EarthDate
Remember the movie Jurassic Park? Or every time you’ve seen a reconstruction of a T. rex in a museum? Probably the image that sticks with you is the exposed daggers of fearsome teeth. Well, some Canadian grad students may have proven that image wrong. They discovered something rather elemental: T. rex teeth have very thin enamel. Even thinner than the enamel on mammal teeth. But early paleontologists had based their tyrannosaur reconstructions on crocodiles and alligators, which have exposed teeth. It turns out that the enamel on their teeth is very thick, enough to withstand constant drying out and wear from their environment. Teeth with thin enamel need to be protected and kept wet with saliva. And for that, you need lips. That’s why most lizards have them. The Komodo dragon, for instance. It’s one of the few living reptiles that has teeth like a therapod dinosaur. But you’ve probably never seen them, because they’re hidden behind the lizard’s scaly lips. A closer examination of their tooth and jaw structure, and those of other modern lizards, has indeed revealed that theropod mouth anatomy more closely resembled lizards than crocodiles. So T. rex probably had a face like a Komodo dragon. And like them, probably lacked the muscles to expose its teeth in a fearsome snarl. That toothy grin may sell movies. But in reality, T. rex had lizard lips.
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