Examples of using Tarbosaurus in English and their translations into Russian
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In Asia, there was Alectrosaurus,Alioramus and Tarbosaurus.
Tyrannosaurus, Tarbosaurus, and Daspletosaurus had skulls that exceeded 1 m(3.3 ft) in length.
By 1965, this species had been renamed Tarbosaurus bataar.
All of this suggests that Tarbosaurus relied more on its senses of smell and hearing than on its eyesight.
Several analyses have concluded Alioramus was quite closely related to Tarbosaurus.
The total brain volume for a 12 metres(39 ft) Tarbosaurus is estimated at only 184 cubic centimetres 11.2 cu in.
Overall, the skull is morphologically most similar to that of Tyrannosaurus and Tarbosaurus.
Another major difference between Tarbosaurus and its North American relatives was its more rigid mandible lower jaw.
The nuchal crest was especially well-developed in Tyrannosaurus, Tarbosaurus and Alioramus.
The vast majority of known Tarbosaurus fossils were recovered from the Nemegt Formation in the Gobi Desert of southern Mongolia.
Tyrannosaurids varied little in body form, and Tarbosaurus was no exception.
Alioramus and Tarbosaurus are found to be related in one cladistic analysis, forming a unique Asian branch of the family.
In fact, one quarter of all fossils collected from the Nemegt Formation belong to Tarbosaurus.
For example, you can see the remains of the largest predator on Earth ever- а 12 meters long Tarbosaurus which lived on the territory of modern China and Mongolia.
Unlike Tyrannosaurus, Tarbosaurus had a narrower skull more typical of other tyrannosaurids in which the eyes faced primarily sideways.
Albertosaurus was smaller than some other tyrannosaurids,such as Tarbosaurus and Tyrannosaurus.
Cladistic analyses of tyrannosaurid phylogeny often find Tarbosaurus and Tyrannosaurus to be sister taxa, with Daspletosaurus more basal than either.
The other major subfamily of tyrannosaurids is the Tyrannosaurinae,which includes Daspletosaurus, Tarbosaurus and Tyrannosaurus.
Although Tarbosaurus has not been studied as thoroughly as the North American tyrannosaurids, the available material has allowed scientists to draw limited conclusions about its biology.
It is considered the sister taxon to a clade containing Tyrannosaurus, Tarbosaurus, and probably Zhuchengtyrannus.
An additional tyrannosaurid, Raptorex, was initially described as a more primitive tyrannosauroid, butlikely represents a juvenile tyrannosaurine similar to Tarbosaurus.
Albertosaurines are unknown in Asia,which was home to the tyrannosaurines, such as Tarbosaurus and Zhuchengtyrannus, and Qianzhousaurus and Alioramus of the Alioramini.
Making a plaster cast, called an endocast,of the inside of this cavity allowed Maleev to make preliminary observations about the shape of a Tarbosaurus brain.
The large size of the olfactory bulbs,as well as the terminal and olfactory nerves, suggest that Tarbosaurus had a keen sense of smell, as was also the case with Tyrannosaurus.
A Tarbosaurus skull found in 1948 by Soviet and Mongolian scientists(PIN 553-1, originally called Gorgosaurus lancinator) included the skull cavity that held the brain.
All research published since 1999 recognizes only a single species, which is either called Tarbosaurus bataar or Tyrannosaurus bataar.
By far the largest predator known from the formation, adult Tarbosaurus most likely preyed upon large hadrosaurs such as Saurolophus and Barsboldia, or sauropods such as Nemegtosaurus, and Opisthocoelicaudia.
A 2003 attempt by Christopher Brochu included Albertosaurus, Alectrosaurus, Alioramus, Daspletosaurus,Gorgosaurus, Tarbosaurus and Tyrannosaurus in the definition.
The first of these(PIN 551-2) was named Tarbosaurus efremovi, a new generic name composed of the Ancient Greek τάρβος/tarbos("terror","alarm","awe", or"reverence") and σαυρος/sauros("lizard"), and the species named after Ivan Yefremov, a Russian paleontologist and science fiction author.
Later authors, including Maleev himself,agreed with Rozhdestvensky's analysis, although some used the name Tarbosaurus efremovi rather than T. bataar.