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Deep Time

Media Photo/Video

July 17, 2018

Close up of T rex
download Download nhb2017-00025.jpg

In its time, Tyrannosaurus was the largest meat eater in western North America. It feasted on dinosaurs large and small, including plant eaters like the Triceratops. Few—if any—animals could take down a healthy, adult Tyrannosaurus.

As the apex predator, the “tyrant king” affected the entire community. Each meal Tyrannosaurus killed or scavenged helped keep populations of some species in check and provided leftovers for others.

In its new pose devouring a Triceratops, the Nation’s T. rex will be the centerpiece of the David H. Koch Hall of Fossils—Deep Time, a 31,000-square-foot dinosaur and fossil hall slated to open June 8, 2019.

Smithsonian Institution


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  • Natural History Museum

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Tyrannosaurus posed devouring a Triceratops

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T rex fossil

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Related Content

  • Stacked crates

    Smithsonian’s New Fossil Hall To Open June 8, 2019

    The Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History has announced that the Nation’s T. rex has returned to the museum where it will be the centerpiece of the new 31,000-square-foot fossil hall opening June 8, 2019.

    • July 17, 2018
    • News Release
    • Natural History Museum
    • Exhibitions
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