T. rex had feathers (and we have proof)
The king of dinosaurs was, technically, an oversized angry bird.

Seventy million years ago, a juvenile tyrannosaur, not much larger than a modern turkey, stalked the fern-filled undergrowth of what would become China. Its eyes, sharp and predatory, fixed on small prey. This creature, a distant cousin to *T. rex*, held a secret, etched into the fossil record.
The fossilized remains of *Yutyrannus huali*, unearthed from the Liaoning Province, present an unambiguous plumage: three distinct patches of filamentous feathers. These are not scales. They are primitive feathers, simple quills, some reaching nearly six inches in length, covering the animal's flank, tail, and neck. This discovery provides direct evidence that large tyrannosauroids, long envisioned as scaly reptilian predators, possessed a feathery integument. This shifts our understanding of thermoregulation and display in these apex predators, hinting at a world where even the most formidable hunters might have ruffled their plumage.
The image of a scaled, lizard-skinned tyrant king is profoundly ingrained in our collective imagination. Yet, the persistent whispers from the fossil record suggest a more nuanced reality. From tiny hatchlings to colossal adults, a feathery covering likely played a role in the lives of many tyrannosaurs, painting a more complex and avian-like portrait of these ancient rulers.
*Yutyrannus huali* translates to "beautiful feathered tyrant."
Sources

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