Tyrannosaurus rex, Osborn, 1905

Joshua B. Smith, 2005, Heterodonty in Tyrannosaurus rex: Implications for the taxonomic and systematic utility of theropod dentitions, Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 25 (4), pp. 865-887 : 866-884

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1671/0272-4634(2005)025[0865:HITRIF]2.0.CO;2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4323776

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/20538788-D026-FFC1-FF0B-FB51BC11D506

treatment provided by

Jeremy

scientific name

Tyrannosaurus rex
status

 

Most known T. rex crania containing teeth were examined (Supplementary Data 1, available online at www.vertpaleo.org/ jvp/JVPcontents.html). Tarbosaurus Maleev, 1955 , was excluded as there is no consensus on its taxonomy and it appears to be a distinct species ( Holtz, 2001; Hurum and Sabath, 2003; Carr and Williamson, 2004). Data from Dilophosaurus Welles, 1970; Liliensternus Welles, 1984; Ceratosaurus dentisulcatus Madsen and Welles, 2000 (?= Ceratosaurus nasicornis Marsh, 1884); Masiakasaurus Sampson et al. 2001 ; ‘ Indosuchus ’; Majungatholus Sues and Taquet, 1979 ; Baryonyx Charig and Milner, 1986 ; Suchomimus Sereno et al., 1998 ; Allosaurus Marsh 1877 ; Acrocanthosaurus Stovall and Langston, 1950 ; Carcharodontosaurus Stromer, 1931 ; Gorgosaurus Lambe, 1914 ; Daspletosaurus Russell, 1970 ; Tyrannosaurus rex ; Troodon Leidy, 1856 ; Saurornithoides junior Barsbold, 1974 ; Bambiraptor Burnham et al., 2000 ; Deinonychus Ostrom, 1969 a ; Dromaeosaurus Matthew and Brown, 1922 ; and Velociraptor Osborn, 1924 were used to provide context for teeth of Tyrannosaurus rex within theropod dental morphospace (see Smith et al., 2005, for data).

Growth-related change is important in paleobiology (e.g., Currie, 2003b). However, as ontogeny in Tyrannosaurus rex is currently poorly understood, data were excluded from problematic specimens (see Molnar and Carpenter, 1989; Carr, 1999; Brochu, 2002; Carr and Williamson, 2004), such as LACM 28741 (‘ Aublysodon ’) and CMNH 7541 (‘ Nanotyrannus ’), to be dealt with separately. These specimens are likely juveniles of T. rex (see Carr, 1999; Holtz, 2001), and have been synonymized as such ( Carr and Williamson, 2004). However, a consensus is lacking (see Currie, 2003a; Currie et al., 2003), and there are new data (J. Peterson, pers. comm., 2002) that merit consideration. I am not comfortable coding teeth as pertaining to T. rex unless there is general agreement that they are such, nor is it wise to use data from a problematic specimen to support or refute a T. rex affinity for that individual. Therefore, I included only those data that are currently unquestioned as pertaining to T. rex . As tyrannosaurid taxonomy becomes clearer, the dentitions of problematic specimens should be compared against those of well-supported taxa. In the absence of this and in the absence of data for proven juvenile teeth for T. rex , discussions of ontogenetic change in its dentition are premature (e.g., Senter and Robins, 2003).

Measurements and Counts

Measurements were made directly with electronic calipers or on digital images using SigmaScan®. Denticles were counted with a Hensoldt-Wetzlar 8X lens possessing a mm-scale reticle. Data cases are averages of five replicate measurements (measurement repeatability was assessed by Smith, 2002). Data were included from teeth regarded as being fully erupted (teeth that are erupting, are reconstructed, or are not accessible because the specimen is on display were omitted). Orientation terminology ( Fig. 1A View FIGURE 1 ) follows Smith and Dodson (2003). Studies of tyrannosaurid dentitions must pay particular attention to the premaxillary and first dentary teeth. The basal short axes of these crowns are mesiodistal rather than labiolingual in orientation (as in most theropods), and the long axes (sensu the basoapical axis in human incisors, see Minagi et al., 1999) are oriented labiolingually rather than mesiodistally ( Fig. 1B, C View FIGURE 1 ).

The variables used in this article ( Fig. 1D, E View FIGURE 1 ) were derived or discussed in detail by Smith et al. (2005); they are noted briefly here. Size was described using crown base length (CBL), crown base width (CBW), crown height (CH), and apical length (AL). CBL and CBW were measured in a horizontal plane referenced approximately to point B of Smith et al. (2005). Basal shape was described using the crown base ratio (CBR = CBW/CBL); crown “squatness” was assessed using the crown height ratio (CHR = CH/CBL). Apex displacement from the crown base center and crown curvature were described using the crown angle (CA).

Crown angle values were calculated using the Law of Cosines and solving for: View Figure

where a = CBL, b = AL, and c = CH.

Denticle size and spacing was quantified by determining the number of denticles per 5 mm of carina length (see Farlow and Brinkman, 1987), counted as close to the base, mid point, and apex as possible (see Chandler, 1990), thus generating the basal (MB and DB), mid-crown (MC and DC), and apical densities (MA and DA). For very small teeth (e.g., Bambiraptor ), counts were taken over 2 mm and then adjusted to 5 mm after Farlow et al. (1991). Five counts of each variable were taken, the means of which yielded average densities for the mesial and distal carinae (MAVG, DAVG, after Chandler, 1990). The ratio of MAVG to DAVG generated the denticle size density index (DSDI), devised and discussed by Rauhut and Werner (1995).

Analyses

Statistical analyses were run with SPSS, SigmaStat®, and Stat- View and were illustrated using SigmaPlot®. Factors that might have a significant effect on the variability within the data were examined using analysis of variance (ANOVA). As biogeography (concept after Carrasco, 2000a, b; Lieberman et al., 2002) showed no significant effect on the observed variation ( Smith et al., 2005) and sexing and aging of tyrannosaurs is problematic ( Larson, 1994; Chapman et al., 1997; Galton, 1999), tooth position is the main factor that might account for a significant proportion of the observed variation. ANOVA was employed to test this hypothesis using variability profiles sensu Yablokov (1974) but modified after Smith (2002) to show positional variation within tooth rows (sensu Williamson, 1996). As the variables were compared with tooth position rather than with coefficients of variation (see Yablokov, 1974), raw data were analyzed instead of following Sokal and Braumann (1980). The results were examined using post-hoc tests that compared the means of the dependent variables with respect to tooth position: Fisher’s PLSD (see Sokal and Rolf, 1995) and Tukey-Kramer ( Kramer, 1956). Raw data were used for AL, CA, CBL, CBR, CBW, CH, CHR, MAVG, and DAVG. CA and DAVG were also compared after removing size as a confounding variable (see Marko and Jackson, 2001). Smith et al. (2005) log-transformed the data and ran a principal-components analysis. The data for DAVG were then regressed on PC1, which explained 84.4% of the observed variation; the residuals from these regressions constitute the sizecorrected variables CA2 and DAVG2.

MORPHOLOGY AND POSITIONAL VARIATION

Osborn’s (1912) study remains the best prior treatment of Tyrannosaurus dentition, although other works have briefly discussed the teeth (e.g., Brochu, 2002; Hurum and Sabath, 2003). Osborn (1912) focused on CM 9380 View Materials , AMNH 5027 View Materials , 5117 View Materials , 5866 View Materials , and CM 9379 View Materials . He reported a dental formula of 4 premaxillary, 12 maxillary, and 13–14 dentary teeth, for 58–60 total positions. Molnar (1991) found 4/11–12/? from these specimens and LACM 23844 View Materials and SDSM 12047 . Currie et al. (2003) reported 4/11–12/ 12–14, but from which specimens these data came is not clear. Table 2 View TABLE 2 provides an updated list of tooth counts.

Theropods are not usually considered to be heterodont taxa, but this view is too simple (see Currie, 1987). Tyrannosaurus rex in particular exhibits as much heterodonty (see Stromer, 1934) as do taxa acknowledged as having distinctive dentitions, such as Eoraptor Sereno et al., 1993, Troodon , and Masiakasaurus . Preliminarily, T. rex appears to be more heterodont than Daspletosaurus or Albertosaurus ; it possesses tooth morphologies that we can regard as classes at the element level (see Peyer, 1968; Zhao et al., 2000) and as sets sensu Hungerbühler (2000) at the intraelement level. These sets differ in concept from the ontogenetic tooth families of Edmund (1969) and Osborn (1973). Broadly, T. rex follows the ‘typical’ theropod pattern (see Holtz and Osmólska, 2004) of ‘recurved’ crowns possessing longer base lengths than widths ( Molnar and Carpenter, 1989). However, T. rex teeth are less curved than those of many theropods (an obvious exception to this are the dentitions of certain spinosaurids; see Sereno et al., 1998; Sues et al., 2002).

The Premaxillary Dentition

There are four teeth in all known premaxillae of T. rex , a feature that is robust for the Tyrannosauridae (see Osborn, 1905, 1906, 1912; Carpenter, 1990, 1992; Molnar, 1991; Brochu, 2002; Currie, 2003a; Hurum and Sabath, 2003). Premaxillary tooth count is constant for most theropods (see Lamanna, 1998). Currie (pers. comm., 1998; see also Ji and Ji, 1997) noted a discrepancy in tooth count in a specimen of Sinosauropteryx Ji and Ji, 1996 (NIGP 127586), but the lack of variation in other theropods suggests that this might be a specimen-specific or taxon-specific anomaly (assuming the individuals all represent one species). Currie and Chen (2001) reported that preparation issues confound tooth counts in Sinosauropteryx. Baryonyx might possess six left and seven right premaxillary teeth in BMNH R9951 (see Charig and Milner, 1997). However, Rpm6 and 7 appear to be crowded into one alveolus, suggesting that BMNH R9951 could also be anomalous. Such anomalies are common in mammals (P. Dodson, pers. comm., 2004) and should not affect the stability of theropod counts. It is also possible that tooth-count variation increases with decreasing crown size (J. D. Harris, pers. comm., 2004).

Crown Size —The premaxillary class is significantly smaller than the maxillary class in CBL, CBW, CH, and AL ( Table 1 View TABLE 1 , Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ), as in other tyrannosaurids ( Russell, 1970; Holtz, 2001; Currie, 2003a; Hurum and Sabath, 2003) and some ceratosaurs ( Rauhut, 2004). There are trends of increasing size along the tooth row for CBL, CBW, CH, and AL ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). The first tooth (mean pm1 CBL = 28.61 mm) is significantly smaller than that for pm3 (pm3 CBL = 33.96; ANOVA with pm1: F = 2.92, p.0346), but the remaining teeth are not significantly different from each other in size. The fourth tooth is slightly smaller than pm3 in all size variables, but the differences are not significant. A similar decrease in size toward the premaxillary-maxillary suture (premaxilla-maxilla joint sensu Molnar, 1991) occurs in Coelophysis Cope, 1889, Dilophosaurus, and Eoraptor ( Welles, 1984; Colbert, 1989; Sereno and Novas, 1993).

Crown Shape and Carina Morphologies —Theropod crown basal cross sections are often ovals that taper to points corresponding to the locations of the carinae ( Fig. 1B View FIGURE 1 ). The basal long axis (generally oriented mesiodistally) can be twice the length of the short axis (usually oriented labiolingually). In the premaxilla of T. rex however, although the crown bases are narrow ovals, the long axes are oriented labiolingually ( Fig. 1C View FIGURE 1 ). The labial faces are ovals that are convex toward the rostral end of the snout ( Fig. 3A View FIGURE 3 ). The lingual faces form very weakly convex curves (e.g., AMNH 5027 View Materials ), which are more pronounced basally, creating a shallow wide ridge (contra Molnar and Carpenter, 1989); apically the faces are almost flat ( Fig. 3B View FIGURE 3 ). The curves of the lingual faces flatten out proximal to the carinae, which are located at the mesiolingual and distolingual corners of the crowns. The flattening is more pronounced distal to pm1 where the very slightly convex mesial and distal faces curve into the lingual face.

A number of theropods exhibit positional variation with respect to carina placement. Tyrannosaurus rex exhibits dramatic changes in this feature along the maxillary and dentary tooth rows, but virtually none within the premaxilla: the carinae are all located at the corners of the teeth, as in other tyrannosaurids ( Russell, 1970; Currie, 2003a). In labial view, the denticles are often just visible along the mesial and distal edges of the labial faces. The carinae start from lingual points on the apices and extend basally along the mesial and distal faces to the bases, exhibiting slight labial convexity. They cross the apices with a surface expression of one carina wrapping over the tip rather than two distinct carinae, although each is discussed separately here. The mesial carinae are ̴2–5 mm shorter than the distal and often do not extend to the bases. Both carinae in pm3 of BHI 3033 terminate before reaching the base. Often premaxillary mesial carinae of T. rex are slightly shorter than the distal carinae, so it might be possible to discriminate left and right crowns by identifying the distal carina. Similar morphologies occur in the premaxillae of other tyrannosaurids ( Russell, 1970; Carr, 1999; Currie, 2003a), leading to the premaxillary crowns being referred to as ‘incisiform,’ ‘U-shaped,’ or ‘D-shaped in cross section’ (see Russell, 1970; Currie et al., 1990; Carpenter, 1992; Holtz, 1994, 1998; Carr, 1999; Ford and Chure, 2001; Brochu, 2002; Currie, 2003a; Carr and Williamson, 2004). Given the convexity of the lingual face and the oval shapes of the crown bases, these descriptors are somewhat inaccurate, but do get the general meaning across (at least colloquially; better descriptions might be desired when using this feature as a systematic character).

Although theropod teeth in general tend to be more circular mesially and more bladelike distally (see Smith et al., 2005), T. rex exhibits a reverse trend. The premaxillary teeth are significantly more blade-like than those in the maxilla or dentary ( Table 1 View TABLE 1 , Fig. 4A View FIGURE 4 ). This might be initially surprising, but T. rex premaxillary crown bases are very elongate. The first two teeth are significantly less circular than are than are pm3 and 4 (pm2 CBR = 0.57; pm3 = 0.64, F = 14.06, p.0128). The premaxillary teeth are more ‘squat’ than in the maxilla or dentary ( Table 1 View TABLE 1 , Fig. 4B View FIGURE 4 ). Along the tooth row, the crowns become increasingly, but not significantly, more elongated (CHR values of 1.52, 1.52, 1.64, and 1.74, from p1–pm4, respectively).

The rostral end of the snout in T. rex is more squared off than in many theropods ( Fig. 5A View FIGURE 5 ), so that the tooth row curves away from the midline. This, along with the derived crown shapes, produces the distinctive tyrannosaurid premaxillary dentition. Carina placement and lingual face morphology in T. rex are similar to those of pm1 of Allosaurus (e.g., YPM 1333 and 4933, MOR 693, and UMNH 1251) and pm1–3 in Majungatholus (e.g., FMNH PR2100). In all three taxa the carinae form the mesial and distal edges of the lingual faces in lingual view ( Figs. 5 View FIGURE 5 B–D). However, this resemblance of Allosaurus and Majungatholus premaxillary teeth with those of T. rex is only valid mesially. By the distal ends of the tooth rows in both of these taxa, the crowns are distinctly different from the premaxillary condition in T. rex . By pm4 in Allosaurus (YPM 1333), the mesial carina, in mesial view, begins at the apex and curves lingually such that it forms the lingual edge of the mesial face at about the mid-crown point. In pm5 the distal carina essentially defines the distal keel of the crown, showing only a very slight labial convexity along its length.

Crown Curvature —That crown curvature is taxonomically variable in theropods has been suggested ( Gilmore, 1920; Russell, 1970; Madsen, 1976). Within-taxon variation takes the form of increasingly curved crowns along the length of the tooth row (see Smith 2002), often accompanied by a decrease in size ( Chandler, 1990). However, some taxa, such as Spinosaurus Stromer, 1915 , and Irritator Martill et al., 1996 , exhibit very little mesial curvature (see Sues et al., 2002). This curvature can be seen indirectly in the CA data generated by equation (1). In general, CA values closer to 90° indicate more centrally positioned apices, a condition that usually correlates with less curved mesial profiles. Lower CA values usually correlate with more strongly curved mesial profiles. In T. rex , curvature decreases from pm1–4 ( Fig. 4C View FIGURE 4 ), but the differences are not significant (mean CA values of 84.7°, 85.1°, 85.9°, and 85.9° from pm1–4). The CA values in the premaxillary dentition versus those in the maxilla and dentary are also not significant ( Table 1 View TABLE 1 , Fig. 4C View FIGURE 4 ).

Denticles —The mesial premaxillary denticles range in size from ̴9–̴11/5 mm ( Table 1 View TABLE 1 ), with a weak trend of increasing size along the tooth row ( Fig. 6A View FIGURE 6 ), although differences between adjacent teeth are mostly not significant. Premaxillary MAVG values are not significantly larger than those of the maxillary or dentary teeth ( Table 1 View TABLE 1 ). In examining the components from which MAVG is generated, the MA data range from 8.4–10.9/5 mm, the MC data from 7–9.5/5 mm, and the MB data from 9–12.5/5 mm. There is no significant size trend along the tooth row in the apical denticles, but the mid-crown denticles show a very weak increasing trend. The MB data show no clear trends. The apical mesial denticles (10.3/5 mm) are significantly smaller than those of the maxilla (7.9/5 mm, p <.0001) and dentary (8.5/5 mm, p.0245), but the mid-crown and basal denticles are not. Overall, the components of MAVG and DAVG mimic the trends illustrated in Figure 6 View FIGURE 6 . As Smith (2002) provided variability plots of these variables and they are not substantially more informative for understanding the dentition of T. rex , MA, MC, MB, DA, DC, and DB plots have been omitted here. The distal denticles display similar patterns of variation to that seen in MAVG data ( Fig. 6B View FIGURE 6 ); premaxillary DAVG values are not significantly different in size from those of the maxilla or dentary ( Table 1 View TABLE 1 ). The apical distal denticles (10.3/5 mm) are significantly smaller than those of the maxilla (8.3/5 mm, p.0003), but not those of the dentary (9.4/5 mm, p.0890). There are no significant differences in size between the dentigerous bones of T. rex for the mid-crown or basal distal denticles.

When premaxillary DSDI data are examined for T. rex , posi- tional variation in the denticles largely disappears ( Fig. 6C View FIGURE 6 ). The range of premaxillary DSDI variation is well within the range of DSDI variability for the mouth as a whole. Indeed, while there is some noise within the data, there is little positional influence for this feature in any of three tooth classes. Thus, DSDI does not appear to be particularly useful in examining T. rex teeth. However, the lack of positional variation suggests that DSDI data might have some systematic utility.

The Maxillary Dentition

The maxillary class of T. rex contains an average of 12 teeth, including the largest in the dental arcade and some of the smallest ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). It is significantly larger than the premaxillary and dentary classes in CBL, CH, and AL and significantly larger than the premaxillary class in CBW ( Table 1 View TABLE 1 ). Indeed, mx3 and mx4 are large enough that it might be possible to distinguish them from dentary crowns using CH (mx3: 111.30 mm; mx4: 105.34 mm versus d4: 90.14 mm). The teeth in the maxillary dentition are different from those in the premaxillary class in terms of shape and size. Crown size and shape change enough within the maxilla that the dentition can be discussed in terms of two distinct sets.

Crown Size —The mesial set (mx1–mx3) consists of very large crowns (see Molnar, 1991) with oval bases and moderate mesial curvature ( Figs. 2 View FIGURE 2 A–D). The first tooth is not ‘small’ as in Gor- gosaurus and Daspletosaurus ( Currie, 2003a) . Rather, mx1 is one of the largest crowns in the mouth, as in Tarbosaurus ( Hurum and Sabath, 2003) . True, mx1 is the smallest member of the mesial maxillary set, but it is roughly the same size as the largest crown in the dentary (mx1 CH: 90.04 mm; d4 CH: 90.14 mm). Crown size increases from mx1–mx3. There is an inflection point at ̴mx4 beyond which size decreases to the end of the tooth row. It is between mx3 and mx4, on the basis of size, that the break between the mesial and distal sets was placed. The distal set (mx4–mx12) mostly contains smaller teeth with rather straight distal curvature profiles and long base lengths as compared to widths (although mx4 and 5 are large teeth). In the mesial set, mx1 is significantly smaller than mx3 in CH and AL (mx3 CH: 111.30 mm, p.0030). These are the only significant differences in size in the mesial set. In the distal set, size decreases from mx4– mx12 for all size variables (recognized by Osborn, 1912). As in the premaxilla, few teeth are significantly larger than adjacent crowns but the mesial teeth in the set are significantly larger than the more distal crowns (mx5 CBL: 46.19 mm; mx7 CBL: 39.17 mm, p.0065). A noticeable outlier is mx10, which is significantly taller than mx11 (mx10 CH: 70.98; mx11 CH: 42.98, p.0004). The reason this tooth is an outlier is because Lmx10 of SDSM 12047 is larger (CH: 91.27 mm) than Rmx10 of FMNH PR2081 (CH: 61.04 mm), or Rmx10 of MOR 1125 (CH: 88.82 mm). The tooth does not appear to be anomalous, however, as SDSM 12047 has a number of very large crowns (Supplementary Data 1).

Crown Shape and Carina Morphologies —The mesial maxillary tooth bases are more circular than the distal crowns ( Fig. 4A View FIGURE 4 ), as in most tyrannosaurids ( Brochu, 2002), but few of the adjacent teeth are significantly different from each other. The maxillary teeth become increasingly elongated along the mesial set (mx3 is the most elongated crown in the mouth) and become increasingly ‘squat’ distally ( Fig. 4B View FIGURE 4 ). The most distal maxillary teeth are roughly equivalent in CHR to ̴d9.

In the maxilla, the carinae, which in the premaxilla are situated at the linguomesial and linguodistal corners of the crowns, are in more obvious mesiodistal positions. In the first maxillary teeth, carina morphologies, orientations, and positions all begin to change, becoming increasingly mesiodistally positioned along the tooth row ( Fig. 7 View FIGURE 7 ). By the middle of the row, the teeth have distinctly different shapes than those in the premaxilla, and have carina positions that remain fairly constant to the end of the tooth row.

The change in morphology from pm4 to mx1 is more dramatic than those between mx1 and the rest of the mesial set. Although mx1 might be described as a transitional form between the two tooth types, it is more similar in form to the maxillary than the premaxillary dentition. If the premaxillary crowns are described as ‘incisiform’ sensu Brochu (2002) and Russell (1970), then using this terminology for mx1 (as for Daspletosaurus and Gorgosaurus ; see Carr, 1999; Currie, 2003) in Tyrannosaurs rex is clearly inaccurate. The basal long axis of pm4 is roughly labiolingual with respect to the upper jaw and the mesial and distal faces are almost flat ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ). However, in mx1 the mesial face is narrow and curved (convex rostrally) and the labial and lingual faces are more elongate and flat than in the premaxilla. The carina that is at the linguomesial corner of pm4 is positioned on mx1 such that, in lingual view, its base is at the middle of the lingual face; the carina situated at the linguodistal corner of pm4 is, in labial view, located in the distal third of the labial face ( Fig. 8 View FIGURE 8 ).

As maxillary position increases, what was the linguomesial carina on pm4 becomes increasingly mesially positioned on the lingual face; it is clearly recognizable as the mesial carina by mx2. The linguodistal carina of pm4 simultaneously becomes increasingly distally located on the labiodistal faces of the maxillary teeth. It is recognizable as the distal carina in mx1 ( Figs. 9A, B View FIGURE 9 ). The second and third maxillary teeth possess the ‘classic’ image of crowns of T. rex (e.g., FMNH PR2081 ). The mesial carinae, in mesial view, start at the middle of the apex and curve lingually such that at the base of the crown, they are completely on the lingual sides of the bases. They terminate slightly apical from the crown bases where the distal carinae extend to the bases of the enamel. Similar morphologies occur in Gorgosaurus and Appalachiosaurus Carr et al., 2005. The mesial carina is variably placed in mx3. In mesial view, it is located on the lingual side of the apex and largely forms the lingual edge of the mesial face at its terminus ̴20 mm apical from the base of the enamel ( BHI 3033 ), or it is more labially placed ( AMNH 5027 View Materials , Fig. 9C View FIGURE 9 ).

Distally, crown shapes do not change dramatically except for size and length/width relationships, and the carinae are more parallel with the basal long axes. While the mesial teeth are more rounded than those distally, the overall shapes of mx5–6 are not that dissimilar from the overall shapes of mx11–12 ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 ). The labiolingual faces of the more mesial teeth (mx4–6) are more rounded (e.g., CM 9380 View Materials , FMNH PR2081 , SDSM 12047 ), while these faces in mx7–8 (e.g., MOR 555 , SDSM 12047 ) are ‘subparallel’ and just slightly convex. The mesial faces are round in all of the teeth (more strongly so in the distal teeth), but the distal faces of the mesial teeth are more rounded than they are distally. In Lmx9 of BHI 3033 , the distal face is basically flat and slopes from the labial edge of the face towards the carina ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 ).

In a mesial view of mx4 and mx5 (e.g., AMNH 5027 View Materials ), the mesial carinae begin at the apices and extend basally in the middle or labial thirds of the faces in a slight labial curve, terminating ̴20 mm apical from the bases ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 ). In distal view, the distal carinae begin just lingual from the apices and extend basally in the lingual quarters of the distal faces. In mx6, the mesial carina begins at the apex and almost immediately begins to curve lingually. This twist becomes slightly sharper at its base. The carina terminates ̴25 mm apical from the base of the enamel. The carina does not ‘fade’ into the mesial face, but rather terminates in a final small denticle. This occurs in all of the observed T. rex specimens except for MOR 1125 , where several mesial carinae appear to continue past where the denticles terminate (e.g., cf. Lmx2). The mesial carinae in Lmx7–8 of MOR 555 extend basally in the midline of the mesial faces in mesial view; they begin curving lingually ̴25 mm basally from the apices ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 ). In Lmx7, this twist is stronger basally and, in mesial view, the carina terminates ̴9 mm apically from the base in the lingual quarter of the mesial face. In Lmx6 of BHI 3033 , the mesial carina does not appear to have a substantial lingual curve for ̴25 mm basally from the apex, although the carina is difficult to observe as this crown is not fully erupted. In both Lmx6 and Lmx7 of MOR 555 and CM 9380 View Materials , the distal carinae, in distal view, begin at the apices and extend basally in the distal faces, terminating just labial to the midline at the bases. In Lmx7 of MOR 555 , the distal carina appears to extend to the enamel base, although poor preservation confounds the observation. The mesial carina of Lmx8 clearly terminates ̴22–24 mm from the base of the mesial face. In mesial view, it starts from the apex in the middle of the mesial face and extends basally in the face, but there is a slight lingual curve ̴11 mm apically from its terminus. In distal view, the distal carina starts at the apex in the middle of the face and extends basally, curving slightly labially at the base. The labial and lingual faces of mx7–8 are basically flat and parallel to each other. In Lmx9 of BHI 3033 , the mesial carina begins at the apex and curves labially toward the base, ending at about the crown midpoint. This labial curve is more distinct in Lmx9 of MOR 555 , where the carina extends basally in the middle of the face for ̴23 mm before kinking lingually, continuing for ̴13 mm and ending. In distal view of Lmx9 in BHI 3033 and Lmx8 of MOR 555 , the distal carinae start just labial to the apices and extend basally in the lingual quarters of the faces to the bases of the enamel ( Fig. 10 View FIGURE 10 ). However, in Lmx10 of SDSM 12047 , the distal carina is located several mm more labially. In BHI 3033 , there is a slight lingual curve that starts at about the crown midpoint and continues to the base. In MOR 555 , the curve begins closer to the apex. Distal to mx9, the carinae are roughly aligned with the mesiodistal axes of the crowns, but are not as closely tied to the long axes as they are in some other theropods (e.g., Deinonychus ).

In contrast to the condition in some theropods (e.g., Allosaurus , Deinonychus , Dromaeosaurus ), the mesial maxillary teeth of T. rex (e.g., MOR 008 , AMNH 5027 View Materials ) are not set in the jaw with their long axes lined up mesiodistally. Instead, there is an angle of ̴30º between the crown long axes and the alveolar margin of the maxillae, away from the premaxillary symphysis ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 ). This en echelon tooth emplacement results in the apices not lining up in particular along a mesiodistal line (see discussion). The characteristic occurs in Acrocanthosaurus and Majungatholus , but does not appear to occur in Gorgosaurus or Daspletosaurus . It varies within T. rex , being more clearly observed in AMNH 5027 View Materials and FMNH PR2081 than in SDSM 12047 . It can be seen in the left mesial alveoli of FMNH PR2081 in figure 4a and the CT data of Brochu (2002). Brochu (2002) also reveals that while the tooth bases are angled ̴40° away from the sagittal plane (in MOR 008 and FMNH PR2081 ), the crowns themselves twist slightly so as to be more or less in a mesiodistal orientation (seen in Rmx3 and Rmx5 of FMNH PR2081 ). This is in contrast to the situation in Majungatholus and Acrocanthosaurus , where the crowns do not twist and the teeth actually angle away from the midline.

Crown Curvature —Distally in the maxilla, apices become increasingly displaced from where they would be located in true cones, accompanied by an increase in curvature ( Fig. 4C View FIGURE 4 ). Mean crown angle values are fairly constant (̴88°) in the mesial set (mx1–mx5), although mx5 (87.6°) and mx6 (87.3°) are slightly different. They decrease slightly across the mesial part of the distal set to mx10 (86.6°), and then drop to mx12 (82.3°). The CA data reflect the moderate increase in mesial curvature in the maxilla and the dramatic increase in the last few teeth. In the distal maxilla, the mesial faces rise with very gentle curves apically from the base (the basal portions of some of the faces are almost straight), to or just apical to the mid crown. Here the slopes become more sharply curved. The first maxillary crown possesses a straighter mesial profile (similar to those of the mesial premaxilla) than do the rest of the mesial-set teeth. Unlike in other taxa, (e.g., Deinonychus , Allosaurus ), the distal profiles become more straightened in the distal maxilla rather than simply increasing in curvature.

Denticles —There is a weak trend in decreasing denticle size along the maxillary tooth row for both carinae ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 ). The trend correlates with the increase in crown size observed across the maxilla and is expected given the relationship between tooth and denticle size ( Farlow et al., 1991). Mean densities range from 6.8–13.4/5 mm (MAVG) and from 7.2–13.2/5 mm (DAVG). For both carinae, position is a significant factor in explaining the observed variation, but there is no significant separation, in either carina, between the mesial and distal sets. Contrary to the reports of Molnar and Carpenter (1989) and Carr and Williamson (2004), there is no significant difference in denticle size between the mesial and distal carinae (MAVG = 9.1/5 mm; DAVG = 9.4/5 mm, p.3470). The DSDI data roughly mirror the MAVG and DAVG numbers ( Fig. 6C View FIGURE 6 ), but, as in the premaxilla, tooth position only slightly influences DSDI variation in the maxilla.

Tooth position is not a significant factor in MA, MC, or MB variation. The MC and MB data mirror the MAVG data and there is a decrease in MA size mesially. Position within the tooth row is significant in explaining the observed variation in DA, DC, and DB, all of which decrease in size distally.

The Dentary Dentition

There are 12–14 dentary teeth in T. rex ( Table 2 View TABLE 2 ). As in the maxilla, tooth size and shape variation is qualitatively greater than for many theropods ( Currie, 1997a, b). There are several distinct morphologies within the dentary class, and it is possible to divide the dentition into three sets on the basis of size and gross morphology: a set containing d1, a mesial dentary set (d2– d4), and a distal dentary set (d5–d14).

Crown Size —The dentary contains very large crowns as well as the smallest in the mouth. Tooth position has a significant effect on the observed variation in size. There is an increase in size from d1 to d4 and then a decrease from ̴d5 to d13 ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). The first tooth is significantly smaller in terms of CBL, CBW, CH, and AL than the teeth mesial to ̴d9 (e.g., d1 CBL = 25.9 mm; d2 CBL = 39.9 mm, p <.0001; d9 CBL = 32.56, p.0268). Carr and Williamson (2004) reported that d1 in tyrannosaurids is the smallest tooth in the dentary. This is not the case in T. rex (contrary to Carr and Williamson’s results, this is also not true for dromaeosaurids) as the last dentary teeth are significantly smaller than d1 ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ; e.g., d 1 View FIGURE 1 CBW = 18.2 mm; d13 CBW = 10.2 mm, p.0089).

The teeth of the mesial dentary set are significantly larger than d1. The CBL difference between d1 and d2 is 14 mm, so although they are similar in morphology and carina orientations (see below), size might be enough to distinguish d2 from d1 (the difference is not obvious in AMNH 5027 View Materials but is in FMNH PR2081 ). It should also be difficult to confuse the mesial-set teeth with those in the premaxilla as the size and morphologies of the sets are different. In terms of CBL and CBW, d4 is the largest tooth in the dentary. This crown is designated as the last tooth in the mesial set because it marks an inflection point beyond which size decreases to the end of the tooth row in CBL, CBW, and AL ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). The fifth tooth is not significantly different from d4 or in some cases d3, but for all size variables, d5 is smaller than d4. There is heterodonty within the distal set, but the changes are subtle and the teeth become increasingly smaller to the end of the tooth row. Distal to d7, the distal set teeth are significantly smaller than those in the mesial set. The thirteenth and fourteenth dentary teeth are the smallest in the mouth of T. rex (d12 CBL = 22.29 mm; d13 CBL = 16.53 mm, p.0485).

Crown Shape and Carina Morphologies —Tooth position does not have a significant effect on CBR variation in the dentary and there are no real trends of basal shape across the tooth row ( Fig. 4A View FIGURE 4 ), although d13 is an outlier that is significantly more lance shaped than the more mesial teeth. There is a trend towards increasingly squat teeth ( Fig. 4B View FIGURE 4 ) and tooth position is significant for CHR. There is a significant difference in ‘squatness’ between d1 and the mesial dentary set. The mesial-set teeth exhibit similar degrees of elongation. Distal to d4, the teeth become increasingly ‘squat.’ The most distal teeth possess significantly lower CHR values than those in the rest of the mouth (d12 = 1.45; d13 = 1.23, p 0366).

As in the maxilla, the location and orientation of the carinae change with position from mesial to distal in the dentary ( Fig. 7B, D View FIGURE 7 ). Osborn (1912) reported that the basolingual surfaces of the teeth have a pronounced concavity that is wider root apically (sensu Smith and Dodson, 2003) than basally, where it tapers to a foramen for the dental artery. This structure is obvious in some T. rex teeth, but it is not always congruent with the dental foramina. Mesially, crown shape is distinct from that of the distal set; d1 in particular resembles the premaxillary class more than the dentary sets ( Fig. 12 View FIGURE 12 ). The labial face of d1 is convex rostrally and the mesial and distal faces are flattened and elongated. However, unlike in the premaxilla, the basal long axis of d1 is mesiodistally oriented. The tooth is more conical than are those in the premaxilla. The lingual face is more rounded than in the premaxilla, although apically it is very similar to that of the premaxillary crowns. The carinae are linguomesially and linguodistally positioned, although the bases are more labially positioned than in the premaxilla. Molnar (1978) and Carr and Williamson (2004) noted this general morphology in the putative juvenile specimen of T. rex , LACM 28741.

The second crown (the first in the mesial set) is a transitional form between d1 and the more distal dentary teeth ( Fig. 13 View FIGURE 13 ). Osborn (1912) noted correctly that the mesial crowns distal to d1 are morphologically dissimilar from the premaxillary teeth, and recognized that the dentary series changed in a similar manner to the maxilla, with the carinae changing from the labial and lingual surfaces mesially to the mesial and distal surfaces distally. The mesial carina of d2 is positioned mesially as compared to that of d1. It begins at the apex and extends basally along the lingual edge of the mesial face, such that denticles can be seen on the lingual edge in mesial view. The distal carina of d2 remains close to where it is in d1, such that its base is located in the distal quarter of the labial face. By d3, the mesial carina is positioned such that it in mesial view, it begins just lingual to the apex and extends basally in the lingual quarter of the mesial face. The distal carina is located such that its base is in the distal quarter of the labial face, similar to that of d2. Carina orientations in d4 are very similar to d3. The labial faces of the mesial set are almost flat (e.g., BHI 3033 , FMNH PR2081 , and MOR 008 ), while the lingual faces are slightly convex.

In the distal set, carina orientations become increasingly mesiodistally aligned, the long axes of which largely parallel the edge of the dentary ( Figs. 7B View FIGURE 7 , 14 View FIGURE 14 ). Mesially in the set (d5–d8), the teeth resemble the mesial maxillary teeth, except that they are narrower. The distal-most teeth (>d12) are different from all other T. rex crowns; they are small, very narrow, and have strongly curved mesial curvature profiles and almost straight distal profiles that in some cases (Ld13 of BHI 3033 ) angle toward the apex. Even in the last few teeth, however, the mesial carinae exhibit a basal lingual twist and the distal carinae are labially placed (e.g., Rd13 of LACM 150167 ).

As in the maxilla and in Acrocanthosaurus , but in contrast to the condition in Albertosaurus , Allosaurus , and Gorgosaurus , the mesial dentary teeth (e.g., MOR 008 , AMNH 5027 View Materials ) are not set in the jaw with their long axes lined up mesiodistally. Rather, the crowns are oriented such that there is an angle of ̴30° between the long axes and the alveolar margin. Thus, the apices do not line up with each other along the tooth row and the surface area the teeth can contact during a bite is greater in T. rex than it is in other tyrannosaurids such as Gorgosaurus (see discussion).

Crown Curvature —As in the maxilla, curvature increases across the dentary and position is a significant factor in explaining the observed variation ( Fig. 4C View FIGURE 4 ). The CA for d1 (84.44°) is significantly different from those of the distal teeth (d11= 82.68°, p.0357). Whereas d1 might be successfully distinguished from pm1 using CBW, it is not distinct from pm1 in terms of apex displacement (pm1 = 84.72°, p.7154). However, pm1 has a more strongly curved mesial profile than does d1 ( Fig. 15 View FIGURE 15 ). As the crowns become more elongated in the mesial dentary, their apices become more centrally positioned and there is a weak trend of increasing CA in the set ( Fig. 4C View FIGURE 4 ). However, in the distal set, CA values decrease steadily to the end of the row. The last dentary teeth have the most displaced apices in the dentition (d13 CA = 78.17°; d12 = 82.93°, p <.0001).

Denticles —As in the rest of the mouth, denticle sizes in the dentary are reciprocals of crown size, and denticle density increases distally along the tooth row ( Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 ). Mesial densities range from 7–14.4/5 mm and distal densities range from 7.5– 15.7/5 mm; d4 has the largest mesial denticles (7.8/5 mm) and d3 has the largest distal denticles (8.8/5 mm). The distal dentary teeth have the smallest denticles in the entire dentition (d13 DAVG: 14.9/5 mm; d12: 12/5 mm, p.0006). Contrary to Carr and Williamson (2004), there is no significant difference in denticle size between the mesial and distal carinae (MAVG = 9.6/5 mm; DAVG = 10/5 mm, p.5100). The DSDI data for the dentary ( Fig. 6C View FIGURE 6 ) exhibit a similar trend to that observed in the maxilla; DSDI values do not increase or decrease substantially along the tooth row.

NON-POSITIONAL VARIATION

Apical Denticles —Carinae can be isolated or can cross the apex as one entity. For theropods with ‘single’ carinae, the denticles can terminate prior to or can cross the apex. This latter condition, apical denticulation, has been described in Acrocanthosaurus, Alectrosaurus Gilmore, 1933 , Dryptosaurus Marsh 1877, Eotyrannus Hutt et al., 2001, Neovenator Hutt et al., 1996 , and Ricardoestesia Currie et al., 1990, and is considered unusual (see Harris, 1998; Hutt et al., 2001). However, I have observed it in Majungatholus , Allosaurus , Carcharodontosaurus , tyrannosaurids, and dromaeosaurids, a distribution similar to that reported by Currie and Carpenter (2000). I agree with these authors that apical denticulation in and of itself is not a particularly useful character. However, recording whether or not the denticles cross the carinae (with possible taphonomic modification acknowledged) in theropod descriptions is still useful as I suspect that possession of apical denticulation is likely to be the plesiomorphic theropod state, while a lack of apical denticles is the derived condition.

Crown Ornamentation —‘Enamel wrinkles’ are considered diagnostic for carcharodontosaurids (see Stromer, 1931; Sereno et al., 1996; Chure et al., 1999). Evaluating the distribution of the feature is beyond the scope of this paper, but observations made during this study indicate that the distribution of ‘enamel wrinkles’ extends beyond Carcharodontosaurus and Giganotosaurus Coria and Salgado, 1995 , as similar structures occur in tyrannosaurids (including T. rex ), allosaurids, Dromaeosaurus (AMNH 5356), and (very weakly) in Irritator (SMNS 58022). They are more strongly developed and exhibit slightly different morphologies in Carcharodontosaurus (SGM Din-1) as compared to other theropods, but ‘enamel wrinkles’ (broadly defined) are not restricted to this group, especially as there is no consensus as to what exactly constitutes an ‘enamel wrinkle.’

Split Carinae —This feature and its implications were discussed by Erickson (1995) and will not be restated here. Rather, as Erickson’s (1995) work focused on an assemblage of shed tyrannosaurid teeth, I will simply note the instances of in situ split carinae observed during this study. The first occurs in Rd2 of SDSM 12047 , where an additional mesial carina occurs on the mesial face. It begins ̴12–13 mm from the apex, ̴1–2 mm labial of center, and extends down the labial quarter of the face. It is denticulate along its entire length; the denticles are smaller than those on the principal carina (̴10/5 mm apically; ̴9/5 mm basally). The second occurs in CM 1400, a partial left maxilla from the Lance Formation of Wyoming (see McIntosh, 1981). This bone possesses six complete alveoli and preserves four teeth. The third tooth back from the rostral margin (Lmx3?) has a secondary carina labial to the principal keel apically on the crown. These are the only instances of in situ split carinae in T. rex that I have observed. A third possible occurrence exists on the basal margin of the distal carina of Ld2 on BMNH R5863 . However, there is a crack in the crown enamel between the two serrated ridges and it is possible that the crack runs through the distal carina, separating it and giving it the appearance of being split.

Denticle Curves —Theropod denticle morphology has recently begun to be addressed ( Currie et al., 1990; Slaughter et al., 1994; Baszio, 1997; Holtz, 1998; Holtz et al., 1998). Chisel-shaped denticles are said to be distinctive dromaeosaurid characters ( Currie et al., 1990), pointed denticles that hook apically have been cited as characteristic for tyrannosaurids ( Currie et al., 1990; Abler, 1992) and for troodontids ( Currie, 1987). In reality, denticle morphology has only been examined at very basic levels (e.g., Currie et al., 1990) and variation in denticle shapes has not yet been examined. The true taxonomic and systematic utility of denticle shapes is currently unknown and applications of these shapes are premature. It might be profitable in the future to mathematically model the curved shapes of denticles as was discussed by Smith et al. (2005) for crown curvature profiles.

DISCUSSION

Teeth of T. rex possess several theropod plesiomorphies, including ‘sharp’ and ‘not closely packed’ crowns ( Gauthier, 1986) with serrated carinae ( Holtz, 1998) and significant curvature ( Sereno et al., 1998). However, accounting for positional variation, T. rex displays features distinct from the teeth of other tyrannosaurids and non-tyrannosaurids that might hold promise for taxonomy and systematics. It is important to assess the distribution of these features within the Theropoda to gauge systematic potential (as is true for non-dental traits), and the strength of the analysis presented here is reduced without detailed comparisons of other dentitions. The discussion must begin somewhere, however, and the length of this article illustrates that the process of accounting for variation in theropod dentitions is involved enough to make the simultaneous study of nu- merous taxa impractical, especially those with heterodont dentitions. The discussion of putative characters given below is thus a very preliminary step that awaits detailed examinations of the dental arcades of other theropod species.

Placing Teeth in Alveoli

A stepwise discriminant analysis using squared Mahalanobis distances was run to study the prospect of correlating teeth with alveoli. The analysis was run in the same manner as those in Smith et al. (2005) and used AL, CA2, CBL, CBR, CH, CHR, CBW, and DAVG2 (see Smith et al., 2005, for data). The analysis succeeded in correctly classifying 41% of the teeth with the correct alveolus, not a good result. It is possible that sample size (116 valid teeth) is to blame. If so, the result is discouraging as this is a larger sample than is likely to be obtained for most theropods for the foreseeable future. However, results improve when tooth class, rather than position, is used as a factor ( Table 3 View TABLE 3 ). In this analysis, 67% of the teeth were correlated with the correct bone. As it is difficult to discriminate T. rex maxillary and dentary crowns using visual inspection, these results offer some promise as to the future potential of being able to correlate teeth with alveoli, especially as more data are added to the standard.

Taxonomy and Systematics

Tooth Count — Lamanna (1998) found that premaxillary tooth count varies little within theropod species and is a robust character. The present work and all consulted sources agree that T. rex possesses the theropod plesiomorphy of four premaxillary teeth ( Holtz, 1998). In general, maxillary and dentary counts are weak characters, except that high counts are synapomorphic for certain taxa, such as ornithomimids and some spinosaurids (but see Holtz, 2001; Currie, 2003a). Tyrannosaurids possess too much intraspecific variation in maxillary and dentary tooth counts for these features to be systematically useful ( Lamanna, 1998).

Tooth Emplacement —The en echelon emplacement of crowns that occurs in the lateral dentitions of some theropods ( Fig. 11 View FIGURE 11 ) is intriguing and it is tempting to interpret this feature in a systematic sense. A difference between the trend of the bone and the crowns’ basal long axes would result in the cutting of a wider swath during a bite than with teeth that line up along the trend of the bone, as occurs in some modern reptiles (see Auffenberg, 1981). This wider swath might serve to increase the efficiency with which a theropod could tear meat from a prey animal and as such there is likely to be a strong functional aspect to this feature. The en echelon emplacement of lateral teeth appears to be restricted to certain theropods and might represent a derived condition. The distribution of this feature within the Theropoda is curious, however (e.g., Acrocanthosaurus , Giganotosaurus , Majungatholus , T. rex ), and warrants additional study.

Tooth Size —Dental size features are not common in theropod phylogenetic analyses. Indeed, basal width is the only common theropod tooth size character (narrow crown bases are considered plesiomorphic for the Theropoda , Holtz, 2001). While size features must be handled carefully if they are to be examined in a systematic light, T. rex crowns are generally so much larger than those of other theropods in terms of CBL and CH that these features might be useful if compared with other metrics (e.g., limb lengths, Currie, 1998). Such appears to be the case for CBW. Although teeth of Carcharodontosaurus are similar in size to teeth of T. rex ( Figs. 16A, C, D View FIGURE 16 ), T. rex crowns are substantially wider ( Fig. 16B View FIGURE 16 ). In fact, T. rex might well have the widest teeth of any theropod, a feature affected less by position than some of the other variables ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). Large basal width thus might ultimately prove to be a viable autapomorphy of Tyrannosaurus . Holtz (2001) erected a similar character (79: incrassate crowns: cross section greater than 60% wide labiolingually as long mesiodistally). In examining the data here, Holtz’s character (79) holds up for T. rex and Daspletosaurus , but is not robust for Gorgosaurus . Currie et al. (2003) discounted Holtz’s character 79 with the argument that base width is allometric and juvenile tyrannosaurids should possess ziphodont ‘lateral’ teeth. This is entirely possible, but Currie et al. (2003) did not support the hypothesis. There was no discussion of the data nor were juvenile crowns identified within the dataset. Although postulated juvenile crowns identified as cf. T. rex are known (pers. obs.; see also Currie et al., 1990), none of these has been conclusively shown to pertain to T. rex because there are currently no proven juvenile skulls of T. rex . For T. rex at least, the dentition of which differs from other tyrannosaurids in several ways, the lack of definitive juvenile data makes hypotheses regarding the ‘juvenile condition’ of the teeth of this animal speculative. The spread of the data reported by Currie et al. (2003:fig. 1) does not demonstrate that juvenile tyrannosaurids have ziphodont teeth, nor does it demonstrate that T. rex lacks a distinct CBW condition (various taxa possess aspects of their teeth that depart from clean linear relationships, see Farlow et al., 1991; Holtz et al., 1998).

Carr and Williamson (2004), Carr et al. (2005), and Currie (2003a) reported that a ‘small’ mx1 is a tyrannosaurid character. Qualitatively, mx1 in Daspletosaurus and Gorgosaurus is smaller than the mesial maxillary dentition (see Carr, 1999; Currie, 2003a). In T. rex , however, although mx1 is the smallest crown in the mesial maxillary set, it is not ‘small’ with respect to the rest of the dentition. Indeed, mx1 is significantly larger than most of the maxillary teeth and almost the entire dentary class ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ), a feature recognized by Osborn (1912). A ‘small mx1’ is not a synapomorphy of the Tyrannosauridae , nor does it unite the Tyrannosaurinae sensu Currie (2003b) as the condition occurs in Daspletosaurus , but not in T. rex or in Tarbosaurus ; this merits investigation given the relationships recovered by Holtz (2001) versus those obtained by Currie et al. (2003). Also intriguing is the fact that CMNH 7541 appears to possess a ‘small mx1.’ If additional material of ‘ Nanotyrannus ’ continues to support the possession of this feature, it might have implications for the taxonomic validity of this taxon. LACM 12471 also possesses a ‘small mx1,’ which might have implications for the hypothesis of Carr and Williamson (2004) that this specimen represents a juvenile T. rex . Even if tooth size in the maxilla of T. rex increases with positive allometry ( Currie, 2003b), there is little reason to believe that mx1 would respond differently during growth than the rest of the maxillary class, especially as it is possible that theropod teeth exhibit small amounts of ontogenetic change (see Currie et al., 1990). As such, given the normal caveats related to sample size, the disproportionately small sizes of mx1 in some tyrannosaurids are probably real features; while not a tyrannosaurid synapomorphy, it might still be useful in helping to recover relationships within the clade.

Carr and Williamson (2004) reported that d1 in tyrannosaurids is ‘subconical’ in shape and is the smallest tooth in the dentary. Their precise definition of ‘subconical’ is difficult to ascertain, but as discussed above, the morphology of d1 in T. rex is certainly different from the rest of the dentary teeth and indeed is similar to the premaxillary dentition. However, although d1 is similar in size to d11 ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ), it is significantly larger than the distal teeth of both the dentary and the maxilla (d12–d14; mx12). For at least T. rex , then, a ‘small’ d1 is not a viable character.

Tooth Shape —‘Incisiform’ premaxillary crowns with linguomesially and linguodistally placed carinae are generally considered to be derived for tyrannosaurids (see Carpenter, 1982; Bakker et al., 1988; Molnar and Carpenter, 1989; Chandler, 1990; Currie et al., 1990; Abler, 1992; Farlow and Brinkman, 1994; Carr, 1999; Carr and Williamson, 2000; Sankey, 2001; Carr and Williamson, 2004). The condition is real, although some other theropods (e.g., dromaeosaurids) also possess premaxillary features that are similar to what occurs in tyrannosaurids (pers. obs.; see also Molnar, 1978; Molnar and Carpenter, 1989; Holtz, 1998). There might be an alternative to coding premaxillary crowns as simply “D-shaped in cross section,” to better distinguish the tyrannosaurid condition. In contrast to other theropods, tyranno- saurid premaxillary basal long axes are labiolingually oriented, with carinae that are positioned at the linguomesial and linguodistal corners of the crown. In the premaxillary dentitions of Allosaurus and some other taxa, the long axes are not strictly labiolingual and the placement of the carinae is more complicated. As such, tyrannosaurid premaxillary mesiodistal axes are distinctly shorter than those of other theropods; this is a derived condition of the clade (see Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 ).

As with crown size, an ‘incisiform’ mx1 has been described as a tyrannosaurid synapomorphy ( Carr, 1999; Currie, 2003a; Carr and Williamson, 2004), occurring in Gorgosaurus and Daspletosaurus as well as in problematic specimens such as LACM 28471 and FMNH PR2211 (e.g., Molnar, 1978; Carr and Williamson, 2004). However, the premaxillary teeth of T. rex and other tyrannosaurids have also been referred to as ‘incisiform’ in shape (e.g., Russell, 1970; Holtz, 1998; Brochu, 2002). In T. rex , mx1 is morphologically distinct from the more distal teeth and from the premaxillary class. The difference in shape is more dramatic between mx1 and the premaxillary class than it is between mx1 and the rest of the maxillary series; mx1 does not possess the same morphology as the premaxillary crowns and the term incisiform cannot be used in the same sense for both pm4 and mx1 in T. rex . The long axis of mx1 is mesiodistally oriented and is longer than the labiolingual axis. The mesial carina extends down the lingual side of the mesial face, which is the homologue to the labial face in the premaxilla. This is not the morphology of mx1 in Daspletosaurus or in Gorgosaurus and it is distinctly different from the premaxillary condition in T. rex . I would argue that there is no single good term for the morphology of mx1 in T. rex and that this crown is best described as a transitional form between the premaxillary and the maxillary classes, but one that is decidedly more similar to the maxillary condition. Using ‘incisiform’ in the same sense for both morphologies is not appropriate; if an ‘incisiform’ mx1 occurs in Gorgosaurus and Daspletosaurus , then the condition that actually occurs in T. rex is a lack of an incisiform mx1. CMNH 7541 , the holotype of Nanotyrannus , and LACM 28471 both possess an ‘incisiform’ mx1 sensu Carr (1999). If ‘incisiform’ is describing the same morphologies in these non- T. rex taxa, then the presence of an ‘incisiform’ mx1 in CMNH 7541 and LACM 28471 might argue for the distinction of these specimens from T. rex and against the juvenile T. rex hypotheses advocated by Carr (1999) and Carr and Williamson (2004); this would be curious because the evidence offered by these authors is very compelling.

Carina Lengths —In T. rex , the mesial carinae terminate above the crown bases and the distal carinae extend to the bases. Currie and Dong (2001) reported that the mesial carinae of maxillary teeth extend to the crown bases, but the results presented here refute this hypothesis. Shortened maxillary carinae occur in several theropods (e.g., Gorgosaurus , Acrocanthosaurus ). Carr and Williamson (2004) reported that this condition is typical of tyrannosaurids except Daspletosaurus . In T. rex it is possible to interpret this feature as a trend of decreasing mesial carina length along the maxillary tooth row; in the distal crowns the mesial carinae terminate ̴25 mm above the bases of the enamel. Carina length cannot be used to discriminate a maxillary crown versus one from the dentary, but the fact that some theropods do not appear to possess shortened maxillary carinae (e.g., Velociraptor ) suggests that this feature holds some taxonomic utility.

Denticles —Since denticle and tooth sizes generally scale together ( Chandler, 1990; Farlow et al., 1991; Baszio, 1997), denticle size would seem unlikely to be useful in taxonomy or systematics. However, few tests have been done and denticle sizes are occasionally considered to be taxonomically diagnostic ( Molnar and Carpenter, 1989). Chandler (1990) reported that the taxonomic value of serration densities had not been assessed prior to her work because of a lack of diagnostic specimens ( Carr, 1999, and I have had similar problems). Assessing the utility of denticles has been further hampered because existing published data are often calculated from a single tooth or as an average of several crowns (e.g., Barsbold, 1983; Currie, 1995; Azuma and Currie, 2000; Currie and Carpenter, 2000; Hutt et al., 2001). There is sometimes no distinction made concerning from which carina or even which tooth measurements come (e.g., Barsbold, 1983; Hurum and Sabath, 2003). Chandler’s (1990) lamentation over a lack of data reflected the additional problem that denticle densities have virtually never been reported in such a way as to facilitate a detailed examination of their variability.

Denticle sizes alone do a poor job of discriminating most theropods ( Figs. 17A, B View FIGURE 17 ). Rauhut and Werner (1995) devised DSDI to improve this situation, but the results are mixed ( Fig. 17C View FIGURE 17 ). It discriminates poorly overall, but Deinonychus is significantly different from Dromaeosaurus , two taxa with otherwise very similar teeth (see Currie et al., 1990). This is mostly due to differences in MAVG between these taxa. There are other potentially useful tooth and denticle relationships as well. Troodontids and dromaeosaurids have derived teeth ( Holtz, 1998, 2001) with significantly larger distal than mesial denticles (contrary to Carr and Williamson [2000; 2004], this is not typical of tyrannosaurids, at least where T. rex is concerned) and some spinosaurids have unusually small denticles for the size of the teeth. DAVG and DSDI values do not illustrate these characteristics well, but some resolution comes from using the size corrected DAVG2 ( Fig. 17D View FIGURE 17 ). Mean DAVG2 values below ̴−.5 might be significant for troodontids and above.5 might be a synapomorphy for baryonychines. A tooth/denticle size index might thus generate a useful theropod character. Although devising this is beyond the scope of this paper, the concept has been qualitatively discussed previously by Sereno et al. (1998) and was explored by Farlow et al. (1991). Denticle size should be explored further.

Summary

Theropod teeth are simple structures, but this work has shown that there can be useful information contained within theropod dentitions if they are studied in detail, by combining qualitative descriptions with quantitative methods. With the dental anatomy and variation of a common theropod documented, we might ultimately expect additional systematic information to come from teeth. Also, a standard now exists against which to compare putative teeth of T. rex . It should now be possible to examine assemblages of isolated crowns from Upper Cretaceous rocks in western North America and identify teeth of T. rex within these assemblages. Descriptions of other dentitions should facilitate the inclusion in theropod phylogenetic analyses of additional dental information, facilitate the taxonomic identification of isolated teeth, and aid in assessing the validity of ‘tooth taxa,’ benefiting all biogeographical and paleoecological research conducted in terrestrial Mesozoic rocks.

TABLE 2. Premaxillary, maxillary, and dentary tooth counts of Tyrannosaurus rex.

Specimen Element Side Positions
AMNH 5027 View Materials Premaxilla Left 4
AMNH 5027 View Materials Premaxilla Right 4
BHI 3033 Premaxilla Left 4
BHI 3033 Premaxilla Right 4
FMNH PR2081 Premaxilla Left 4
FMNH PR2081 Premaxilla Right 4
LACM 23844 View Materials Premaxilla Right 4
AMNH 5027 View Materials Maxilla Left 12
AMNH 5027 View Materials Maxilla Right 12
BHI 3033 Maxilla Left 11
BHI 3033 Maxilla Right 11
CM 9380 View Materials Maxilla Left 12
FMNH PR2081 Maxilla Left 12
FMNH PR2081 Maxilla Right 12
LACM 23844 View Materials Maxilla Right 11
MOR 555 Maxilla Left 12
MOR 1125 Maxilla Right 12
SDSM 12047 Maxilla Left 12
SDSM 12047 Maxilla Right 12
UCMP 118742 Maxilla Right 12
AMNH 5027 View Materials Dentary Left 14
AMNH 5027 View Materials Dentary Right 14
BHI 3033 Dentary Left 13
BHI 3033 Dentary Right 13
BMNH 5863 Dentary Left 14
CM 9380 View Materials Dentary Left 13
CM 9380 View Materials Dentary Right 13
FMNH PR2081 Dentary Left 13
FMNH PR2081 Dentary Right 14
LACM 23844 View Materials Dentary Right 11
LACM 23844 View Materials Dentary Left 11
LACM 150167 Dentary Right 12
MOR 1125 Dentary Right 14
SDSM 12047 Dentary Left 14
SDSM 12047 Dentary Right ?15

TABLE 1. Tyrannosaurus rex class-level comparisons for the nine principal variables used in this study. “p (Premaxilla)” = p values of ANOVAs for maxilla and dentary values against the premaxillary values; “p (Max-Dent)” = p values of ANOVAs between the maxilla and dentary values. “S(P)” and “S(M)” = indications of significance (*) or nonsignificance (- -) at 95% for the ANOVAs.

            p p      
Bone Variable Mean Min. Max. St. Dev. (Premaxilla) (Max-Dent) S (P) S (M) n
Premaxilla CBL 31.41 27.38 36.06 2.666         9
Premaxilla CBW 19.01 14.27 24.00 2.992         9
Premaxilla CH 50.63 42.55 63.65 7.393         9
Premaxilla AL 57.25 50.21 71.97 6.640         9
Premaxilla CBR .60 .52 .67 0.052         9
Premaxilla CHR 1.61 1.42 1.77 1.607         9
Premaxilla CA 85.44 84.59 86.38 0.715         9
Premaxilla MAVG 9.9 9.1 10.8 0.568         9
Premaxilla DAVG 9.9 8.4 11.0 0.831         9
Maxilla CBL 40.37 18.96 54.88 8.807 .0059   *   59
Maxilla CBW 27.90 12.83 41.59 6.885 .0004   *   57
Maxilla CH 78.62 27.02 117.10 24.364 .0011   *   52
Maxilla AL 86.21 32.14 138.94 26.201 .0016   *   52
Maxilla CBR .69 .57 .86 0.073 .0001   *   57
Maxilla CHR 1.97 1.43 2.55 .269 .0005   *   52
Maxilla CA 86.67 81.45 88.11 1.491 .0945   - -   52
Maxilla MAVG 9.1 6.8 13.4 1.316 .1135   - -   49
Maxilla DAVG 9.4 7.2 13.2 1.368 .3214   - -   48
Dentary CBL 36.05 15.01 52.07 9.586 .1487 .0089 - - * 62
Dentary CBW 25.92 9.22 38.57 7.192 .0056 .1175 * - - 62
Dentary CH 64.87 15.85 105.61 23.538 .0890 .0024 - - * 58
Dentary AL 70.62 17.41 115.88 25.160 .1352 .0013 - - * 58
Dentary CBR .72 .56 .88 0.056 <.0001 .0450 * * 62
Dentary CHR 1.7 1.06 2.36 0.297 .1071 .0003 - - * 58
Dentary CA 85.75 76.45 87.76 2.495 .6733 .0182 - - * 58
Dentary MAVG 9.6 7.0 14.4 1.479 .5833 .0604 - - - - 51
Dentary DAVG 10.0 7.5 15.7 1.803 .8725 .0383 - - * 52

TABLE 3. Classification results for T. rex tooth/bone DFA. 67% of original group cases correctly classified.

Predicted
Actual Premaxilla Maxilla Dentary Total
Premaxilla n 8 0 1 9
Maxilla 10 27 12 49
Dentary 5 10 42 57
Premaxilla % 88.8 0 11.1 100
Maxilla 20.4 55.1 24.5 100
Dentary 8.8 17.5 73.7 100
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