1:27 : that is Albertosaurus & Centrosaurus 5:25 & 11:10 : Those are supposed to be Early Sauropodomorphs; namely Plateosaurus 11:29 : Your torture continues; those are not Dimetrodon, but more early Spino art
5:55 I feeeell thats supposed to be Plateosaurus which is a Pro-sauropod from the Triassic in which wasn't a true sauropod bit was a long necked herbivorous Biped, who knows tho
7:35 Ooh, these plates meant to showcase the whole biome are always fun. Let's see, we have what looks like Nothosaurus on the left coast. Plesiosaurus chasing a shark (looks like Hybodus) like a dog chases a postal worker, love that. An Ichthyosaurus eating a snake for some reason. Some mostly generic fish and unrecognizable pterosaurs above. A couple of benthic animals including, fr some reason, an ammonite. And finally, a couple of random snakes, some suchian reptile (early crocodile?), and in between these an early Iguanodon once more, because that was the only reptile with a horn on its nose in paleoart this old. 11:10 I have that book, illustration is labeled as Plateosaurus 11:30 I have that book, too! It's Spinosaurus.
That first image isn't a T-Rex. The ceratopsian it's eating is a Centrosaurus. This image is an image of the bone bed where over five hundred Centrosaurus were found after they died trying to cross a river during a flood. I used to have a postcard with that art on it, and I believe it said that theropod was either an Albertosaurus or a Daspletosaurus.
Man, this is a part of the dinosaur community I can actually enjoy. Too many people are way too pissy and fixed on Paleo "accuracy" that they forget that all of it is just theories about what they COULD look like. I love old paleo art, it's nostalgic and so alive(?).
11:08 Id go with iguanodon. Mind with the long neck they do have a saurapod feel I get therizinosaur for a guess but I think iguanodon with a really long neck.
I like these pictures, kinda reminds me of the dinosaur book I had as a kid and probably still have somewhere. I think mostly they are pretty well drawn even if its not perfect
I think those "therizenosaurs?" Are meant to be *proto* sauropodomorph Like a massospondylus, which I'm pretty sure coincidentally is a very early discovered DINOSAUR Even the hands look kind of right So that'd my theory
If old paleoart pictures a Stegosaurus with eight thagomizers, I can tell you with absolute certainty that that is meant to be Stegosaurus Ungulatus.
Old paleoart is so charming with how beastly the tail dragging looks.
However, you sometimes gets some oddballs like this ceratosaurus at 9:15
1:27 : that is Albertosaurus & Centrosaurus
5:25 & 11:10 : Those are supposed to be Early Sauropodomorphs; namely Plateosaurus
11:29 : Your torture continues; those are not Dimetrodon, but more early Spino art
9:45: I think that's a diorama rather than a pop-up book. (I think I might have had that one as a small kid back in the 80s).
5:55 I feeeell thats supposed to be Plateosaurus which is a Pro-sauropod from the Triassic in which wasn't a true sauropod bit was a long necked herbivorous Biped, who knows tho
Bro would freak over Ultimasaurus Imperatrix lol.
Fr
6:01 looks either like a plateosaurus or a massospondylus
Precisely. Was about to comment the smell thing.
5:35 Therizinosaur on Elm Street.
7:35 Ooh, these plates meant to showcase the whole biome are always fun. Let's see, we have what looks like Nothosaurus on the left coast. Plesiosaurus chasing a shark (looks like Hybodus) like a dog chases a postal worker, love that. An Ichthyosaurus eating a snake for some reason. Some mostly generic fish and unrecognizable pterosaurs above. A couple of benthic animals including, fr some reason, an ammonite. And finally, a couple of random snakes, some suchian reptile (early crocodile?), and in between these an early Iguanodon once more, because that was the only reptile with a horn on its nose in paleoart this old.
11:10 I have that book, illustration is labeled as Plateosaurus
11:30 I have that book, too! It's Spinosaurus.
That first image isn't a T-Rex. The ceratopsian it's eating is a Centrosaurus. This image is an image of the bone bed where over five hundred Centrosaurus were found after they died trying to cross a river during a flood. I used to have a postcard with that art on it, and I believe it said that theropod was either an Albertosaurus or a Daspletosaurus.
@kevinnorwood8782
I looked it up, it’s Albertosaurus
@@hcollins9941 That’s what I thought! Thnx for the confirmation.
@kevinnorwood8782
No problem! 👍
Finally, you're back to looking at paleoart that's dated with the depictions and not just simply going "I don't like how this looks, so...CURSED!!!".
Man, this is a part of the dinosaur community I can actually enjoy. Too many people are way too pissy and fixed on Paleo "accuracy" that they forget that all of it is just theories about what they COULD look like. I love old paleo art, it's nostalgic and so alive(?).
Can you really blame them for being annoyed when the mainstream image of dinosaurs are murder lizards?
@@welpimf0cked654 Yes, half the time those "murder lizards" are meant to be like that for creative purposes, or GENETIC. ENGINEERING.
11:08 Id go with iguanodon. Mind with the long neck they do have a saurapod feel I get therizinosaur for a guess but I think iguanodon with a really long neck.
ngl the try hard stegosaurus looks sick as hell
Kinda accurate plateosaurus
I like these pictures, kinda reminds me of the dinosaur book I had as a kid and probably still have somewhere. I think mostly they are pretty well drawn even if its not perfect
I think those "therizenosaurs?" Are meant to be
*proto* sauropodomorph
Like a massospondylus, which I'm pretty sure coincidentally is a very early discovered DINOSAUR
Even the hands look kind of right
So that'd my theory
3:02 It is a dimetrodon.
11:15 plateosaurus
Very Nice
Make an AI Masiakasaurus knopfleri in your next AI dinos video.
LOL❤❤❤