Skull Tyrant

A skull tyrant (Labocania anomala) is a species of medium-sized solitary carnivorous non-avian theropod dinosaur part of the Tyrannosaur family. It was originally extinct in Late Cretaceous Baja California, but was brought back from extinction and introduced to Holocene Baja California and most other parts of Mexico in the 1910s. It is named for its skin covering on this tyrant's face is stretched very tightly across the bone and is chalky white in color, giving the creature's head a skeletal appearance, furthered by the similarly colored line running down its back and short rib-like stripes splitting off from said line, standing out against the coal black skin that covers the rest of the body. The normally blackish-grey skin covering the now-visible antorbital fenestrae and other openings in the skull is laced with thousands of blood vessels that can be flushed whenever the tyrant is startled or angry, coloring these gaps a demonic-looking flaming orangey-red. The natural environments where this species of tyrant normally lives in includes deserts, scrublands, savannas, and open woodlands. The conservation status of this species of tyrant is Least Concern due to successful conservation efforts, the tyrant's tame nature toward dylanusids as well as sapient species/beings, and being able to adapt to life in the cities and suburbs.