Just a couple of corrections for the mis-wording I put in this video. 1) For t.rex and bird ancestry, I should’ve cleared that up, birds are their closest relatives. 2) The artwork at 0:42 is by Fred Wierum. 3) The BBC itself isn’t accurate but has the funding to get expert opinion.
T. rex doesn’t have descendants. They went extinct and stopped evolving. Birds spilt off from dinosaurs in the Jurassic so they may be closely related therapods but they are not descendants of T. rex.
That may be part of why we experience an intense sense of fear when hearing infrasound; behavior passed down over millions of years (as there are still animals that make that sound, ex: alligators and crocodiles, so maintaining it in some areas would make sense).
@@kyze8284 A theory of the T-Rex is that it was an ambush predator, because of its large size, it is seen as unlikely that it was a dinosaur that was actively hunted. The theory is also that they were deadly silent even for their size. You'd think you would notice when it would walk but you wouldn't. Basically, you wouldnt know it was there until it had you in its mouth.
@@stoffni I was saying the rumble as the vocals as that’s what the entire video and comments are about I’ve seen bears and even moose stalk through trees. A large ambush reptile with similar padding would make so much more sense than running down prey too, like what we imagine Carnos might have done. Cause a stampede towards others of the group who then ambush and take down prey from a set point on the escape path
Low frequency sounds are less directional than higher frequency (as far as I know) so it might be hard to tell exactly which direction it's coming from, and you'd probably be able to hear it from a long way off, if you can feel it in your chest it might be close, very close. Which would be pant wettingly scary!
To be fair, it literally is still like this nowadays in untouched chunks of jungle. No dinosaurs, but the current animal inhabitants still make some pretty strange and offputting sounds.
Okay, but the T-Rex one is actually terrifying. The way the sound would potentially reverberate through your body gives it a whole new level of a sense of danger. Something about the low pitch is much scarier than the Jurrasic Park version, it somehow feels more overwhelming. Fascinating!
The "realistic" t-rex sound is terrifying, but I still love the JP t-rex noises as well as the other dinosaurs. It's some of the best sound design/editing ever put to film
It's very good sound design. One thing not mentioned here is that while the sound presented would likely be the most common sound a T-Rex would make, let's call it a T-Rex at ease, it doesn't mean the animal wouldn't be capable of loud, open mouth roars, if it wanted to.
Indeed. Roosters sometimes make these short roars (if I can name them as such) to alert the flock of what he considers to be an imminent threat. And boy, scaling that to a several-ton T-rex would sound like distilled terror.
@@mrcactuar8515 Last of that family of Therapods. Birds and T rex were both related, but one did not evolve from the other. Like how we didn't evolve from Chimps. We share a common ancestor in the same family
@@brawlclips3059 because by the late Cretaceous, multiple species of avian dinosaurs(the first true birds) existed alongside the dinosaurs for millions of years, filling their own ecological niche.
I just know if I woke up in the Mesozoic, I'd die of a heart attack from the sounds before I was even eaten, and that makes me like dinosaurs even more.
Reality is stranger than fiction. When making fiction, we make it from our understanding of the world. In reality, there are some things we never would imagine.
@@kinglyzardhell, we can't imagine how a new color would look like. Theres Animals, like the mantis shrimp, that can see 12 channels of colors! To put this into perspective we humans can only see three (Red, green and blue).
Yooooo, the T'rex one is WAYYYY scarier then from the movies. Imagine hearing that at night while out camping. You wanna talk about a primal fear? That would do it. Very interesting topic my friend. Great work.
You’re in a tree nest looking out over a clearing and all of a sudden a dozen deer fly out of the trees to your left and across the clearing and out of sight. It gets quiet for a moment. Then you hear, no, feel this sound through your body. You scan the trees wondering what the fuck is going on but see nothing out of the ordinary. You hang the bow over your shoulder and grab your binoculars but it’s getting dark and with a gentle breeze flowing through the forest, you cannot discern movement. In your growing panic you think about scrambling down the tree and to your atv, after all, the others back at camp aren’t that far. But before that thought completes the wind dies down and you listen. Everything in the woods seems to hold its breath.. all but one. You hear a steady inhale. Then an exhale. You scan the forest once again with your binoculars. The radio cracks and a branch snaps. You turn the radio off and peer into the darkness. From behind you hear the sound of a flare firing into the sky and then you see them. Two eyes ten feet off the ground staring back at you, unmoving. The glow of the flare dies and the eyes vanish. A scream sounds in the distance.
@@PvtPartzz absolutely bone chilling! Do you have reddit or any other social media where you write more stories? I would honestly read an entire book written like this
Listen with a good subwoofer. It has a lot of low frequency rumble; the kind you would feel in your chest. This makes it hard to determine the direction of the source of the sound and gives the feeling that it is emanating from within you and all around you.
@@krisspkriss Try PA speakers instead. Even on low volume, You will not only hear theme but feel with Your whole body. Normal subs may go much lower but diffrence in element size and how sound is distributed makes big diffrence. Have Zeck PA-s with 18 woofers. No sub has come close, even thou 19-20Hz is lowest these PA-s go. Even mid/high will go trough Your body ;)
Just imagining how it would be to hear that through trees in the dark, feeling the vibration from it and the ground trembling, along with snapping branches and shifting trees... Without seeing the source, that would induce dread in just about anyone. Seeing a lizard that size make the sound would probably be enough to make a person either freeze in terror or run screaming like a child
I was thinking that a very strong low rumble, like a strong bass, instantly gives you the idea that you are facing something really big, like a whale sound, a high pitch roar can be made by small animals, like my old puddle lmao, but a strong low pitched sound is not something you will often find in small animals
I think that was mostly used for mating and conversing with younglings, there is no reason to scream at prey. If T-Rex wasn't a silent killer, walking slowly and methodically, it wouldn't reach the back of the neck of a Triceratops. It would probably run pretty quick in extremely short bursts as well, due to the mass. Like a crocodile, just sitting patiently, quietly, until the sudden snap.
On a PERSONAL level, I adore the JP sound library. On a SCIENTIFIC level, the idea of being able to hear a sound that hasn’t been heard on Earth since ≥65 MYA is TANTALISING.
I hate pictures where predatory animals look at the camera because it freaks me out. Dinosaurs looking straight at you would probably be the most terrifying way to die
I think a T-rex sending out a bone-shivering rumble-clatter that you feel more than hear is pretty terrifying. You wouldn't be able to tell just where this echoing, deep clicking sound came from, only that you can feel it in every part of your body. Makes me think it'd sound like the Predator only ultra-low register, or like a gator's rumble, just way more intense. Maybe not supremely loud, but given it'd hit your body like a shockwave, it'd SEEM loud.
If I remember correctly, it was the real T-rex one that added some infrasound. My cats would become clearly agitated if I played it and I sent a link to people whose dog REALLY didn't like it. It hits that "ohhhhh, this is BAD" vibe on such a deep level it isn't even genetic, but pure physics.
The fact we humans didn't even begin for millions of years after the last Dino existed means we didn't get that primal fear from them - BUT if we believe in evolution from ape lineage, maybe there was a big version who was the father of all future apes/gorilla/monkeys/cavemen etc so we did get that primal fear from way back before we even became of the Homo genus.
@@ReptilianTeaDrinkerAs a crocodile, can confirm. I mostly keep it locked up in my safe, away from the kids, but I like to go to the shooting range every now and then
0:31 further research, being solving time travel to be able to go back to actually hear the sounds they made because without actually hearing them with our own ears it’s all theoretical
4:06 That has got to be the creepiest image of a dinosaur I have ever seen. It feels like some ancient memory from a past life, when I faced a dinosaur like that and got eaten by it shortly afterward.
I remember reading somewhere that a fear of the dark is natural in humans because it dates from prehistoric times when there were things in the dark (for example leopards) that could see (and hunt) us when we couldn't see them. It's like a weird inherited memory from ancestors thousands of generations ago.
Media cant even accurately get existing sounds right, for example, eagles (and many birds of prey) often use the sounds of hawks, the iconic "eagle screech" is from a red tailed hawk. Lions also often get vocalizations from tigers. It's easy to get the depictions of dinosaurs wrong compared to that (and at least to jurassic park's credit, the dinosaurs there aren't "real" and were apparently stated to purposely be engineered based on the pop culture depictions of the time). As stated at the end, it's easy to be wrong in an ever-changing field where views and opinions are always clashing.
To be fair, a Golden Eagle and Red Tailed Hawk do sound eerily alike. Using it for a Bald Eagle however, that usually chirps, is always annoying. Not even going to mention it being used for MOSTLY SILENT buzzards
@kyze8284 I mean, I guess. I wouldn't really call it annoying though, it's a lot prettier sounding than the seagulls people compare it to. It's a "sea eagle" after all, it makes sense for such adaptations to occur. Trying to humanize what does or doesn't sound cool in nature is dumb imo anyways, since they take function over form. Though I will say that I doubt size determines pitch in animals, it often depends on environmental surroundings and what travels through it better.
You ain't hiding from that by getting real still. It's too late. He has already seen you and set his focus on you. He has already gauged his range from you and begun imagining what you're gonna taste like. He has already unconsciously spiked his saliva flow to make sure your flesh doesn't stick in his throat and gag him as he rips bits of it off your live body. This is it. You're dead, dude.
@@TheLandauMinimum The real question is, why did it have more than two eyes? :( That was horrifying! But yeah, the art is well done and definitely succeeds in making a person scared witless.
Ngl I honestly love the sound of the Parasaurs, being someone who Plays Ark, it makes me miss the old trumpety sounds the game devs had for them because it was a pretty accurate to the sounds portrayed in this video
@@ashhplayz9489 Absolutely, and potentially if it was right beside you, the sound could make your eardrums explode. REALLY glad they went extinct LONG ago lol
LOL--and to also keep you up at night: crocodiles, squids, octopuses, and whales (sort of) both had family or were alive in the mid to late hight of the dino era are easily as smart or smarter than a dog, top of the food chain, and haven't needed to change how they're evolving dramatically in that many years....
I imagine they sounded more a mixture of hisses, growls, chirps etc. with theropods producing more bird-like vocalizations with a mixture of hissing and crocodilian like "roars" while herbivorous Dinosaurs like the ornithschians, produced more reptilian vocals. Sauropods I imagined just bellowed, producing loud trumpet sounds, maybe deep roar like screeches? Kind of like a large bird but with a very deep tone, i do think some dinosaurs did roar though
@@hungedteddy7971 not counting with vast variation of other sounds too like modern birds and some reptiles like geckoes that can be very vocal for lizard. Maybe some birdlike dino have weird haunting howl like certain owl or creepy screeches
Imagine if these incredible creatures were still around. You're in the woods hiking, its dusk. You crouch down to tighten your shoe lace and hear 3:44 and freeze. All around is thick forest. Birds have stopped singing. Just a light breeze. There it is again....a bit louder this time.
I think he was referring to crocodiles, since they didn't descend from theropods but did share a common ancestor with them... but yeah, the phrasing he used is odd.
Imagine this, you're standing in a clearing and something shakes you to the core before you hear a strange, muffled, almost inaudible rumble, you look around as you and see nothing as fear slowly creeps into your mind. After a while of looking into the surrounding forest, it happens again, this time even more intense before hearing that rumbling, this time closer and you freeze as a deep, primal fear takes over. Then you hear a soft thud and then another and another along with the sounds of rustling leaves and snapping wood, your eyes frantically scanning your surroundings, as you realise that these are the steps of something big and after what felt like hours, a gigantic predator emerges from the foliage, its mouth barely open, immediately letting you know that it is the source of the rumbling, as its throat vibrates, shaking you to the core with calls partly below your hearing range, unheard, but not unfelt. It briefly glances at you with piercing, amber eyes before continuing its march across the forest. As it steps away, you notice that you are shaking, your heart beating faster than what you thought was possible and slowly and steadily, you relax, one muscle at a time as you ride your motorbike to safety.
I like how some of the smartest people on earth somehow reconstructed the sound an animal from 100s of million years ago would have made and then decided to put birds chirping in the background even though said birds came millions of years after the dinosaurs from said dinosaurs.(4:35)
I love the sound design for JP. That said...I’m ready for more realistic, yet creepy, depictions of these animals. Some creepypasta type content with dino home invasions, stranded in the woods or the side of the road in a broken down car with dinos around, or a school lockdown due to a dino entering a side door and getting into the building. Give them weird bird/reptile like behavior and sounds. I’m ready!
I’ve read it. Love it. I wish the movie went along that route. I would love more content in the movies to depict this creepy, gory material, or maybe a show on a streaming channel.
@@Betweentheraindrops8 Funny you say all that. Having seen JP in theaters when I was a child, I've had many nightmares involving the T-rex, to the point in the last one I remember... I saw it and said, "not you again!" lol
I really like your mentioning of caveats and possible inaccuracies! "Impotant to recognize this does not take into account unfossilized soft tissue", "remember that most birds produce sound with sirynx so using larynx may be incorrect", etc. It's all too common to see people acting very confident with their recreations when we simply don't know. I also appreciate how you explained the sources of the noises and the reasoning behind them.
Great to see Mark Witton mentioned here. I had the pleasure of interviewing him when i was in uni as part of my course, testimonials from someone in the industry. Lovely bloke, incredible artist and really passionate about his field. The book he wrote on Pterosaurs was also excellent!
Have you ever heard the sounds of a cassowary? If not look it up and imagine something like that scaled up to t-rex size. Seriously that would be far more terrifying that the high pitched screams of the movies because you would feel it as much as you hear it.
I really like Studio’s take on what they sounded like. The trex is the most terrifying yet hilarious rendition I’ve ever heard. One minute it sounds like a giant goose, next it sounds like an alien war machine.
Nice video, well compacted and also the length is perfect for even for you to get monitization on the video. Though I think there should have been an example of the ticking noice they make from their throat.
That T-Rex low frequency would just make your bones vibrate and your bladder leak. You can just feel the power. You won’t get a fight or flight response, it’ll just be freeze.
If you guys havent check some of the full videos on the realistic Trex sound, as whats in this video only scratched the surface of how terrifying the sounds are.
love the T-rex rendition, straight outta horror movie. imagine hearing that sound resonating in you guts and thinking "oh! there's a T-rex somewhere in five mile radius" although i have to add - there's a distinct high freq cut as an artifact of slowing down a sound, in reality it likely has more high freq info in the signal. like a saussaphone from hell, or a diesel engine on low rpm.
The Parasaurolophus sounds pretty majestic if you ask me. It fills me with awe and wonder. Maybe I just don't get something, but I heard the rumble at the museum that they think T-Rex likely used and I have to be honest the rumble just doesn't scare me at all. To me the JP roar is much more frightning.
Somebody else already said this better, but if you listen to the T-rex sound with good subwoofers, you'll notice that it's more of a low frequency rumble. IRL you wouldn't just hear it but you'd feel it in your bones, and the worst part is that it would sound like it's coming from every direction at once. It also doesn't help that it sounds alien. We already have modern animals that can roar like lions but I don't know of anything that sounds quite like T-rex.
I imagine that T-Rex less intense version is like you did something deathly wrong to hear that and by the time you turn around to try to see what you did wrong it eats or mauls you to death. Far creepier than any Hollywood depiction.
Hear the T-Rex sounds literally made me feel uneasy! It sounds very disturbing and threatening for some reason,like hearing an earthquake shaking the earth beneath you and the buildings cracking around you ....
JP rex does sound scary, hearing that in the wild would make one fearful but still functional. However there's just this indescribable feeling deep down in my gut when I hear the real thing. It's just scarier in a way that words can't describe, an instinct or a reflex more than a thought. Certain types of tiger roar frequencies can paralyze one with fear due to the audio/physical frequency combo. I imagine a real rex would affect a human even more severely
the trex vocalization is surprisingly relaxing. the weight of the rumbles reminds me of a cats purr, obviously louder and deeper, but that same sensation of being vibrated all the way through. the deadliest purr ever
Honestly, I like the real noises more than the ones from the movies. It’s interesting to know that they didn’t just roar, and they could make a variety of different noises. Hopefully one day we’ll be able to know exactly what they sounded like, and how they communicated.
Oh HELL no. That low rumble is 1000 times more distressing than the jurassic park roar. The sheer size of that creature and how the deep rumbles would make the ground tremor and your bones shake, like anyone whose been around low bass noises or the firing range can tell you, you feel those noises not just with your ear but your whole body. Imagine being in the woods, hiding next to a tree in the dark, absolutely paralysed with fear as those low rumbles get closer. Hell no.
The slowed down loon being passed off as spino made me think that the whole "slowing down a similar/related animal's sound" for dino audio reconstruction seems pretty bad for confirmation bias start to finish, even if it produces believable results. Take the preserved ankylosaur's larynx - which we only got bc it was mummified - and imagine if we'd never found it.. we'd probably be making ankylo vocals from like armadillos or turtles. Even the tyrannosaur sound just assumes that the vocals can be pitched to scale with the animal it's recreating, which just doesn't physiologically pan out with anything other than vocalizations close to a sine tone (and even then the overtones don't match, like the tiger/cat video) bc of square-cube law and flow dynamics across those larger surfaces. Going back to spino; it'd be interesting to see an actual reconstruction of their possible vocals, especially given that the retracted nostrils and smaller antorbitals would give them nasal resonances different from basically any other theropods.
I have always had a weird obsession for the noise a crocodile makes. The way you can feel it reminds me of thunder that makes me giddy af. So the idea of the Trex being like that x10 makes me shiver in delight and gosh I would be terefied but I would be too mesmerized to run in time to not be eaten.
That low rumble would vibrate right through your body and not knowing what direction it was coming from would be very unnerving! Definitely asbestos underpants required in that scenario 👀
I want to see someone take a plastic model of a life size Trex head and with the mouth open place a big tuba or didgeridoo mouthpiece where the gullet should be and blow. That would be what a Trex roar would sound like.
The segment with pinacosaurus potentially chirping made me think of the kinds of high-pitched squeals that rhinos produce! And the variety of vocalisations they make, as well. While they're obviously not related to the pina, there are some comparisons between them and rhinos, with both of them being several tonne herbivores with hard weapons on their bodies. It's fun to speculate :o) Fantastic video!
I absolutely love the amount of effort you put into this video and supplying the references for the information. A little while ago, the "real T-rex sound" clip was going around with little to no information about what consisted of the sounds or what research went into the sound. You did an outstanding job putting the information and recordings together! 🙌
What i find cool is that the T-rex's roar and rumbling steps make sense in Jurassic Park. Because it can't see movement it roars to startle it's prey. But if it could roar with the vibrations and depth of these sounds in the video it would definetly make the Spinosaurus turn tail at the first encounter.
turns out the movie was wrong and the eye-sight of the T-rex could have been as precise as a hawk, if not even better cause T-Rex eyes are 100 times bigger.
6:37 This is exactly like the sound I heard at my cabin in Finland, we call it a bottle blower, I know it is some kind of stork making these kind of noises
Just a couple of corrections for the mis-wording I put in this video.
1) For t.rex and bird ancestry, I should’ve cleared that up, birds are their closest relatives.
2) The artwork at 0:42 is by Fred Wierum.
3) The BBC itself isn’t accurate but has the funding to get expert opinion.
4) It's Chris Packham, not Chris Packson
Also You keep saying the word ancestor when you mean descendent. Chickens are not the ancestors of the T-Rex. They are the descendants.
You should do short faced bear vs American lion
You mentioned a Chinese crocodile, but that would actually have been a Chinese alligator that the sounds were based on.
T. rex doesn’t have descendants. They went extinct and stopped evolving.
Birds spilt off from dinosaurs in the Jurassic so they may be closely related therapods but they are not descendants of T. rex.
The low.rumble would affect us on an internal level. You'd feel it in your feet first, then your bones and chest. Truly terrifying.
“What’s that rumbling-“ “RUN! SHUT UP AND RUN! IT KNOWS WE’RE HERE!” “Wha?-“ *Chomp*
That may be part of why we experience an intense sense of fear when hearing infrasound; behavior passed down over millions of years (as there are still animals that make that sound, ex: alligators and crocodiles, so maintaining it in some areas would make sense).
@@kyze8284 A theory of the T-Rex is that it was an ambush predator, because of its large size, it is seen as unlikely that it was a dinosaur that was actively hunted. The theory is also that they were deadly silent even for their size. You'd think you would notice when it would walk but you wouldn't.
Basically, you wouldnt know it was there until it had you in its mouth.
@@stoffni I was saying the rumble as the vocals as that’s what the entire video and comments are about
I’ve seen bears and even moose stalk through trees. A large ambush reptile with similar padding would make so much more sense than running down prey too, like what we imagine Carnos might have done. Cause a stampede towards others of the group who then ambush and take down prey from a set point on the escape path
Low frequency sounds are less directional than higher frequency (as far as I know) so it might be hard to tell exactly which direction it's coming from, and you'd probably be able to hear it from a long way off, if you can feel it in your chest it might be close, very close. Which would be pant wettingly scary!
T-rex: low, threatening rumble
Parasaur: tonka 18 wheeler 🚛
"hoooooooooooooooonk"
Parasaur: "10-4 man, take it easy out there, over."
@@tatuira93😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣💯
Tell me that fucker doesn't sound like the train from red dead 2
Alert system
Time stamp
3:50 T. rex.
4:36 one with crazy head horn…parasaur
6:37 spiky
Thank you stranger
Thank you hero
So you just made it so this video can't be monetized?
Why is that?@@PennyAnte-nz4ob
Thanks a lot
imagine walking through the jungle and hearing all those noises. way more terrifying than some loud roar
A honk ain't more terrifying than a fucking Godzilla roar bro you're tripping 😭
I’d start looking around “whatthefuckwhatthefuckwhatthefuck”
Nah, that's a load of horse shit. Look up a video of an angry bull elephant roaring and then try to imagine something substantially larger than that.
@@RozKounelakion And you're subbed to "Masculinism" 💀 that's scariest of all lmfao
To be fair, it literally is still like this nowadays in untouched chunks of jungle. No dinosaurs, but the current animal inhabitants still make some pretty strange and offputting sounds.
Okay, but the T-Rex one is actually terrifying. The way the sound would potentially reverberate through your body gives it a whole new level of a sense of danger. Something about the low pitch is much scarier than the Jurrasic Park version, it somehow feels more overwhelming. Fascinating!
Hollywood: roar
Reality: *LOW RUMBLE BASS CANNON*
It sounds awesome!
But creatures make large noises during a fight or calling mates. What about it🙄?
@@Tyranosaur678 Then, *HIGH RUMBLE BASS CANNON*
Yesss
Just like lions in movies, who are typically given tiger roars
The "realistic" t-rex sound is terrifying, but I still love the JP t-rex noises as well as the other dinosaurs. It's some of the best sound design/editing ever put to film
Me Too
Me too
It's very good sound design. One thing not mentioned here is that while the sound presented would likely be the most common sound a T-Rex would make, let's call it a T-Rex at ease, it doesn't mean the animal wouldn't be capable of loud, open mouth roars, if it wanted to.
I like realistic more.
Dino nerd over here 😂
Me Too But I'm Not A Nerd, Little Bit@@TheCicadaFox
Chickens can make some really unsettling noises. Scaling that up would be terrifying.
Indeed. Roosters sometimes make these short roars (if I can name them as such) to alert the flock of what he considers to be an imminent threat. And boy, scaling that to a several-ton T-rex would sound like distilled terror.
My chicken sometimes does a low level base grumble with mouth closed.
And turkeys thrum.
well, chickens are the last descendants of the T-Rexes, so...
@@mrcactuar8515
Last of that family of Therapods. Birds and T rex were both related, but one did not evolve from the other.
Like how we didn't evolve from Chimps. We share a common ancestor in the same family
T. rex: low bass
Parasaur: HONK
Pinacosaurus: phone buzzing
Imagine ur Just hearing These, Eventually, THEY'RE ON UR BACK or JUST BEHIND U. 🤣🤣🤣🤣ROLF!! Now, Just Standing Watch.
T. rex: distant bass
Parasaur: depressed trumpet
Pincosaurus: eyeore saying hello through noise cancelling headphones
Why is there bird sounds in the back😂😂😂
T-Rex: PERRY THE PLATYPUS?!
@@brawlclips3059 because by the late Cretaceous, multiple species of avian dinosaurs(the first true birds) existed alongside the dinosaurs for millions of years, filling their own ecological niche.
I just know if I woke up in the Mesozoic, I'd die of a heart attack from the sounds before I was even eaten, and that makes me like dinosaurs even more.
Theres a chance you'd die from just waking up due to potentially different oxygen concentration
@@eightcoins4401 also true, didn't even think of that
@@eightcoins4401 you wouldn’t be scared though. The oxygen would fill you with a sense of warmth and you’d be at peace with your fate.
Reality is stranger than fiction. When making fiction, we make it from our understanding of the world. In reality, there are some things we never would imagine.
You make a very good point here. Our imagination does seem limited by our exposure to reality.
And there's a lot of reality out there!
@@kinglyzardYup like in deep forest or deep ocean
@@kinglyzardhell, we can't imagine how a new color would look like. Theres Animals, like the mantis shrimp, that can see 12 channels of colors! To put this into perspective we humans can only see three (Red, green and blue).
Dragons
@@Asaph-bo4np Imagine Dragons.
Yooooo, the T'rex one is WAYYYY scarier then from the movies. Imagine hearing that at night while out camping. You wanna talk about a primal fear? That would do it. Very interesting topic my friend. Great work.
You’re in a tree nest looking out over a clearing and all of a sudden a dozen deer fly out of the trees to your left and across the clearing and out of sight. It gets quiet for a moment. Then you hear, no, feel this sound through your body. You scan the trees wondering what the fuck is going on but see nothing out of the ordinary. You hang the bow over your shoulder and grab your binoculars but it’s getting dark and with a gentle breeze flowing through the forest, you cannot discern movement. In your growing panic you think about scrambling down the tree and to your atv, after all, the others back at camp aren’t that far. But before that thought completes the wind dies down and you listen. Everything in the woods seems to hold its breath.. all but one. You hear a steady inhale. Then an exhale. You scan the forest once again with your binoculars.
The radio cracks and a branch snaps. You turn the radio off and peer into the darkness. From behind you hear the sound of a flare firing into the sky and then you see them. Two eyes ten feet off the ground staring back at you, unmoving. The glow of the flare dies and the eyes vanish.
A scream sounds in the distance.
Sounds like my granpa farting.
Scarier than
@@PvtPartzz absolutely bone chilling! Do you have reddit or any other social media where you write more stories? I would honestly read an entire book written like this
I doubt T-Rex would prey on human.
So instead of screaming at the top of it's lungs like an exorcised demon, T-Rex whispered like some edgy ghost?
It could probably rumble loud enough to make your heart stop beating temporarily
Listen with a good subwoofer. It has a lot of low frequency rumble; the kind you would feel in your chest. This makes it hard to determine the direction of the source of the sound and gives the feeling that it is emanating from within you and all around you.
@@krisspkriss Try PA speakers instead. Even on low volume, You will not only hear theme but feel with Your whole body. Normal subs may go much lower but diffrence in element size and how sound is distributed makes big diffrence. Have Zeck PA-s with 18 woofers. No sub has come close, even thou 19-20Hz is lowest these PA-s go. Even mid/high will go trough Your body ;)
@@antssaar863 I already have four SWAN M200MkIII studio monitors and a Klipsch Reference R-120SW sub. Trust me, I feel it with what I have.
Making a lot of noise let's your prey know you're around.
The parasaur sounded like a cruise ship honking it's horn. 😂
3:48 this picture and that sound just made me think about what those things in real life would have been like and its freaky 😮
Don't listen to the T-Rex growl with complete noise canceling airpods in at 1 am by yourself😭
Too late 💀
Yoo i just put earbuds in, thats insaaaaaane
They're extinct...
Yes, I learned that the hard way!!!!
Lemme get my headphones and try it.
If you've ever felt the rumble of an elephant then the T Rex sound will hit you harder. The body feel of it is what gets you the most.
Just imagining how it would be to hear that through trees in the dark, feeling the vibration from it and the ground trembling, along with snapping branches and shifting trees... Without seeing the source, that would induce dread in just about anyone. Seeing a lizard that size make the sound would probably be enough to make a person either freeze in terror or run screaming like a child
I was thinking that a very strong low rumble, like a strong bass, instantly gives you the idea that you are facing something really big, like a whale sound, a high pitch roar can be made by small animals, like my old puddle lmao, but a strong low pitched sound is not something you will often find in small animals
@@UnswimmingFishYTIt probably would’ve stayed silent while hunting so you don’t suspect anything, very scary
I hear the rumble of a tiger is felt before heard.
3:45 your welcome
Knew there was a hero in the comments
Thanks
You're.
But thanks.
@@DGneoseeker1 ya*
Thank you good sir or maam!
Me: *is in the way*
Dinosaur: *Honks agressively*
T-Rex sounds more like a stealth killer than a bullhorn of war like in the movies
That’s cause it would have been
because they are... they dont run they are actually really slow and even humans couldve out ran them
The T. rex sounded like some horror movie monster, gave me chills. Gonna use that for DnD now…
I think that was mostly used for mating and conversing with younglings, there is no reason to scream at prey. If T-Rex wasn't a silent killer, walking slowly and methodically, it wouldn't reach the back of the neck of a Triceratops. It would probably run pretty quick in extremely short bursts as well, due to the mass. Like a crocodile, just sitting patiently, quietly, until the sudden snap.
Bro I have my buds in with full volume. That fucking rumbled in my head
@@vaporean_boylove.0w083 same, plus i'm watching at night so i'm spooked to say the least
Terrifying
As I certified bard I'd still seduce :3
The Parasaur sounds like a musical instrument of war announcing the presence of a terrifying army.
Sounds like a giant goose
That’s a haunting analogy, To me it sounds like some of those ‘trumpet’ noises people have been hearing.
@@Asaph-bo4npHONK!
Yes, buddy everything sounds like war to you.
check out the carnyx, an old Celtic instrument
On a PERSONAL level, I adore the JP sound library.
On a SCIENTIFIC level, the idea of being able to hear a sound that hasn’t been heard on Earth since ≥65 MYA is TANTALISING.
Paleontology is not a science, it's a study. (It's only based on observation)
Sorry to be annoying.
I hate pictures where predatory animals look at the camera because it freaks me out. Dinosaurs looking straight at you would probably be the most terrifying way to die
😭😭yeah that thumbnail is crazy
How angelic sounding. Literally like trumpets. Kinda wild but also beautiful
I think a T-rex sending out a bone-shivering rumble-clatter that you feel more than hear is pretty terrifying. You wouldn't be able to tell just where this echoing, deep clicking sound came from, only that you can feel it in every part of your body.
Makes me think it'd sound like the Predator only ultra-low register, or like a gator's rumble, just way more intense. Maybe not supremely loud, but given it'd hit your body like a shockwave, it'd SEEM loud.
If our bodies felt it then it must be have they saunte.
T. rex sounds like a helicopter 🚁
idk I felt a bit relaxed as I heard it 😅
If I remember correctly, it was the real T-rex one that added some infrasound.
My cats would become clearly agitated if I played it and I sent a link to people whose dog REALLY didn't like it.
It hits that "ohhhhh, this is BAD" vibe on such a deep level it isn't even genetic, but pure physics.
For real, that feels primal. There's gotta be some deep deep mammalian trauma in all of us from that.
I was playing this video really loud and my dog did NOT like the T. rex sound lol
The fact we humans didn't even begin for millions of years after the last Dino existed means we didn't get that primal fear from them - BUT if we believe in evolution from ape lineage, maybe there was a big version who was the father of all future apes/gorilla/monkeys/cavemen etc so we did get that primal fear from way back before we even became of the Homo genus.
The trex sounds like godzilla charging up his atomic beam 💀
Just like a croc
@@Asaph-bo4np Crocoldiles have atomic beams? lol
@@ReptilianTeaDrinkerAs a crocodile, can confirm. I mostly keep it locked up in my safe, away from the kids, but I like to go to the shooting range every now and then
3:43 Yup, if I would hear it from some bushes in dense forest, I'd reach speed of sound while running away.
0:31 further research, being solving time travel to be able to go back to actually hear the sounds they made because without actually hearing them with our own ears it’s all theoretical
💯 correct
4:06 That has got to be the creepiest image of a dinosaur I have ever seen. It feels like some ancient memory from a past life, when I faced a dinosaur like that and got eaten by it shortly afterward.
Primal fear.
Yeah I really hate the eyes...
That image really makes my skin crawl, there’s just something about it that’s so terrifying
But humans didn't exist back then, not even primates
Might be cool to live like a little mammalian rat tho
I remember reading somewhere that a fear of the dark is natural in humans because it dates from prehistoric times when there were things in the dark (for example leopards) that could see (and hunt) us when we couldn't see them. It's like a weird inherited memory from ancestors thousands of generations ago.
Media cant even accurately get existing sounds right, for example, eagles (and many birds of prey) often use the sounds of hawks, the iconic "eagle screech" is from a red tailed hawk. Lions also often get vocalizations from tigers. It's easy to get the depictions of dinosaurs wrong compared to that (and at least to jurassic park's credit, the dinosaurs there aren't "real" and were apparently stated to purposely be engineered based on the pop culture depictions of the time). As stated at the end, it's easy to be wrong in an ever-changing field where views and opinions are always clashing.
To be fair, a Golden Eagle and Red Tailed Hawk do sound eerily alike. Using it for a Bald Eagle however, that usually chirps, is always annoying. Not even going to mention it being used for MOSTLY SILENT buzzards
@kyze8284 I mean, I guess. I wouldn't really call it annoying though, it's a lot prettier sounding than the seagulls people compare it to. It's a "sea eagle" after all, it makes sense for such adaptations to occur. Trying to humanize what does or doesn't sound cool in nature is dumb imo anyways, since they take function over form.
Though I will say that I doubt size determines pitch in animals, it often depends on environmental surroundings and what travels through it better.
Yes. Tigers sound way cooler than lions. Thats why they always use tiger vocals.
@@TheBakuganmaster99 pretty much why eagles sound like hawks.
The difference is that media does that to make the most impressive LOOKING animals SOUND as impressive.
4:06 That's the most terrifyng image of a tyranossaurus rex i've ever seen. It's like genuinely taken from a horror movie or something. Goosebumps.
You ain't hiding from that by getting real still. It's too late. He has already seen you and set his focus on you. He has already gauged his range from you and begun imagining what you're gonna taste like. He has already unconsciously spiked his saliva flow to make sure your flesh doesn't stick in his throat and gag him as he rips bits of it off your live body. This is it. You're dead, dude.
@Thundah Opposite for me, I could not stop looking at it and tensed up. Primal fear.
Fight or flight response there. Makes you feel like you've been spotted by a predator. Brilliant art.
you mean 4:08?
@@TheLandauMinimum The real question is, why did it have more than two eyes? :( That was horrifying! But yeah, the art is well done and definitely succeeds in making a person scared witless.
Ngl I honestly love the sound of the Parasaurs, being someone who Plays Ark, it makes me miss the old trumpety sounds the game devs had for them because it was a pretty accurate to the sounds portrayed in this video
That bird that goes "SKRRRAAAAT! POOM POOM!" is truly terrifying.
Your mom goes skrat poom poom
Is the bird a beatboxer? Lmaoo!
The trex sound here 3:44 sounds like Godzilla snoring and it's still terrifying.
That low frequency rumble can travel a LONG way, so there would be no way to know exactly how far away it is. Terrifying.
but i'd assume that when it is close, the rumble of the t-rex would make your body vibrate
@@ashhplayz9489 Absolutely, and potentially if it was right beside you, the sound could make your eardrums explode. REALLY glad they went extinct LONG ago lol
@@ashhplayz9489 It'd feel like an earthquake. lol
LOL--and to also keep you up at night: crocodiles, squids, octopuses, and whales (sort of) both had family or were alive in the mid to late hight of the dino era are easily as smart or smarter than a dog, top of the food chain, and haven't needed to change how they're evolving dramatically in that many years....
@@ashhplayz9489 or cause ripples in your glass of water . 😉
I imagine they sounded more a mixture of hisses, growls, chirps etc. with theropods producing more bird-like vocalizations with a mixture of hissing and crocodilian like "roars" while herbivorous Dinosaurs like the ornithschians, produced more reptilian vocals. Sauropods I imagined just bellowed, producing loud trumpet sounds, maybe deep roar like screeches? Kind of like a large bird but with a very deep tone, i do think some dinosaurs did roar though
So kinda like an elephant?
@@hungedteddy7971 not counting with vast variation of other sounds too like modern birds and some reptiles like geckoes that can be very vocal for lizard. Maybe some birdlike dino have weird haunting howl like certain owl or creepy screeches
Imagine if these incredible creatures were still around. You're in the woods hiking, its dusk. You crouch down to tighten your shoe lace and hear 3:44 and freeze. All around is thick forest. Birds have stopped singing. Just a light breeze. There it is again....a bit louder this time.
Hell no
I'm pretty sure irl the t rex was relatively slow
Yeah like 10-15 miles per hour
That doesn't scare me. More like a six-foot turkey.
*Pulls out raptor claw*
Hearing "living ancestors" is making me have an aneurysm.
heh
Blows me away that someone could get the word all mixed up like that!🤣
I think he was referring to crocodiles, since they didn't descend from theropods but did share a common ancestor with them... but yeah, the phrasing he used is odd.
made me dislike. lol
@@livewire2759 nah man, he wasn't.
Imagine this, you're standing in a clearing and something shakes you to the core before you hear a strange, muffled, almost inaudible rumble, you look around as you and see nothing as fear slowly creeps into your mind. After a while of looking into the surrounding forest, it happens again, this time even more intense before hearing that rumbling, this time closer and you freeze as a deep, primal fear takes over. Then you hear a soft thud and then another and another along with the sounds of rustling leaves and snapping wood, your eyes frantically scanning your surroundings, as you realise that these are the steps of something big and after what felt like hours, a gigantic predator emerges from the foliage, its mouth barely open, immediately letting you know that it is the source of the rumbling, as its throat vibrates, shaking you to the core with calls partly below your hearing range, unheard, but not unfelt. It briefly glances at you with piercing, amber eyes before continuing its march across the forest. As it steps away, you notice that you are shaking, your heart beating faster than what you thought was possible and slowly and steadily, you relax, one muscle at a time as you ride your motorbike to safety.
Bro this is awesome, go write some horror short stories like this you’d be great at it
Use your spaces... otherwise, nice.
bruh that ending tho! i picture pratt's character in JW riding that bike with blue & the crew running at his side
At least one of two muscles will have already relaxed before it passes, let's just hope you have a change of pants ready.
I like how some of the smartest people on earth somehow reconstructed the sound an animal from 100s of million years ago would have made and then decided to put birds chirping in the background even though said birds came millions of years after the dinosaurs from said dinosaurs.(4:35)
For those wondering, this is the sound a Velociraptor makes:
"Alan."
I love the sound design for JP. That said...I’m ready for more realistic, yet creepy, depictions of these animals. Some creepypasta type content with dino home invasions, stranded in the woods or the side of the road in a broken down car with dinos around, or a school lockdown due to a dino entering a side door and getting into the building.
Give them weird bird/reptile like behavior and sounds. I’m ready!
Might I suggest the original book?
I’ve read it. Love it.
I wish the movie went along that route. I would love more content in the movies to depict this creepy, gory material, or maybe a show on a streaming channel.
@@Betweentheraindrops8 Funny you say all that. Having seen JP in theaters when I was a child, I've had many nightmares involving the T-rex, to the point in the last one I remember... I saw it and said, "not you again!" lol
I would go for audiobooks rather than creepypastas: Most narrorators don't even bother getting their words right, much less the ambience.
I really like your mentioning of caveats and possible inaccuracies! "Impotant to recognize this does not take into account unfossilized soft tissue", "remember that most birds produce sound with sirynx so using larynx may be incorrect", etc. It's all too common to see people acting very confident with their recreations when we simply don't know. I also appreciate how you explained the sources of the noises and the reasoning behind them.
Even the tiny western fence lizard can make an impressive hiss. I can only imagine what an eight ton relative sounded like.
The one with the crest sounds like those metal-legged chairs that you have in school being dragged across the tile floor
Great to see Mark Witton mentioned here. I had the pleasure of interviewing him when i was in uni as part of my course, testimonials from someone in the industry. Lovely bloke, incredible artist and really passionate about his field. The book he wrote on Pterosaurs was also excellent!
that first rex sound example is one of the most unsettling and horrifying sounds i've heard.
Parasaur sounds like an 18 wheeler truck, AND I LOVE IT
I thought it sounded like a boat
Giant Goose
@@Asaph-bo4np Not the spicy cobra chickens
@@Professor_K_Oss right on point
Have you ever heard the sounds of a cassowary? If not look it up and imagine something like that scaled up to t-rex size. Seriously that would be far more terrifying that the high pitched screams of the movies because you would feel it as much as you hear it.
Like a muscle car?
@@AA-le3xe Kinda yeah. Where you can feel the vibrations even if you don't see it.
2:23 my first impression of Dinosaurs were from the 70s TV Show Land of the Lost. They called one T Rex in the show Grumpy.
This was such a great video. The audio recreations were amazing to hear and very immersive for the T-Rex one. I was legit scared.
The T-Rex: The (formerly) living definition of the phrase “Beware the Quiet Ones.”
I really like Studio’s take on what they sounded like. The trex is the most terrifying yet hilarious rendition I’ve ever heard. One minute it sounds like a giant goose, next it sounds like an alien war machine.
The sound of duck billed dinosaur sounded like a large cargo ship .
They were the Ish Kabbibbles of the Dinosaur world.😅
I heard traffic myself.
Duck Bill dinosaurs definitely make sounds reminiscent of the waterfront.
It sounded pretty you have to admit
Giant Goose
"What Did Dinosaurs Really Sound Like?" You gave the answer in the thumbnail already!
Nice video, well compacted and also the length is perfect for even for you to get monitization on the video. Though I think there should have been an example of the ticking noice they make from their throat.
That T-Rex low frequency would just make your bones vibrate and your bladder leak. You can just feel the power. You won’t get a fight or flight response, it’ll just be freeze.
If you guys havent check some of the full videos on the realistic Trex sound, as whats in this video only scratched the surface of how terrifying the sounds are.
4:34
nobody
absolutly nobody
This dinosaur:
🛳🛳🛳🛳🛳🛳⚓⚓⚓🗣🗣🗣
thank y'all for the almost 500 likes, never had this many before
also how aren't there any comments on this comment?
What kind of bird is that at 6:37?
brown and white one
@@beavercontrol1743 Thanks.
A feathered one, with a long beak
love the T-rex rendition, straight outta horror movie.
imagine hearing that sound resonating in you guts and thinking "oh! there's a T-rex somewhere in five mile radius"
although i have to add - there's a distinct high freq cut as an artifact of slowing down a sound, in reality it likely has more high freq info in the signal. like a saussaphone from hell, or a diesel engine on low rpm.
With headphones the T-Rex sound sends chills that it almost stuns and tells you not to move or make noise
I was watching this on my shitty phone speaker and couldn't hear anything. I tried with headphones and it made me freeze.
3:55 - Feel it?!
Dude, it's terrifying enough to taste it!
The Parasaurolophus sounds pretty majestic if you ask me. It fills me with awe and wonder. Maybe I just don't get something, but I heard the rumble at the museum that they think T-Rex likely used and I have to be honest the rumble just doesn't scare me at all. To me the JP roar is much more frightning.
The Parasaurolophus sound made me think of a carnyx.
Somebody else already said this better, but if you listen to the T-rex sound with good subwoofers, you'll notice that it's more of a low frequency rumble. IRL you wouldn't just hear it but you'd feel it in your bones, and the worst part is that it would sound like it's coming from every direction at once.
It also doesn't help that it sounds alien. We already have modern animals that can roar like lions but I don't know of anything that sounds quite like T-rex.
I imagine that T-Rex less intense version is like you did something deathly wrong to hear that and by the time you turn around to try to see what you did wrong it eats or mauls you to death. Far creepier than any Hollywood depiction.
Scary tho, the video is soo cool man, thanky you for it and have a great Xmas!
2:03 Tyrannosaurus Shreks
Hear the T-Rex sounds literally made me feel uneasy! It sounds very disturbing and threatening for some reason,like hearing an earthquake shaking the earth beneath you and the buildings cracking around you ....
2:50 "Closest living ancestors" wait what ancestors to a t-rex are still alive?!!?
Ratites, probably?
Like ostriches and cassowaries
Chickens 🐓
@@SSRBno1297 "ANCESTORS"
@@jacksonpavlich8198 What Im trying to get at is that he said ancestors when he clearly meant to say descendents
@@azuresiren5846 how did I miss that 🤦♂️ I’m high asf my bad
I felt my heartbeat quicken involuntarily when I heard that T-Rex rumble.
ok all the sounds coming out of my subwoofer made it sound like they were in my living room
Imagine time-traveling and camping in a pre-cretacious forest, how terrifying and unfamiliar it must be
JP rex does sound scary, hearing that in the wild would make one fearful but still functional. However there's just this indescribable feeling deep down in my gut when I hear the real thing. It's just scarier in a way that words can't describe, an instinct or a reflex more than a thought. Certain types of tiger roar frequencies can paralyze one with fear due to the audio/physical frequency combo. I imagine a real rex would affect a human even more severely
Good call
the trex vocalization is surprisingly relaxing. the weight of the rumbles reminds me of a cats purr, obviously louder and deeper, but that same sensation of being vibrated all the way through. the deadliest purr ever
Honestly, I like the real noises more than the ones from the movies. It’s interesting to know that they didn’t just roar, and they could make a variety of different noises. Hopefully one day we’ll be able to know exactly what they sounded like, and how they communicated.
I actually time travelled to 65 million BC and I can confirm they all sound like roosters
Oh HELL no. That low rumble is 1000 times more distressing than the jurassic park roar. The sheer size of that creature and how the deep rumbles would make the ground tremor and your bones shake, like anyone whose been around low bass noises or the firing range can tell you, you feel those noises not just with your ear but your whole body. Imagine being in the woods, hiding next to a tree in the dark, absolutely paralysed with fear as those low rumbles get closer. Hell no.
So a T-Rex would sound like a huge roided up shoebill?
The slowed down loon being passed off as spino made me think that the whole "slowing down a similar/related animal's sound" for dino audio reconstruction seems pretty bad for confirmation bias start to finish, even if it produces believable results. Take the preserved ankylosaur's larynx - which we only got bc it was mummified - and imagine if we'd never found it.. we'd probably be making ankylo vocals from like armadillos or turtles. Even the tyrannosaur sound just assumes that the vocals can be pitched to scale with the animal it's recreating, which just doesn't physiologically pan out with anything other than vocalizations close to a sine tone (and even then the overtones don't match, like the tiger/cat video) bc of square-cube law and flow dynamics across those larger surfaces.
Going back to spino; it'd be interesting to see an actual reconstruction of their possible vocals, especially given that the retracted nostrils and smaller antorbitals would give them nasal resonances different from basically any other theropods.
3:43 would be one of the most terrifying things in the world. That is like, primally unnerving to hear
I feel like the accurate Parasaurolophus rumble sounds similar to a siren, it reminds me of certain alarm sirens for major events.
t-rex: 3:42
parasaur: 4:35
pinacosaurus: 6:37
I have always had a weird obsession for the noise a crocodile makes. The way you can feel it reminds me of thunder that makes me giddy af. So the idea of the Trex being like that x10 makes me shiver in delight and gosh I would be terefied but I would be too mesmerized to run in time to not be eaten.
If you ever made a part 2 I have a suggestion for the dinos Pachyrhinosaurus, Albertosaurus and Saurophaganax
That low rumble would vibrate right through your body and not knowing what direction it was coming from would be very unnerving! Definitely asbestos underpants required in that scenario 👀
putting the t rex sound on full volume sounds absolutely terrifying 3:50
imagine seeing a huge armored dinosaur built like a damn tank and it chirps at you
I want to see someone take a plastic model of a life size Trex head and with the mouth open place a big tuba or didgeridoo mouthpiece where the gullet should be and blow. That would be what a Trex roar would sound like.
The segment with pinacosaurus potentially chirping made me think of the kinds of high-pitched squeals that rhinos produce! And the variety of vocalisations they make, as well. While they're obviously not related to the pina, there are some comparisons between them and rhinos, with both of them being several tonne herbivores with hard weapons on their bodies. It's fun to speculate :o) Fantastic video!
It looks like a Viper Snake with legs
I absolutely love the amount of effort you put into this video and supplying the references for the information. A little while ago, the "real T-rex sound" clip was going around with little to no information about what consisted of the sounds or what research went into the sound. You did an outstanding job putting the information and recordings together! 🙌
I have surround sound and my house shook when the T-Rex vocal played
That second dinosaur sounded like a boat horn
What i find cool is that the T-rex's roar and rumbling steps make sense in Jurassic Park. Because it can't see movement it roars to startle it's prey.
But if it could roar with the vibrations and depth of these sounds in the video it would definetly make the Spinosaurus turn tail at the first encounter.
turns out the movie was wrong and the eye-sight of the T-rex could have been as precise as a hawk, if not even better cause T-Rex eyes are 100 times bigger.
The realistic parasaurus sounds like my boiler at night 💀💀💀
That parasaur sounded like a damn boat
6:37 This is exactly like the sound I heard at my cabin in Finland, we call it a bottle blower, I know it is some kind of stork making these kind of noises
The T. Rex sounds like a giant spaceship passing by