T. rex had the same lungs. They are the lungs of today’s birds: rigid bellows anchored to the backbone, able to extract oxygen when the animal breaths in and also when it breathes out. They’re different from our lungs, which can take in oxygen only during inhalation, then spew out carbon dioxide during exhalation. They are a stunning feat of biological engineering. When today’s birds—and also T. rex—breathe in, oxygen-rich air courses through the lungs as you would expect. However, some of the inhaled air doesn’t go through the lungs right away but is shunted into a system of sacs connected to
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