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Dinosaur news

United Kingdom Spalea Online
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@johnny rex :

About #165: the link you gave...  https://allthatsinteresting.com/t-rex-true-size

Yes interesting but, for the moment, only purely speculative. At first supposing that 2,5 billion of t.rex roamed the Earth, and from that of course it's very easy to state we know nothing about T-rex. I don't know but this number of 2,5 billions of T-rex having roamed through the Earth (for the moment only a part of the North America continent, Alberta and Montana essentially) during 2-3 millions years. We are speaking about an apex predator... this figure seems a little too overestimated...

Personally I don't believe at all "a 5 tons T-rex" when we are depicting an adult t-rex. It is said a spinosaurus could weigh 15 tons. It's absurd if we compare both skeletons, T-rex and spinosaurus. Spinosaurus close to a t-rex is a gracile theropod. He certainly didn't weigh more than 10 tons. In this case t-rex could have weighed 12 tons easily. Your link speaks about a 33.000 pounds t-rex... Why not ?

The fact is: the fossilization is an exceptional event. And because of that we don't know yet anything about dinosaurs. We're only speculating about exceptional events.
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United Kingdom Spalea Online
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How smart were dinosaurs? Were dinosaurs as smart as primates? The debate over theropod intelligence is a continuing one, with factors like EQ and neuron density competing for respect in the scientific community. With isotropic fractionation, we learned that it's possible for dinosaurs as smart as primates to have existed. Megatheropods may have been among the most intelligent dinosaurs. How smart was T.rex? T.rex, if its neuron density was similar to those of its close avian relatives rather than nonavian reptiles, could be smarter than a baboon.
Dinosaur intelligence is a constantly shifting science, but a technique known as isotropic fractionation may hold the key to unlocking the secrets of ancient dinosaur brains. Suzana Herculano-Houzel investigated dinosaur neuron density and discovered that some theropods may have been as intelligent as primates and modern corvids, suggesting complex problem-solving, tool use, and culture building even in the world's largest terrestrial predators.
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A very interesting video dated from January 2023 about the great variety as concerns the intelligence of the dinosaurs. Indeed the sauropods, ornitischians, and so on were surely "not very bright animals", but as concerns the theropods, it's amazing ! Our famous T-Rex could be compared with the extant ravens.
Question: if it was the case, the relation predatory-prey could have resulted as a pure slaugther, couldn'it ?
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United Kingdom Spalea Online
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Small video about the biggest, but not well known, theropod on Earth during the Jurassik period: saurophaganax.

" Saurophaganax maximus was the biggest theropod in the Jurassic Period, but remains relatively obscure despite being the biggest apex predator in North America besides Tyrannosaurus. New data indicates that not only was it a beast in the same league as the biggest megatheropods, but it was a sauropod-hunting grappler with powerful arms, claws, and other adaptations for taking down the giants of the Morrison Formation. This video analyzes Saurophaganax's life, ecology, and size in order to create the new authoritative guide to the animal. Saurophaganax may be a dark horse in the megatheropod race, but it might be bigger than popular giants like Carcharodontosaurus and Spinosaurus when it comes to the largest specimens of each species. Is Saurophaganax different from Allosaurus? Saurophaganax coexisted with other large predators like Torvosaurus and Allosaurus, and may have hunted huge sauropods like the Kenton Giants, Barosaurus, Brachiosaurus, Apatosaurus, and Diplodocus. Including the gigantic specimen Leviathan, Saurophaganax was the second-largest North American theropod, only behind Tyrannosaurus itself in terms of overall mass. "




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United Kingdom Spalea Online
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Life in the Cretaceous: extremes... With the last perfectionnal improvements as concerns the pictures creation, but without any comments. You can notice some analogies with extant biotopes in Africa (for example Etosha, with a t-rex/lion coming to a water point, the herds of herbivors moving away from its path).
And of course, the final explosion and the megafauna extinction...








" 9 déc. 2023

Travel back 66 million years and immerse yourself in the dinosaurian world of the late cretaceous period, a time both strange and familiar.

In this episode we'll be exploring the extremes of planet earth, where life is tested to the limit.

Life in the Cretaceous is a fan-edit of Prehistoric Planet inspired by Moving Art, featuring no narration - only music and the sound of nature itself. The edit combines scenes from a variety of episodes from Prehistoric Planet as well as other BBC nature series (such as Frozen Planet II) to create a more diverse overview of the flora and fauna that thrived at the end of the cretaceous.*

*Some shots have been picked for completely superficial reasons, as the exact species may not have lived back then but almost certainly something much alike.
"
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Ukraine Mishedic Offline
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(05-08-2024, 03:17 AM)Spalea Wrote: Life in the Cretaceous: extremes... With the last perfectionnal improvements as concerns the pictures creation, but without any comments. You can notice some analogies with extant biotopes in Africa (for example Etosha, with a t-rex/lion coming to a water point, the herds of herbivors moving away from its path).
And of course, the final explosion and the megafauna extinction...








" 9 déc. 2023

Travel back 66 million years and immerse yourself in the dinosaurian world of the late cretaceous period, a time both strange and familiar.

In this episode we'll be exploring the extremes of planet earth, where life is tested to the limit.

Life in the Cretaceous is a fan-edit of Prehistoric Planet inspired by Moving Art, featuring no narration - only music and the sound of nature itself. The edit combines scenes from a variety of episodes from Prehistoric Planet as well as other BBC nature series (such as Frozen Planet II) to create a more diverse overview of the flora and fauna that thrived at the end of the cretaceous.*

*Some shots have been picked for completely superficial reasons, as the exact species may not have lived back then but almost certainly something much alike.
"

It's really good film. And the music is something unusual and so relevant.
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United Kingdom Spalea Online
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After having posted the T-rex's sound into the " T-rex " section, here are a few different Cretaceous reptiles' vocalization. But always without explanation at all. Accepting it or not.






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United Kingdom Spalea Online
Wildanimal Lover
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Dinosaurs vocalizations study with more examples. It's said that dinosaurs owned a larynx and that they could produce some sounds much closer to extant animals than we thought.







" 0:00 Intro
0:22 Triassic Period
6:01 Jurassic Period
12:52 Cretaceous I
20:49 Cretaceous II
26:30 Cretaceous III

An ongoing study utilizing the most recent scientific data on dinosaur vocalizations. Sounds are produced by myself and digitally workshopped from modern non-syrinx based avian reptiles. Using skull and olfactory cavity proportions, one can attempt to recreate the flow of sound, frequency, and volume of each animal. Much study is required for each particular species, and often several phases are trashed due to general unlikelihood. The final results are based on acute representations of what sounds would be most comfortable and base-line for each animal. Video also includes other reptiles, even though they are much more difficult to produce accurately.
"
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