Not knowing how thick the T-Rex skull is (although I guess that .50-cal can go through an engine block, so it probably doesn’t matter) or the size of the brain, I’d be tempted to shoot at the base of the skull and take out the spinal cord (although still a hell of a shot, but I’m a Ranger (at least in the scenario)).
Assuming he’s charging me - aim dead center below the jaw and hope to take out the windpipe and the spine - one or the other would hopefully disable the big guy.
The skull of the tyrannosaur is not a tank. In fact, it had large holes in the bones (fenestrae) and “honeycombed” bones in some places to reduce weight. A single .50 cal would kill it before it knew what was happening.
Yeah, a Tyrannosaur skull was lightly built, full of empty spaces. Which is why shooting it in the head has such a low probability of a killing shot. It’s not that the bullet will bounce off the thick skull, it’s that the bullet will pass through the skull without hitting the brain. The brain is really really small. Take a look at the image on this page: http://www.sciencemag.org/content/310/5750/966.full. Hitting the brain in that skull is going to be nearly impossible.
in his classic story a Gun for Dinosaur, L. Sprague de Camp has his hero insist on using an Elephant Gun:
The reason is that he earlier took someone who couldn’t handle the recoil, and took instead a
The guy ended up as dino treats. I don’t know what exactly you need for dinosaur, or how de Camp made his calculations, but if I was shooting at a beast bigger than an elephant, I’d want an elephant gun.
Turn the rifle around and force the Tyrannosaur to lick my remains out of the grass if he wants to eat me. That’s probably my best bet for ruining his day.
Yeah. The chicken runs around and puts on a show before it dies. So what? The tyrannosaur would be harmless at that point, unless it fell on you.
Also, regarding the tiny brain, and the difficulty of the shot - during “the surge” in Iraq, a U.S. Marine sniper piled up something like 15 to 20 kills over a couple of days by routinely making headshots on running human targets, moving across a narrow alley, from 400 to 800 yards out. A trained sniper could hit the tyrannosaur anywhere he wanted to, regardless of the size of the target. Brain, chest, shrug. It’s all barbecue after it stops twitching.
Plus, a brain-shot is easy on a human because the head is all brain. The problem with a brain-shot on a Tyrannosaur is that the brain is a very small part of the head. It’s one thing to shoot a human in the brain by shooting them in the head. A comparable shot would be to consistently hit the pancreas when shooting someone in the abdomen.
I would have gone for the knee if I had a shot, chest if I didn’t. I don’t have the best awareness on where precisely the heart is on a T-Rex, and I’m unsure if it would bleed out from a through-and-through chest wound. So I’d try to just shatter the leg and let it die painfully.
I’m a pretty good shot, and more importantly, very calm during an emergency. (I fall apart twice as hard afterwards, but you can count on me until it’s over.)
So I picked slice and dice. I’m going for the neck shot, from the front, because if it doesn’t get the spine it will almost certainly stop the breathing, or if I miss in an upward direction disable the jaw.
More like hitting the gall bladder aiming at the chest. There are bones that could deflect, and it’s about the size of a walnut. And lest we forget - it’s not going to be in precisely the same spot on every speciman.