Updated
Updated · The Conversation · May 11
Scientists Probe Why T. rex Had 3-Foot Arms as 45-Foot Bodies Evolved Bigger Skulls
Updated
Updated · The Conversation · May 11

Scientists Probe Why T. rex Had 3-Foot Arms as 45-Foot Bodies Evolved Bigger Skulls

5 articles · Updated · The Conversation · May 11
  • T. rex arms measured only about 3 feet on animals up to 45 feet long, and scientists still lack a definitive explanation for what those limbs did.
  • Fossil evidence shows theropod arms generally shortened as skulls grew larger, making bigger heads the clearest evolutionary pattern tied to T. rex’s tiny forelimbs.
  • Researchers have floated several functions—display, gripping prey, or avoiding bites while feeding in groups—but none has strong fossil support, and the jaws likely reached targets first.
  • Another possibility is that the arms became vestigial, with no major purpose, underscoring that some evolutionary changes persist even when their benefit remains unclear.
A 'missing link' fossil reveals complex arm evolution. What does this discovery mean for the T. rex arm mystery?
New scans show T. rex's arm bones were stress-free. Does this finally debunk the 'arms as weapons' theory?