Here is a funny thing from the Bloody Mary team that tells us that the all the TT-zone lithe tyrannosaurs hypothesis is about to get a great big Type-93 torpedo put into its sinking hull.
While working on the paper I was of course going to include the specimen # of BM now that it is in the NCMNS collections. So rather than bother anyone I looked at their online catalog.
Nothing.
Nor for the Triceratops.
Well OK they hadn't gotten around to listing it so I contacted the collections manager.
Nope, they don't have specimen #s years after their being at the museum.
Odd, very odd. So why is that?
When they first got the daring duo the museum was putting out the popular attractions line that they now had a juvenile Trex, albeit acknowledging the possibility it was something else.
They have dropped that as I have noted in a prior message, just referring to BM as a tyrannosaur in the same sentence they call its (maybe) hapless victim Triceratops.
One suspects those long, long hands have something to do with that.
Having a good idea the BM is not a Tyrannosaurus, they are keeping the option of naming the fossil themselves, as they should.
In order to prevent others from trying to preempt them in the technical literature with a Genus species name, well no specimen number to cite as a holotype, no ability to do that. Clever.
If it is named it will not be a Nanotyrannus, skull far too different. Maybe a Stygivenator, but as i note in the paper there are problems with that too, including stratigraphic.
While I am at it, after the Nick & Evans paper came out, Carr in a news article (
https://www.livescience.com/animals/dinosaurs/nanotyrannus-vs-t-rex-saga-continues-controversial-study-doesnt-settle-the-question-at-all) said that the two did not understand that there are lots and lots of differences between juv and adult Tyranno. After all, he found over 1800 of them in his 2020 paper, so it is not appropriate to cite the differences as evidence they are not the same species. Ummm, that is not the parsimonious null hypothesis. That is pure circular reasoning. The reason there are so many diffs between most of the TT-zone little ones is because they are not the same species.
Why am I the one that has to explain all this?
GSPaul