The most famous of all dinosaurs, Tyrannosaurus rex, handled to be fearsome adequate to star posthumously in a Hollywood smash hit regardless of its comically brief arms. Some other, lesser-known dinosaurs likewise integrated a big head with short forelimbs, and a research study released today (July 7) in Current Biology identifies yet another, which lived 20 million years before T. rex and belonged to a totally various group– suggesting there was likely an evolutionary advantage to the combo. “For a long period of time, we thought it was mainly tyrannosaurs that did the big head, long legs, small arms thing,” James Napoli at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, who wasnt associated with the research study, tells New Scientist. The study reveals that Meraxes gigas, which comes from a group called carcharodontosaurs, also sported those physical qualities. Artists rendition of Meraxes gigasCarlos PapolioThe results are based on fossils, including M. gigass skull and limbs, that the research study authors discovered in Argentina in 2012. They estimate that M. gigas, called after a dragon from Game of Thrones, was 11 meters long and weighed around 4 metric loads. It lived during the Late Cretaceous date, around 95 million years ago. While the forefathers of M. gigas had longer arms, study coauthor Juan Canale of the Ernesto Bachmann Paleontological Museum in Argentina informs CNN that they likely shrank as the animals developed larger, more powerful heads, with which they could have gotten prey straight, leaving their arms unnecessary for searching. Brief, M. gigass arms were strong, suggesting they kept some other function, according to the study. “Im inclined to think that they were used in other kinds of activities, like holding the female throughout mating or assistance in raising the body from a prone position,” Canale informs Reuters. Smithsonian reports that the M. gigas fossils are likewise shedding light on the anatomy of other species of carcharodontosaurs, which are largely known from fossil remains much less total than those of M. gigas.”Every new, weird, unanticipated dinosaur is actually important in reminding us just how much is left to be discovered,” Napoli informs New Scientist.