Greg Paul (1988) proposed that the horns were butting weapons and that the small orbita would have minimized the possibility of hurting the eyes while fighting.[9] Gerardo Mazzetta and colleagues (1998) suggested that Carnotaurus used its horns in a way similar to rams. They calculated that the neck musculature was strong enough to absorb the force of two individuals colliding with their heads frontally at a speed of 5.7 m/s each.[22] Fernando Novas (2009) interpreted several skeletal features as adaptations for delivering blows with the head.[AS] He suggested that the shortness of the skull might have made head movements quicker by reducing the moment of inertia, while the muscular neck would have allowed strong head blows. He also noted an enhanced rigidity and strength of the spinal column that may have evolved to withstand shocks conducted by the head and neck.[AT]
Other studies suggest that rivaling Carnotaurus did not deliver rapid head blows, but pushed slowly against each other with the upper sides of their skulls.[44][45] Mazzetta and colleagues, in 2009, argued that the horns may have been a device for the distribution of compression forces without damage to the brain. This is supported by the flattened upper sides of the horns, the strongly fused bones of the top of the skull, and the inability of the skull to survive rapid head blows.[44] Rafael Delcourt, in 2018, suggested that the horns could have been used either in slow headbutting and shoving, as seen in the modern marine iguana, or in blows to the opponent's neck and flanks, as seen in the modern giraffe.[37] The latter possibility had been previously proposed for the related Majungasaurus in a 2011 conference paper.[46]
Gerardo Mazzetta and colleagues (1998) propose that the horns might also have been used to injure or kill small prey. Though horn cores are blunt, they may have had a similar form to modern bovid horns if there was a keratinous covering. However, this would be the only reported example of horns being used as hunting weapons in animals.[22]
Des études sorties en 1988, 1998, 2009 et 2018 avancent que les Carnotaurus se battaient peut-être à coups de boule, ou au moins en se poussant crâne contre crâne, du fait de leur cou musculeux, de leur crâne court, de leur forte colonne vertébrale et de leurs orbites de petite taille, entre autres.
L'animation dans JWE2 semble s'appuyer sur ses études. On ne part pas sur un choc vif et violent comme les pachys, mais sur un choc lent et délibéré, avant une longue poussée.