“…During the Cenomanian Stage of the Late Cretaceous, the Western Interior Seaway separated the terrestrial ecosystems of the eastern portion of North America with those of the American west, in turn affecting the faunas of both the east and west of the continent by subjecting each to isolation for millions of years. While in the west, it is known that the ancestors of the iconic Tyrannosaurus rex evolved reduced forelimbs and massive, powerful skulls, the tyrannosaurs of the eastern portion of North America, at that time a landmass called Appalachia (e.g., Sampson et al, 2010;Loewen et al, 2013), have remained more obscure, and rarely are associated or partial skeletons ever found. The two most complete tyrannosaurs from Late Cretaceous continent described so far are Dryptosaurus aquilunguis and Appalachiosaurus montgomeriensis, originally known from the Maastrichtian New Egypt Formation of New Jersey 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 and from the middle Campanian Demopolis Chalk Formation of Alabama, respectively (e.g., Cope, 1866;Marsh, 1877;Weishampel et al, 2004;Carr, Williamson & Schwimmer, 2005;Weishampel, 2006;Brusatte, Benson & Norell, 2011).…”