Daspletosaurus
Daspletosaurus was a relative of Tyrannosaurus Rex. It lived about 10 million years earlier than its larger cousin, and like T. Rex, it was an apex predator that preyed upon other dinosaurs.
Classification: Saurischia. Theropoda. Tyrannosauridae.
Genus: Daspletosaurus (“Frightful Lizard”)
Species: D. torosus, D. horneri
There is some evidence that Daspletosaurus lived in social packs, due to bones of multiple individuals being found together.
There is also evidence that Daspletosaurus engaged in “intra-specific” combat or biting, meaning that it fought with other members of its own species. Bite marks from tyrannosaurids have been found on the snouts of Daspletosaurus skulls.
Daspletosaurus lived during the same time and in roughly the same region as Gorgosaurus, another tyrannosaurid. Gorgosaurus was lighter and less heavy-bodied, so it’s possible these two hunters filled different ecological niches, like a lion and a cheetah would today.
Daspletosaurus was very similar to Tyrannosaurus, with a large head full of sharp teeth and tiny, two-fingered arms. Though its arms were small, they were larger proportionately than other tyrannosaurids.
It was more heavier bodied than other tyrannosaurid relatives, such as Albertosaurus and Gorgosaurus.
Length: 8-9 meters (26-30 feet)
Weight: 2.5 tons (2.8 short tons)
Daspletosaurus was first discovered in 1921 by Charles Mortram Sternberg in Alberta, Canada. He originally believed it was a new type of Gorgosaurus, and it would not get its own name of Daspletosaurus until 1970, when the remains were described by Dale Russell.
Daspletosaurus lived on a large floodplain that contained numerous large rivers. The area was full of diverse life during fertile periods, but drought, flooding and volcanic eruption were potential occurrences that often caused large amounts of animals to die out.
While this was unfortunate for the animals at the time, it has provided paleontologists with a wealth of remains that teach us much about the animals of the time period.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daspletosaurus
Paul, G. (2016). The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs, 2nd Edition. Princeton, New Jersey: University Press Princeton.