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T. rex relative with giant, protruding eyebrows discovered in Kyrgyzstan

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Researchers have unveiled the first giant predatory dinosaur ever discovered in Kyrgyzstan — a distant cousin of Tyrannosaurus rex. The fossilized bones are from two individuals that could be a parent and its offspring.

The potential parent dinosaur was around 26 feet (8 meters) long and weighed more than 2,700 pounds (1,250 kilograms) despite not being fully grown, while the potential offspring was about 15% to 20% smaller.

The researchers named the dinosaur Alpkarakush kyrgyzicus, partly inspired by the giant mythological bird in the "Manas" epic poem of Kyrgyz culture called "Alpkarakush," the team wrote in a study, published Aug. 20 in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.

A. kyrgyzicus belonged to a group of carnivorous dinosaur families collectively called the carnosaurs, which would later include T. rex's family and part of the larger theropod group that ultimately gave rise to living birds. Researchers found that the new carnosaur sat in a family called Metriacanthosauridae. These dinosaurs lived across Asia and Europe during the Jurassic period (201 million to 145 million years ago), but this is the first Jurassic theropod to be discovered in Central Asia west of China.

"Although the affiliation of Alpkarakush with the metriacanthosaurids is not necessarily a surprise, this discovery closes a huge gap in our knowledge of the Jurassic theropods," study lead author Oliver Rauhut, a curator at the Bavarian State Collection for Palaeontology and Geology in Germany, said in a statement. "It leads us to important new insights into the evolution and biogeography of these Animals."

Related: T. rex could have been 70% bigger than fossils suggest, new study shows

Rauhut and his colleagues excavated the dinosaurs from a mountainous desert region near Tashkumyr in western Kyrgyzstan. They started finding exposed A. kyrgyzicus fossils in 2006, but the bones went deep into the slope of a steep incline, and it took several excavations between 2006 and 2023 to retrieve them all, according to the study.

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