Elite Raptor 007
MemberCompsognathusApr-09-2014 8:56 PMeverybody in this JP fan server, must be loving Tyrannosaurus Rex, and we all know that T-rex has quite the Largest Bite Force on the Planet, but actually, their Bite Force were stronger than we've measured, previously recorded, that T-Rex bite experiment done by Dr. Greg Eriksen Measured around 5,000 pound per square inch, could be bigger.
The already fearsome Tyrannosaurus rex dinosaur may have been even deadlier than previously thought.
The extinct T. rex bit 10 times harder than a modern alligator and four times harder than previously calculated, according to a computer model of the dinosaur generated by researchers from the University of Liverpool.
This newfound force means the T. rex had the strongest bite of any land animal ever. Getting bitten by one would have felt like being sat on by an elephant, the authors wrote.
I have no idea what the bite would do to an animal beyond hurt a lot, Karl Bates, co-author of the study and post-doctoral researcher in biomechanics at the University of Liverpool. The force is obviously much higher than alligators and lions and you wouldn't want to be bitten by either of those.
The strength of the bite didn't start out that strong though. Juvenile T. rexes probably had a much weaker bite, making it likely that the dinosaur's diet changed over time, the authors wrote. Younger members of the species would eat smaller prey until their bite force became strong enough to puncture the skin of other dinosaurs.
I think everyone expected T. rex to have a strong bite force, but it's even stronger than we expected, Bill Sellers, a computational zoologist at the University of Manchester who was not involved in the study. And it gets stronger as it gets bigger, which is surprising.
Bite force is measured in Newtons, a unit of measurement named after physicist Sir Issac Newton, famous for formulating the theory of gravity. A Newton is defined as the amount of force required to accelerate a mass of one kilogram one meter per second squared.
A T. rex would have been capable of biting down with a force of 35,000 to 57,000 Newtons with its back teeth, according to the study. Great white sharks can bite down with a force of 20,000 Newtons, according to a 2008 study published in the Journal of Zoology. Humans are capable of biting down with less than 1,000 Newtons.
But even with that amount of crushing power, the T. rex doesn't hold the distinction for the most powerful jaws. That distinction belongs to the ancient megalodon sharks, according to National Geographic.
Megalodons lived between 1.5 million and 28 million years ago, and may have grown to be 50 feet (16 meters) long. The extinct sharks could bite with a force three times stronger than that of a T. rex - 105,000 to 171,000 Newtons - according to National Geographic.
Raptor-401
MemberAllosaurusApr-09-2014 9:44 PMInteresting. I really do hope this doesn't start a fnaboy war.
IT'S TIME TO DU-DU-DU-DU-DUEL!!!
UCMP 118742
MemberCompsognathusApr-10-2014 2:53 AMThe newest study regarding it's bite force was done in 2008 (I think) by Mason B. Meers (again, I'm not so sure) and he calculated a bite force of 180.000-235.000N. Most people don't think that it wouldn't represent an average but rather a maximum, with the average being at roughly ten tons (100.000N).
Keep in mind that many people have died for their beliefs; it's actually quite common. The real courage is in living and suffering for what you believe in. -Brom-
Lord Vader
MemberTyrannosaurus RexApr-10-2014 4:15 AMWe already knew most of this, but UCMP is correct. With its maximum force, the King would have the highest bite force of all time.
Raptor, not everything that says Tyrannosaurus was strong is going to start a fanboy war, especially consdidering that Spino wasn't even mentioned.
Jack of all trades. Master of none
Dinosaur.Fanatic
MemberCompsognathusApr-10-2014 2:40 PMWow. Really makes you appreciate this magnificent creature.
"Either way, you probably won't get off this island alive."
--Alan Grant
Deltadromeus
MemberCompsognathusApr-10-2014 3:38 PMOkay, I don't really know my newton-pound, but when I looked it up, (for everyone else who can't convert in thier head) the highest 57,000 newtons is around 12800 lbs of force. Or around 6.4 tons. I'm not suprised by this. Nor am I suprised by the fact that Megalodon has a max bite of around 38400 lbs or 19.2 tons. It makes sense for a shark that size. I know that the supercrocs like Sarcosuchus and Deinosuchus have massive 10+ tons of bite force with some estimates for another croc (can't remember which one, and the statistics where from DinoFights) that had a bite up to the Megalodon's 20 tons of force. Interesting little research. It would be schooler if they used it on smaller dinosaurs too.
Hi
Elite Raptor 007
MemberCompsognathusApr-10-2014 6:31 PMMegalodon was the largest predatory fish ever live, it hunt's giants like St.Barbara Whale, the bite force of around 20 Ton will be really useful to take it down. while T-rex was a land animal, that much bite force will cause it to be heavier, and also the prey it hunt was not as big as megalodon's prey so the bite force doesn't really need to be really huge, at around 7 Tons it will be really efective to crushed down triceratops spine.