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Baby T. rex were out of the nest and hunting early

Baby Tyrannosaurus were cute, but still dangerous according to a new study published in the peer-reviewed journal Biology. A team of paleontologists and researchers, including OSU Center for Health Sciences Professor of Anatomy and Cell Biology Eric
Baby T. rex were out of the nest and hunting early
OSU paleontology students bring history to life at Cherokee Immersion School

Thu, Apr 21, 2022

OSU-CHS students Celine Cortes, Lianna Marilao, Jacob George and Forrest LaFleur taught children about paleontology and STEM at the Cherokee Immersion School in Tahlequah

OSU-CHSgraduate programPaleontologyOSU Center for Health SciencesOSU School of Biomedical Sciences
Paleontology alum featured in dinosaur documentary

Sat, Jan 29, 2022

For OSU Center for Health Sciences alumnus Evan Johnson-Ransom, taking part in paleontology field research in Alaska's Denali National Park last summer was unlike anything he had done before, including being filmed for a dinosaur documentary.

OSU School of Biomedical SciencesOSU Center for Health SciencesPaleontologyOSU-CHSgraduate programs
Younger T.rex bites were less ferocious than their adult counterparts

Fri, Mar 12, 2021

By closely examining the jaw mechanics of juvenile and adult tyrannosaurids, some of the fiercest dinosaurs to inhabit earth, scientists from the University of Bristol and OSU College of Osteopathic Medicine at the Cherokee Nation have uncovered

OSU-CHSFaculty ResearchOSU Center for Health SciencesOSU College of Osteopathic Medicine at the Cherokee NationPaleontology
We Are OSU-CHS: Evan Johnson-Ransom

Thu, Jan 14, 2021

A regular spotlight of some of OSU-CHS' outstanding students at our Tulsa and Tahlequah sites.

PaleontologyStudent SpotlightOSU-CHSOSU Center for Health Sciences
Researchers learn more about teenage T.rex

Thu, Jan 2, 2020

Without a doubt, Tyrannosaurus rex is the most famous dinosaur in the world. The 40-foot-long predator with bone crushing teeth inside a 5-foot long head are the stuff of legend. Now, a look within the bones of two mid-sized, immature T. rex allow

PaleontologyOSU-CHSHighlight
New study finds T. rex has an unbeatable ability to twirl, making it a superb predator

Thu, Feb 21, 2019

A new study from researchers at University of Wisconsin-La Crosse and Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences found that Tyrannosaurus rex — and other tyrannosaurs like it — could turn twice as fast as other carnivorous dinosaurs

PaleontologyOSU-CHS