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New Study Links T. Rex’s Tiny Arms to Powerful Skulls

The analysis points to convergent arm reduction tied to stronger heads across several dinosaur lineages.

Overview

  • The peer-reviewed study, published Tuesday in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, examined 82 theropod species and found five independent cases of forelimb shortening.
  • Researchers report a stronger link between short arms and skull robusticity, a measure of skull strength and bite power, than with overall body or skull size.
  • A new skull-strength metric placed T. rex first for bite force, with the South American giant Tyrannotitan next.
  • The team argues that growing herbivore prey likely pushed some predators to rely on jaws over claws and notes the results show correlation, not proven cause.
  • Patterns varied by lineage, with abelisaurids such as Majungasaurus shortening parts past the elbow while tyrannosaurids shrank whole arms proportionally, and Carnotaurus had the tiniest forearms.