![]() ![]() “ was more analogous to agonistic reptilian carnivores, like the Komodo dragon,” Frederickson said in a study recently published in Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. Frederickson’s team instead studied what these apex predators ate throughout their lives, and that gave away something quite surprising-and gruesome. ![]() What they unearthed was unexpected after raptors had reached cinematic stardom snapping their jaws and ripping apart prey in packs. Joseph Frederickson, a vertebrate paleontologist at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh, and his team found that out after they put fossilized raptor teeth under the microscope. Rex and (just by coincidence) saved the lives of the humans trapped in the museum? Turns out that probably wouldn’t have happened even if we could bring dinosaurs back from extinction. ![]() Remember that epic scene in Jurassic Park where a pack of raptors attacked the T. ![]()
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