20 September 2009

Mini T-Rex fossil found in China

The skull of the Raptorex is dwarfed by that of 'Sue', a famous adult T-Rex at the Field Museum in Chicago. -- PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

CHICAGO: A pint-sized version of the Tyrannosaurus rex, with similarly powerful legs, razor-sharp teeth and tiny arms, roamed China some 125million years ago, say scientists, startled by the discovery.

The new animal, based on a single fossil smuggled out of China and eventually sold to a private collector, has been named Raptorex which means 'king raptor'. It lived in a lake-dotted region of northern China.

Measuring a mere 3m, the Raptorex weighed only about 60kg and was nearly 100 times smaller than the king of the dinosaurs, according to a paper published on Thursday in the online version of the journal Science.

This scrambles the picture of mega-predator evolution and raises the question of whether other jumbo dinosaurs had budget-sized versions.

The orthodoxy in palaeontology has been that T-Rex got its peculiar body shape - the colossal head, powerful jaws and comically short forelimbs - as a side-effect of evolving into a giant animal. The small arms have been seen as a natural trade-off for the big head.

'What we're looking at is a blueprint for a fast-running set of jaws,' University of Chicago palaeontologist Paul Sereno, the lead author of the Science paper, said this week. The blueprint works at multiple scales and across tens of millions of years of the Mesozoic era, he added.

The Raptorex fossil shows that the skinny arms evolved, not in order to help it offset a heavier overall bodyweight, but as a trade-off for agility and speed.

The tyrannosaurus genus did not reach its full size until about 85million years ago and was wiped out about 65million years ago. This suggests that for most of their evolutionary history, tyrannosauruses were small animals that lived in the shadow of other very large dinosaur predators.

The new species will be named Raptorex Kriegsteini, in honour of American eye surgeon and dinosaur enthusiast Henry Kriegstein, who bought the fossil and the dinosaur's link to raptors and the T-Rex.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, LOS ANGELES TIMES-WASHINGTON POST, WASHINGTON POST

17 September 2009

Term 3 Week 10 Percentage answers

10 September 2009

Exam Schedule

Some parents have asked about the exam schedule.

For those who want to start their examination preparations, here are the dates:

24 Sep (Thu) - P5 Eng Oral
25 Sep (Fri) - P5 MT Oral
27 Oct (Tue) - EL Paper 1 & Listening Comprehension
28 Oct (Wed) - MT Paper 1 & Listening Comprehension
29 Oct (Thu) - EL Paper 2
30 Oct (Fri) - MT Paper 2
2 Nov (Mon) - Math
3 Nov (Tue) -Science

Regards,
Mr Wan

09 September 2009

I've got a happy Teachers' Day

Dear 5C pupils,

Thanks for the little surprise you guys came up with the 5D pupils.

You've shown me that you guys can work with differences put aside.

The gifts you've showered me were great and I appreciate them, particularly the heart put in choosing, wrapping and decorating them, as well as the nice little messages placed in the cards.

I'm sorry that my throat wasn't well in delivering my lessons. I'm also glad that you guys could still understand the lessons.

Melvin, thank you for the praise but I'm not really a dancer. I was just trying to mimic the dance steps on the projector screen. I was kind of shocked that I won as I've got no time to notice what Mr Hakim and Mr Ghani were doing.

I'm glad you guys enjoyed the dance, though all 3 of us were caught by surprise.

Thank you for being attentive pupils for the past 8 months.

A teacher can never be great without great students.

You guys rock! Thank you for everything.

Best wishes,
Mr Wan

Pictures!