yutyrannus huali by Xu Xing and co-authors—stretched about 30 feet long as an adult. Thanks to the fine preservation of three skeletons that represent this roughly 125-million-year-old carnivore, we know that much of this dinosaur’s body was covered in fine, wispy feathers. These were not flight feathers or down that you might see on a modern bird, but simpler structures best described as dino-fuzz. This makes Yutyrannus the largest creature with observed plumage ever to have lived.

I have been waiting for Yutyrannus or something like it for a long time. The dinosaur is a beautiful confirmation of an evolutionary hypothesis made years ago. In 2004, Xu and collaborators described a much smaller tyrant: Dilong paradoxus, which lived only about five million years before Yutyrannus, was a small coelurosaur with a coat of simple fuzz. And Dilong appears to have been an archaic tyrannosauroid, a dinosaur near the base of the family that contained later tyrants such as Gorgosaurus and Teratophoneus. If a tyrannosauroid had feathers, and almost every other lineage closely related to the tyrannosauroids had feathers, then even Tyrannosaurus rex might have been at least partly coated in plumage.

Giant tyrannosaurs with feathers was a respectable idea, but there was no direct evidence. In North America, at least, tyrannosaurs were not entombed in the kind of environments with the high-fidelity preservation potential for feathers to make it into the fossil record. And, while they have frustratingly never been published, rumored specimens of tyrannosaur skin have hinted that adult animals had naked hides. Maybe tyrannosaur chicks were fluffy while adults, no longer needing an insulating coat, lost their feathers.

Not everyone has been on board with the idea of fluffy tyrannosaurs. The humor website Cracked.com listed an illustration of a feather-covered Tyrannosaurus one as of “17 Images That Will Ruin Your Childhood,” and the same image posted at BuzzFeed attracted more than a few negative responses. (“Dear god no!” wailed on commenter.) The smooth-skinned monsters of the Jurassic Park franchise remained the canonical pop culture image of everything a Tyrannosaurus should be.

I was ecstatic when news of Yutyrannus reached by inbox. Killjoy that I am, I loved the idea that the dinosaur made it all the more likely that other big tyrannosaurs were at least partly covered in filamentous protofeathers. I have no sympathy for immature attachment to traditional visions of scaly, drab tyrannosaurs. And, despite all the cries of “Ow! My childhood!” in reaction to feathered dinosaurs, Tyrannosaurus and kin would have been just as fearsome as ever. As tyrannosaur expert Thomas Holtz pointed out in a National Geographic news item, feathers “might make a little more amusing, but only until the point right before it tears you to shreds.”

The extent of feathers on Yutyrannus and other tyrannosaurs isn’t entirely clear. Although I think Brian Choo’s illustrations of Yutyrannus are fantastic, and a full coat of fuzz is a fair hypothesis, patches of feathers were only found in a few places among the three specimens: the tail, hip, foot, neck and arm. That’s enough to hypothesize that much of the dinosaur was covered in feathers, but there’s always the possibility that non-avian dinosaurs had feathers on some parts of their bodies and not on others. Any restoration opting for either pattern is a hypothesis based on the available evidence.

Still, the discovery of any feathers at all means that we might find out what color Yutyrannus was. Microscopic studies of dinosaur feathers have helped establish the palettes of small feathered dinosaurs such as Anchiornis, Archaeopteryx and Microraptor. Now there’s the possibility of unlocking tyrannosaur colors, too. Was Yutyrannus mostly covered in dark plumage, like the other dinosaurs studied so far? Or did the tyrannosaur have a different color scheme? I guess we’ll have to wait and see—according to an interview with Xu on the Nature podcast, this research is already underway.

In spite of my overwhelming excitement about all this, though, there are two wrinkles in the story. The first is that there is a slight possibility that Yutyrannus may not actually be a tyrannosaur. As paleontologist Darren Naish points out at Tetrapod Zoology, Yutyrannus shows some subtle similarities to carcharodontosaurids, a subgroup of large predatory dinosaurs more closely related to Allosaurus. Exactly where Yutyrannus fits in the dinosaur family tree awaits confirmation by way of future analyses.

Should Yutyrannus turn out to be something other than a tyrannosauroid, that would immediately make the predator that much more important. At first, it seemed that only coelurosaurs—the group containing tyrannosauroids and sundry other theropod lineages, including birds—had feathers. Then paleontologists discovered feather-like structures on two very distantly related dinosaurs—the small ceratopsian Psittacosaurus and the diminutive, bipedal herbivore Tianyulong. (Following that, the carcharodontosaurid Concavenator supposedly showed evidence of bristles on its arms, but this evidence has been disputed.)

The spread of feathers and feather-like structures among dinosaurs might mean that secondary body coverings evolved at least twice on two different sides of the dinosaur family tree. Or it might indicate that simplified integument was a common trait shared among dinosaurs—a very old feature that was retained in some groups and lost in others. And here’s where Yutyrannus comes in. If Yutyrannus is not a coelurosaur but a carcharodontosaurid or something else, then it adds another feathery point in the dinosaur family tree and suggests that a wider array of dinosaurs had feather-like body coverings.

Yutyrannus isn’t even the only dinosaur that may shake things up. A smaller, earlier theropod called Juravenator was preserved with traces of dinofuzz, and there have been rumors that this dinosaur might turn out to be something other than a coelurosaur. Much remains to be established and tested, but the emerging picture is that several dinosaur lineages—very distantly related to birds—had secondary body coverings of one sort or another. It wouldn’t be altogether surprising if Yutyrannus turned out to be additional evidence of this trend. For now, though, the primary hypothesis is that Yutyrannus was an archaic form of tyrant dinosaur.

According to comments Xu made during a Nature podcast interview, the behavior of Yutyrannus may have made the predator even sexier still. The paper mentions three Yutyrannus individuals of different sizes, all found together. Other bonebeds of multiple tyrannosaurs have been used to propose that tyrant dinosaurs were highly coordinated pack hunters, and Xu follows suits with this discovery. Since the three predators were found together in the same quarry, and a sauropod skeleton has also turned up at the site, Xu says that the Yutyrannus were members of a pack that attacked the even bigger sauropod. For some unknown reason, all died together.

I’m not convinced that this was the case. Bonebeds are tricky things—there are many reasons why multiple skeletons may come to rest in the same place. The animals could have been forced into a relatively small area by flooding or storms, they could have died elsewhere and all been washed into the same place, or the site could have been some sort of predator trap. Very careful analysis of the geology and taphonomy of such sites is required to figure out why all those bodies wound up in the same place, and we shouldn’t take the association of skeletons at face value when trying to reconstruct dinosaur behavior. Could tyrannosaurs have hunted in groups? Certainly. But solid evidence for rapacious packs of big tyrannosaurs has yet to be found.

Alone or in coordinated social groups, though, Yutyrannus must have been a fantastic sight. Discoveries like this beautifully underscore just how wonderful dinosaurs really were. If previous discoveries hadn’t led us to expect the existence of this fuzzy dinosaurian hypercarnivore, I sincerely doubt that we could have imagined such a creature.

See also: Posts about Yutyrannus by Dave Hone and Ed Yong.

References:

Xu, X., Norell, M., Kuang, X., Wang, X., Zhao, Q., & Jia, C. (2004). Basal tyrannosauroids from China and evidence for protofeathers in tyrannosauroids Nature, 431 (7009), 680-684 DOI: 10.1038/nature02855

Xu, X., Wang, K., Zhang, K., Ma, Q., Xing, L., Sullivan, C., Hu, D., Cheng, S., & Wang, S. (2012). A gigantic feathered dinosaur from the Lower Cretaceous of China Nature, 484 (7392), 92-95 DOI: 10.1038/nature10906

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[Update] Todo sobre Yutyrannus【 Guía Ark: Survival Evolved 】 | yutyrannus – Australia.xemloibaihat

Información básica y tameo

Como muchos depredadores más grandes, Yutyrannus es un depredador ápice agresivo que caza al más grande de los herbívoros y a los carnívoros más pequeños, con la excepción del Carnotaurus en su propia manada. Sin interrupción, se sabe que se enfrentan y abruman a las presas en su número e inducen el miedo en sus enemigos con su rugido.

Yutyrannus es un gran dinosaurio carnívoro que tiene una cabeza larga, una cresta baja en el hocico y un par de cuernos por encima de los ojos. Su cuerpo está cubierto de plumas gruesas y esponjosas, excluyendo las manos, los pies y la cara, donde tiene una apariencia más tradicionalmente escamosa. A diferencia de su pariente más grande, el Rex, tiene brazos largos con tres dedos con garras.

Cómo tamear Yutyrannus

Seguro que te gustaría tamear este fantastico dino. Por lo tanto os dejamos un vídeo para que sepáis tamearlo.

Utilidad

  • Apoyo de tropas: La rugido de coraje de Yutyrannus aumenta temporalmente el daño de ataque infligido por las criaturas aliadas en un 25% y reduce el daño entrante que reciben en un 20% cada una. Esto puede ser muy útil en batallas masivas o cuando luchas contra jefes.
  • Intimidación: La miedo que induce rugido de Yutyrannus también aterroriza a las criaturas enemigas, incluso cuando está montado por un jugador. Esto los deja débiles para atacar de otros animales y jugadores de la tribu. Las criaturas afectadas recibirán una desventaja que aumentará el daño recibido y reducirá el daño infligido hasta en un 50% y 30% respectivamente. Con miedo total, la criatura aterrorizada huirá y no responderá a las órdenes. Además, un Yutyrannus rugiente es una vista aterradora e incluso puede asustar a otros supervivientes.

Las siguientes criaturas se volverán hostiles en lugar de huir después de escuchar el rugido de miedo de Yutyrannus:

  • Allosaurus
  • Basilisco
  • Depredador de sangre
  • Carbonemys
  • Calicoterio
  • Ferox (grande)
  • Kentrosaurus
  • Magmasaur
  • Mamut
  • Managarmr
  • Estegosaurio
  • Tek Stegosaurus
  • Triceratops
  • Paraceratherium
  • Rey Reaper
  • Reaper Queen
  • Rock Drake
  • Terizinosaurio
  • Yutyrannus
  • Kaprosuchus

Las siguientes criaturas ignoran el Rugido de miedo de Yutyrannus, incluidas todas las criaturas Alfa, todas las criaturas Brutas y todos los Jefes y sus secuaces:

  • Astrocetus
  • Brontosaurio
  • Deathworm
  • Megachelon
  • Gigantosauro
  • Rex
  • Espino
  • Tek Rex
  • Titanosaurio
  • Wyvern

Tenga en cuenta que todas las criaturas dentro del alcance de los tambores del Mamut con la montura del Mamut también ignorarán el Rugido de miedo de Yutyrannus.

  • Recolección de fertilizantes: Una vez que una criatura salvaje ha alcanzado el efecto completo del miedo, no solo huirá, sino que también defecará en el proceso. El jugador es libre de desmontar y recolectar las heces. Inducir miedo a un grupo de criaturas débiles como Dilos puede producir fácilmente de 5 a 10 heces. Además, Yutyrannus en una granja de kibbles producirá heces grandes más que suficientes para que los escarabajos peloteros las conviertan en fertilizante.
  • Caza: Casi lo mismo que un Rex solo y tener la capacidad de potenciar un paquete y hacer que Carnos salvaje luche de tu lado usando el rugido de poder sobre ellos hace que Yutyrannus sea uno de los mejores cazadores y monturas más versátiles del juego. Además, la reacción violenta del ataque de rugido y mordisco lo hace incapaz de ser golpeado por criaturas pequeñas o medianas cuando se usa con habilidad.
  • Provocación: Las criaturas corruptas del DLC Extinction son provocadas por el rugido «Fear», lo que hace que ataquen a los Yutyrannus en lugar de correr. Las criaturas afectadas aún sufren una desventaja para recibir un daño mayor y causar daño reducido. Esto puede ser útil cuando se defiende el nodo de elemento (extinción) y la caída de suministro orbital (extinción), ya que el rugido se puede usar para alejar a los enemigos del objetivo. Asegúrate de tener una domesticación poderosa para defender a Yutyrannus, especialmente en las dificultades más altas.
  • Transporte: Como todas las demás criaturas enormes, Yutyrannus puede llevar mucho. (Nivel de peso, velocidad, resistencia)
  • Montura de batalla: Con la misma salud base y solo un poco menos de daño que un Rex y una velocidad más rápida que un Allosaurus, las habilidades adicionales del Yutyrannus pueden convertirlo en una montura superior para el líder de una batalla a gran escala. Sin embargo, mantén los ojos abiertos para domar a los más poderosos del otro lado; Recuerda que si bien su velocidad y sus fuerzas de apoyo pueden convertirla en la mejor montura desde la que liderar tus fuerzas, no necesariamente la convierten en la mejor opción para enfrentarse en duelo con domadores de alto nivel, especialmente aquellos en la lista de criaturas de las que ignoran el rugido. Miedo por completo. Esto, combinado con la velocidad de ataque lenta del Yutyrannus y el hecho de que tanto el Rugido intimidante como el Grito de batalla solo afectan el área frente al Yutyrannus, significa que es mejor conducir desde atrás. (Nivel de salud, daño cuerpo a cuerpo, resistencia)
  • Montura de guerra: El mismo Yutyrannus hace bastante daño. Sin embargo, es mejor evitar una pelea con otros dinosaurios carnívoros grandes, ya que ignoran el rugido intimidante. Debido a la larga animación de ataque de Yutyrannus, no es extraño perder una pelea contra un Rex o un Spino.
  • Extraordinaria producción de kibbles: Aunque Yutyrannus prefiere kibbles extraordinarias, sus huevos se pueden obtener pasivamente y utilizarse para hacer kibbles extraordinarias (como los huevos de Deinonychus y Magmasaur). Esto puede hacer que Yutyrannus sea la única criatura que se haya necesitado para comer kibbles, ya que las kibbles extraordinarias son efectivas para domesticar a cualquier criatura dócil, aunque usar kibbles extraordinarias en criaturas mucho menores puede ser muy agotador. Tenga en cuenta que si va a una granja de huevos de Yutyrannus, solo se necesitan Yutyrannus de bajo nivel.

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Ark Crystal Isles | THUẦN HÓA YUTYRANNUS LEVEL CỰC CAO và CHẠY ĐI ĐÂU CON SÂU

Yutyrannus Evolution


Yutyrannus Evolution

Dinosaur Size Comparison: Ark Survival – Jurassic Park


The dinosaurs in the game Ark Survival Evolved differ quite a bit from real dinosaurs. I’ve played this game for hundreds of hours since it was released in early acces. The dinos in ark aren’t supposed to be realistic, and are designed to look more impressive. After all these years I have grown accustomed to the dinos in ark.
One day I was crawling along the beach in third person, when I bumbep into a lystrosaurus. I then noticed it was about as long as a human, and bigger than my character in overall size. I had always found them really small, but this made me realize how big, and sometimes even enormous the creatures in ark are.
So I decided to measure the size of some of the dinos in ark, and compare them with dinosaurs from jurassic world, and jurassic park.
I’ve used the wall structures and responder node to find out how big they are.
Music by Kevin MacLeod:
\”Fretless\” Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
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Dinosaur Size Comparison: Ark Survival - Jurassic Park

Dinosaurs 4K | Yutyrannus – super predator | NEW PREHISTORY | Dinosaur video


Yutyrannus (meaning \”feathered tyrant\”) were large bipedal predators. The holotype and oldestknown specimen has an estimated length of 9 metres (29.5 ft) and an estimated weight of about 1,414 kilograms (3,117 lb)
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Dinosaurs 4K | Yutyrannus - super predator | NEW PREHISTORY | Dinosaur video

Paleo Profile – Yutyrannus


Today we start a new series called: Paleo Profile, where I examine the lesser known but still very interesting prehistoric creatures! Today we have Yutyrannus, the largest feathered dinosaur and relative of T. rex!
Music: Walking with Dinosaurs Soundtrack
Disclaimer to owners of copyrighted images:
At the time of this video’s creation I didn’t fully understand copyright and fair use, so dear owners of images used in the video, if I displayed any images without your permission and/or without crediting you please forgive me. At the time I did not understand and I apologize. Please contact me to credit you if I neglected to.
Please notify me if I neglected to credit your work in the video.
I believe all copyrighted footage and images in this video are protected under FAIR USE for reasons of Commentary, Education, Criticism, Parody, and Social Satire.
Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research.
All copyrighted images belong to their respected owners
Yutyrannus. by FrankLode (http://franklode.deviantart.com/)
Yutyrannus_huali by cheungchungtat (http://cheungchungtat.deviantart.com/)
Yutyrannus by Olorotitan (http://olorotitan.deviantart.com/)
Yutyrannus huali gadding from black flies by Psithyrus (http://psithyrus.deviantart.com/)
Yutyrannus huali Skeleton by FranzJosef73 (http://franzjosef73.deviantart.com/)
Yutyrannus huali Border patrol by Gogosardina (http://gogosardina.deviantart.com/)
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Source:
https://archosaurmusings.files.wordpress.com/2012/04/yutyrannus_reconstruction_new.jpg
http://www.dinochecker.com/dinosaurs/YUTYRANNUS
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yutyrannus
http://olorotitan.deviantart.com/art/Yutyrannus294809007
http://psithyrus.deviantart.com/art/Yutyrannushualigaddingfromblackflies341554861
http://cheungchungtat.deviantart.com/art/Yutyrannushuali294243661
http://franklode.deviantart.com/art/Yutyrannus300159263
Footage Taken from:
March of the Dinosaurs
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Paleo Profile - Yutyrannus

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