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Tuesday, November 24, 2020
DJ-Producer Lizzy Wang Ranked #52 Globally by DJane Magazine
China's top ranked female DJ LIZZY WANG vaults up 40 places to #52 in the 2020 DJane Magazine yearly rankings. Last year's #92, LIZZY WANG has broken through in 2020 with a prolific touring schedule, plus remixes and collaborations with Ferry Cprsten, Henri PFR and Valentino Khan. [PR.com]
T. rex had huge growth spurts, but other dinos grew 'slow and steady'
Tyrannosaurus rex was one of the biggest meat-eating dinosaurs of all time—it measured up to 42 feet long from snout to tail and would have weighed in at around 16,000 pounds. And it wasn't alone—some of its less-well-known cousins could reach nearly the same size. Scientists have previously shown that T. rex got so big by going through a huge teenage growth spurt, but they didn't know if that was true for just tyrannosaurs, just them and their close relatives, or perhaps all big bipedal dinosaurs. By cutting into dinosaur bones and analyzing the growth lines, a team of researchers got their answer: T. rex and its closest relatives had an awkward adolescence during which they got huge, while its more distant cousins in the allosauroid group kept on growing a little bit every year.
source https://phys.org/news/2020-11-rex-huge-growth-spurts-dinos.html
source https://phys.org/news/2020-11-rex-huge-growth-spurts-dinos.html
T. rex had huge growth spurts, but other dinos grew 'slow and steady'
Tyrannosaurus rex was one of the biggest meat-eating dinosaurs of all time—it measured up to 42 feet long from snout to tail and would have weighed in at around 16,000 pounds. And it wasn't alone—some of its less-well-known cousins could reach nearly the same size. Scientists have previously shown that T. rex got so big by going through a huge teenage growth spurt, but they didn't know if that was true for just tyrannosaurs, just them and their close relatives, or perhaps all big bipedal dinosaurs. By cutting into dinosaur bones and analyzing the growth lines, a team of researchers got their answer: T. rex and its closest relatives had an awkward adolescence during which they got huge, while its more distant cousins in the allosauroid group kept on growing a little bit every year.
The US Oncology Network Warns Administration’s Most Favored Nation Model Will Disrupt Patient Access to Cancer Treatments
Interim Final Rule would disproportionately target oncologists and reduce patient access to current and future treatments. [PR.com]
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