(An important caveat before we start this discussion is that the following is based on tyrannosaurids generally, not D. horneri specifically, because the horneri study does not include photographs of its alleged epidermal correlates. The D. horneri paper describes them very well (see Carr et al. 2017, supplementary data), but it's difficult to evaluate them without images of the bone surfaces themselves. Dave "Tyrannosaur Chronicles" Hone needs a shout out here for sharing his expertise and extensive image library of tyrant fossils as I prepared this post - though I have some experience with tyrannosaur bones and their interpretation, this article has been considerably improved by his involvement.)
Tyrannosaurids and crocodylians: face off
An obvious place to begin this discussion is crocodylian facial structure. Crocodylian skulls are so familiar that it's easy to forget how distinctive they are among modern animals, and I don't think it's widely known that their skin plays a significant role in shaping their skull tissues. Crocodylian jaw bones have incredibly high numbers of foramina, with averages of 100 in each major jaw bone (premaxilla, maxilla and dentary) and over 1000 in each bone in some specimens (Morhardt 2009). These openings are the loci around which gnarly ridges and tubercles grow by a process of dermal ossification: tissues from the skin are turned to bone and build up the sculpting on the skull surface (Grigg and Kirshner 2015; de Buffrénil et al. 2015). Simultaneously, the bone immediately surrounding the foramina is resorbed, enhancing the rugosity pattern further and creating that highly distinctive, deeply pitted and grooved crocodylian skull texture (de Buffrénil et al. 2015). This restructuring can be extensive and, over ontogeny, crocodylian snout surface area can increase by as much as 20% (de Buffrénil et al. 2015). That's a major reworking of the superficial bone of the skull, and their skin has a major role in its development.Skull of a mature American crocodile, Crocodylus acutus, demonstrating that classic crocodylian skull texture. Cropped from public domain Wikimedia image by Daderot. |
Juvenile alligator, Alligator mississippiensis, showing virtually crack-free facial skin - it's only adults that develop the extensively cracked, superficially 'scaly' faces. Photo by Joxerra Aihartza, from Wikimedia, FAL 1.3. |
Firstly, although tyrannosaurids have elevated numbers of jaw foramina compared to other dinosaurs, their numbers are, on average, significantly lower than those of crocodylians (Morhardt 2009). No tyrannosaurid jaw bone reported by Morhardt (2009) exceeds 81 foramina, which is high for a dinosaur, but still short of the crocodylian average, and well below the 1000+ figure reported for some croc jaws. Interestingly, data in Morhardt (2009) suggests that foramina numbers weakly correlate to jaw size: the longer a jaw is, the more foramina it generally has. This trend is particularly well shown in her tyrannosaurid sample but seems true of other fossil and extant animal groups as well, and might also be reflected in ontogeny (smaller Tyrannosaurus have fewer foramina, on average, than large ones). The cause behind this trend seems to be elusive at present - might it reflect a change in tissue type with age (Morhardt 2009)? does it reflect demands of supplying an absolutely larger jaw with nervous and vascular tissues? - but whatever the reason, it implies that we should consider foramina frequency proportionate to jaw size when analysing rugosity profiles. Under this metric, foramina values in crocodylian jaws are even more impressive as, compared to some extinct animals, their skulls are of middling size. By contrast, the slightly above-average foramina counts of even the largest tyrannosaurines seem less significant because, even with extreme jaw size, they don't attain a value comparable to a much smaller alligator. If we remove size from our consideration by comparing similarly-sized tyrant and croc jaws, we find they are worlds apart in terms of jaw perforation. Indeed, the foramina values of smaller tyrants are nothing special - they are comparable to most other similarly-sized tetrapods (Morhardt 2009). Presumably, this explains why - as many internet conversations have pointed out - tyrannosaurid jaws simply don't have that same obvious, pitted surface as those of crocodylians.
Further differences might be noted in relative foramina sizes. Those foramina occurring high on tyrant snouts - such as at the top of the maxilla - are much smaller than the broader, obviously deep labial foramina paralleling the jaws (Brochu 2003; Carr et al. 2017). In crocodylians however, jaw foramina seem to have a lower size range. Foramina shape and size is an important consideration for facial tissues (Hieronymus et al. 2009) and this might imply different tyrant facial tissues over the side of the snout vs. those at the jawline, whereas the more uniform foramina sizes of crocodylians are entirely consistent with their homogeneous jaw skin.
Finally, we can observe that the ontogeny of tyrannosaurid skull textures is not at all crocodylian-like. Tyrants do have some sculpting on their jaw bones and, as with most reptiles, these become better defined with maturity (e.g. Evans 2008; de Buffrénil et al. 2015). However, even the most rugose tyrannosaurid skulls do not match the complex and sharply pitted rugosity patterns of mature crocodylians (e.g. Osborn 1912; Carr et al. 1999; 2017; Brochu 2003; Hone et al. 2011). Given that ossifying facial skin is a direct factor in jaw bone sculpting in crocodylians, the lack of comparable development in tyrannosaurids is a blow to the idea that their faces bore the same dermal regime. Histological examination of tyrannosaurid jaw bones for might have further insight here, as the resorption/remodelling pattern might reveal details about bone/dermal interactions (Witzmann et al. 2010; de Buffrénil et al. 2015) but, for now, this inconsistency seems to be a big hole in the idea that tyrannosaurids had crocodylian-grade facial tissues.
Does the tyrannosaurid EPB help here?
Collectively, these points seem to suggest that tyrant jaws are not as croc-like as argued, and that it's not a given that the two groups had similar facial tissues. A counterargument to this is that crocodylians are the best tyrant analogues in their extant phylogenetic bracket (EPB), and thus give us our best, most phylogenetically informed insight into tyrannosaurid faces. Indeed, the croc-snouted tyrant hypothesis was informed primarily by comparisons with taxa from the tyrannosaurid EPB - specifically the skulls of birds and alligators (Carr et al. 2017) and, sure, crocs and tyrannosaurid jaws may not be exactly alike, but they're undeniably more similar to each other than either is to a bird. Might we concede that the comparisons aren't perfect, but that this is simply the best we can do without violating the tyrannosaurid EPB?Our issue is that, while the EPB is a terrific method for predicting ancient anatomies, it really struggles with the complexity of archosaur facial tissue evolution, perhaps to the extent of being redundant. One major issue is that we can be near certain early archosaurs had neither croc- or bird-like facial tissues because no species representing the earliest phases of archosaur evolution have comparable skin-influenced jaw textures (see Nesbitt et al. 2013, and papers therein). Rather, we only see these features developing in relatively crownward archosaur groups, implying independent development of their respective facial anatomies well after the croc-bird split. This being the case, the common archosaur ancestor must have had a different set of facial tissues, and the facial anatomy of extant archosaurs may tell us little about the faces of Mesozoic dinosaurs.
So, if not croc-like, what might be happening here?
If croc-skinned tyrant snouts are problematic, what are our other options? Our discussion above really only pertains to the maxillary region of tyrannosaurid snouts and, for the rest of the skull, I think Carr et al. (2017) nailed it: what I've seen of tyrannosaurid skulls suggests the orbital region and skull roofs were covered in cornified sheaths, armoured dermis and large scales. There seems to be quite a bit of variation in these tissues, with some taxa having more defined scale correlates over the nasals than others, as well as differences in elaborations of the hornlets above the eye. In all likelihood, different tyrant species would be highly recognisable in life by the development of scales, armour and horn across the top of their faces. These armoured tissues are entirely consistent with what we understand of tyrannosaurid behaviour: if you were being routinely bitten about the face by another tyrannosaur, you'd want some protection too (see opening image).other arguments for extra-oral tissues the case for crocodylian-like exposed teeth is looking increasingly doubtful. I must admit to thinking that proponents of exposed dinosaur teeth really need to start making better cases for this idea: most ways we can slice this particular debate suggests that extra-oral tissues are looking likely (and no, the common argument that their teeth were too big to be sheathed isn't valid: it's simply a speculation based on incredulity, not actual data from dinosaur skulls).
So...
To sum up this long, detail-heavy post:- Crocodylian skull textures are basically built by their skin, and we should expect any prehistoric animal with croc-like facial tissues to have a croc-like cranial rugosity profile. What we see in tyrannosaurs is a little croc-like, but only superficially. Differences between croc and tyrant skull tissues may be more significant than their similarities and seem to contradict the notion of croc-like facial tissues in tyrannosaurids.
- Attempts to ground discussions of dinosaur facial tissue in the EPB are problematic: a great deal of what we know about archosaur facial tissue refutes what the EPB predicts. Basic comparative anatomy, framed by a wide phylogenetic bracket, might be the way forward for understanding dinosaur faces.
- Tyrant faces - as largely predicted by Carr et al. (2017) - seem to have been adorned with scales, cornified sheaths and armoured dermis, but their jaw regions may have been covered in vertical (perhaps ornamental?) bands of epidermal scales, not croc-like skin. Distribution of epidermal correlates around the jaws of tyrannosaurids (and other dinosaurs) is suspiciously reminiscent of many lizard skulls, and may favour a lipped condition.
Tyrannosaurus rex portrait, based on my take of epidermal correlates of the AMNH 5027 skull. No, you tell it that its ornamental ridges look a bit silly. |
Perhaps unsurprisingly, I couldn't research and write all this without wanting to draw my take on tyrannosaur facial anatomy. I'll leave you with my take on the face of AMNH 5027 (above): I'm sure it'll need modifications as more details on tyrannosaurid faces come to light, but I won't pretend it wasn't neat to draw a Tyrannosaurus based on relatively objective reading of available data. Palaeoart is at it's most exciting when we join dots between data rather than, as is so often the case, largely imagine huge swathes of our subject species. The duelling Tyrannosaurus that welcomed you to the post are based on the same model.
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- Brochu, C. A. (2003). Osteology of Tyrannosaurus rex: insights from a nearly complete skeleton and high-resolution computed tomographic analysis of the skull. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 22, 1-138.
- Carr, T. D. (1999). Craniofacial ontogeny in Tyrannosauridae (Dinosauria, Coelurosauria). Journal of vertebrate Paleontology, 19(3), 497-520.
- Carr, T. D., Varricchio, D. J., Sedlmayr, J. C., Roberts, E. M., & Moore, J. R. (2017). A new tyrannosaur with evidence for anagenesis and crocodile-like facial sensory system. Scientific reports, 7, 44942.
- De Buffrénil, V., Clarac, F., Fau, M., Martin, S., Martin, B., Pellé, E., & Laurin, M. (2015). Differentiation and growth of bone ornamentation in vertebrates: a comparative histological study among the Crocodylomorpha. Journal of morphology, 276(4), 425-445.
- Evans, S. E. (2008). The skull of lizards and tuatara. Biology of the Reptilia, 20, 1-347.
- Grigg, G. (2015). Biology and evolution of crocodylians. Csiro Publishing.
- Hieronymus, T. L. (2009). Osteological correlates of cephalic skin structures in amniota: Documenting the evolution of display and feeding structures with fossil data. Ohio University.
- Hieronymus, T. L., Witmer, L. M., Tanke, D. H., & Currie, P. J. (2009). The facial integument of centrosaurine ceratopsids: morphological and histological correlates of novel skin structures. The Anatomical Record, 292(9), 1370-1396.
- Hone, D. W., Wang, K., Sullivan, C., Zhao, X., Chen, S., Li, D., ... & Xu, X. (2011). A new, large tyrannosaurine theropod from the Upper Cretaceous of China. Cretaceous Research, 32(4), 495-503.
- Frey, E., Tischlinger, H., Buchy, M. C., & Martill, D. M. (2003). New specimens of Pterosauria (Reptilia) with soft parts with implications for pterosaurian anatomy and locomotion. Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 217(1), 233-266.
- Knoll, F. (2008). Buccal soft anatomy in Lesothosaurus (Dinosauria: Ornithischia). Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie-Abhandlungen, 248(3), 355-364.
- Milinkovitch, M. C., Manukyan, L., Debry, A., Di-Poï, N., Martin, S., Singh, D., ... & Zwicker, M. (2013). Crocodile head scales are not developmental units but emerge from physical cracking. Science, 339(6115), 78-81.
- Morhardt, A. C. (2009). Dinosaur smiles: Do the texture and morphology of the premaxilla, maxilla, and dentary bones of sauropsids provide osteological correlates for inferring extra-oral structures reliably in dinosaurs?. Western Illinois University.
- Nesbitt, S. J., Desojo, J. B., & Irmis, R. B. (2013). Anatomy, phylogeny and palaeobiology of early archosaurs and their kin. Geological Society, London, Special Publications, 379(1).
- Osborn, H. F. (1912). Crania of Tyrannosaurus and Allosaurus; Integument of the iguanodont dinosaur Trachodon. Memoirs of the AMNH; new ser., v. 1, pt. 1-2.
- Vickaryous, M. K., A. P. Russell, and P. J. Currie. (2001). Cranial ornamentation of ankylosaurs (Ornithischia: Thyreophora): reappraisal of developmental hypotheses. In K. Carpenter (ed). The Armored Dinosaurs. 318–340. Indiana University Press.
- Witzmann, F., Scholz, H., Mueller, J., & Kardjilov, N. (2010). Sculpture and vascularization of dermal bones, and the implications for the physiology of basal tetrapods. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 160(2), 302-340.
Mark: For the record, did you examine any actual tyrannosaurid fossils for this post? Sincerely, Thomas
ReplyDeletePS: I would have been happy to discuss your concerns with you before this post was made.
Thanks for your comment, Thomas. To answer your question, yes, I have had first-hand experience with several relevant tyrannosaurid specimens (ranging from excellent casts to genuine jaw material), so I'm not green on these animals. I’ll concede that I did not view these specimens in the last month while writing this post, but – as noted in the article – I’ve taken steps to check my observations and make sure I’ve not said anything too ridiculous. Furthermore, my reconstruction at the base is not merely literature based: I’ve spent the last year examining a large number of tetrapod skulls specifically to understand their epidermal correlates for an upcoming book project. If there are errors here, they’re not from a lack of research effort.
DeleteThanks for the offer to correspond about these issues. This post was prompted by a number of inquiries about tyrannosaur faces at the tail end of last year, so I went straight for publication to answer those messages. I’m interested to know your thoughts.
It would be very enriching for us, the public, to read a full response to the criticisms presented by Mark on this post.
DeleteWe urge for more arguments in order to understand your correlative analysis for bone surface and rugosity between tyrannosaurs and crocodilians.
That because even from the viewpoint of fine casts and high-resolution images of tyrannosaur fossil material, it really does not appear to be identical in superficial appearance. As Mark stated, the differences seems to be more remarkable than its similarities.
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Deletethat last picture reminds me od a marine iguana (Amblyrhynchus cristatus)
ReplyDeleteReally enjoyable post, Mark! I'm glad to see your inclusion of the weirdness of crocodilian facial integument development; skin cracking seems truly bizarre. I also didn't realize that this happened relatively late in development, so thanks for the mention of skin in younger individuals!
ReplyDeleteAlso on crocs and not really relevant to tyrannosaurs but I just felt like mentioning it, the interaction between the dermis and cranial bones in crocs is exactly why I shy away from 'osteoderm' for much of the ornamentation in ankylosaurid skulls in favour of Blows' term 'caputegulum'.
Good read. Very interesting. Quite a nice life reconstruction too. Though I find it interesting you didn't extend the brows or nasal ridge with the cornified sheath. Since we do see in some animals that horns and crests can extend much further in life than is visible on just the bones. So I'm wondering if there was a specific reason for not extending these areas into possible hornlets or if you just reconstructed it conservatively without wanting to speculate too much.
ReplyDeleteI'd like to know what you were inspired by for the markings in the end reconstruction. There's something very Scourge-leader Trask from Angel about it (to me, at least).
ReplyDeleteHello Dr. Witton
ReplyDeleteIt seems that Jaime Headden has come to differing conclusions based on Tyrannosaurus osteological correlates
https://qilong.files.wordpress.com/2018/01/tyrannosaur-skull-integument.png
Thoughts?
In an effort to reduce the spam percentage...
ReplyDeleteSorry if you've mentioned this before, but I'm still a bit hazy on the difference between 'armoured dermis' and 'cornified skin'. What extant examples could I look up to see how their appearance, at least, differs?
Your points about scales were pretty convincing, I'll give you that. In fact this is also what happens to iguanas (https://i.pinimg.com/originals/6c/e6/22/6ce6221c0e81652d36e28b5a0e59457e.jpg https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/1467/6660/products/Galapagos-Land-Iguana--Main__TQ-537__1.jpg?v=1500667269): they do have scales and not simply a hardened skin, but the tough scales make the skull texture irregular.
ReplyDeleteAbout the lips, while we once debated about it once, I think I may have realized something that can be important about this issue. You said that since teeth covering lips seems to be the "standard" appearence for modern animals then it is reasonable for the same ratiocination to be applied to dinosaurs, but the thing is that most modern tetrapods have pretty much the same width for both the upper and lower jaws, while in most non avian theropods the lower jaw was way thinner (https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b1/Red_Tegu_Skull.jpg/4032px-Red_Tegu_Skull.jpg http://www.paleofile.com/imges/Dinosaurs/Theropoda/Tyrannosaurusbottom.jpg) so it is possible that, even if T. rex had lips, these would be too short to completely cover the teeth but still seal the mouth shut (like in this image https://i.ytimg.com/vi/7tr8Lw-N1Og/hqdefault.jpg). What do you think?
Great post, and I love the portrait of the AMNH T. rex.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting, interesting indeed. But no matter how many crocodilian or JP-like features T-Rex may be discovered to possibly have. Real-life Rex is still an animal, and one that kills for survival, not fun unlike in the movies.
ReplyDeleteBut lizards have alot of structures in there mouth that support the extra oral tissues that are not featured in theropodshttps://www.google.com/search?q=amnh+5027+skull&rlz=1C1CHBF_enJO895JO895&sxsrf=ALeKk00GOADZBpKQs5qhttps://www.google.com/url?sa=i&url=https%3A%2F%2Fcarnivora.net%2Fargentine-black-and-white-tegu-v-crocodile-monitor-t6420.html&psig=AOvVaw13wE0txDjtcKb1bgGtkCmc&ust=1591625490272000&source=images&cd=vfe&ved=0CAIQjRxqFwoTCLiFy5Hx7-kCFQAAAAAdAAAAABADjMazDD-MpSW4UHg:1591539070758&tbm=isch&source=iu&ictx=1&fir=fhiqNbmaJ2tL3M%253A%252C0BjRsN3o-6om6M%252C_&vet=1&usg=AI4_-kSrylbvPBsKJzySf-H-g2o1XutcFw&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj0jNWH8e_pAhWSzqQKHSUeB5UQ9QEwAHoECAcQEw#imgrc=fhiqNbmaJ2tL3M:
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