Stargazing T. Rex Gets a 67-Million-Year-Old View of the Night Sky

T. rex stands under the night sky.
What would the night sky have looked like to a fierce T. rex some 67 million years ago?
(Image credit: The Image Bank/Getty Images Plus)

Even an extremely dead apex predator deserves a beautiful view of the night sky — particularly one that reminds them of home.

Sue, the world's most complete T. rex skeleton, resides in a recently renovated gallery in the Field Museum in Chicago. There, the fossil, named for their discoverer, enjoys a new immersive display that called on the expertise of not only the Field's paleontological experts, but also, perhaps unexpectedly, astronomers at the neighboring Adler Planetarium.

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Michael Dhar
Live Science Contributor

Michael Dhar is a science editor and writer based in Chicago. He has an MS in bioinformatics from NYU Tandon School of Engineering, an MA in English literature from Columbia University and a BA in English from the University of Iowa. He has written about health and science for Live Science, Scientific American, Space.com, The Fix, Earth.com and others and has edited for the American Medical Association and other organizations.