Great white sharks can stun sea lions with impact. Orcas do the same to Dolphins, Dolphins do it to some fish. Ramming is very effective. The scariest evidence seen was an early orca fossil where the robs were literally crushed in, it's believed the superpredator megaladon was the culprit. For whatever reason meg didn't eat the orca, allowing it to fossilize
Shakrs and Orca's both have been observed to do the same thing. In water or not having a multi-tonne heavy animal slam into you at several dozen miles per hour is extremely fatal.
@@robinsonray6766 probably got scared off by the pod or something. Or maybe the corpse just flew into an area the Meg couldn't reach, we don't know how high up in the air it went
@@Jbarack98 orcas do this today and they can get close to the size of this predator. The mighty megaladons did this, we have fossil evidence of a meg crushing an orcas ribcage, these sharks were massive far larger than these reptiles.
@@Jbarack98it is realistic. Many reptiles, including mosasaurs close relatives like monitor lizards and iguanas can make quite sudden bursts of speed so it’s in their behavioural nature. Also many whales similar or even heavier than mosasaurs breach out of the water after reaching high speeds and their anatomy matches the ability.
@@isaiahrowe8367 "it is realistic. Many reptiles, including mosasaurs close relatives like monitor lizards and iguanas can make quite sudden bursts of speed so it’s in their behavioural nature" - innateness isn't the consideration, size is! A mosasaur cannot possibly match the explosive acceleration of a monitor or iguana, physics of size bear upon that, as does the inertia of water. This animation is closer to what a monitor or iguana is capable of. I, as a zoologist won't outright refute it for it's not my field, but it appears unachievable to me. "Also many whales similar or even heavier than mosasaurs breach out of the water after reaching high speeds and their anatomy matches the ability." - irrelevant, breaching wasn't mentioned
@@Dr.IanPlect you’re just avoiding the logic, saying whales are irrelevant… It’s the fact that their anatomy is fairly similar and many species are bigger than mosasaurs, so of course breaching is important to consider because it requires quick bursts of speed for such a heavy animal to leap full body out of water, the same applies to mososaurs needed speed to hunt and like in the video, it literally breaches. And it’s common sense that mososaurs won’t match their modern relatives speed to body relativity, but weighing in the factors it would still be a fast animal. Anyway it’s pointless you arguing it as we have their exact diet in the fossil record: ammonites, belemites, fish, other marine reptiles etc so there’s no way a predator like that would exist if it couldn’t catch that prey.
@@monsterversestudiosgodzill9591 I think they're saying it looks like a great white attacking a sea lion. The same way they attack from below and often breech the water with it.
@@prickledickle5238 at the Oberman Ocean Man, the crust is illusive when it casts forth to the child-like man Ocean Man, the sequence of a life form braised in the sand Soaking up the thirst of the land.
I immediately knew that the scene of the Mosasaurus jumping out of the water with a plesiosaur in its mouth was directly based on Great White Sharks doing that to seals that I’ve seen countless times now.
@@94sweetmochi Not really… 45 to 60 feet long was the average size I know of for a Mosasaurus Hoffmannii, so it’s possible for one to have grown 60 feet long.
Mosasaurs experienced an astonishing radiation and success rate. As predators, they were among the fiercest and strongest that have ever lived on Earth.
They had success for a short time and only because there was an oceanic extinction a few million years before the meteorite. The mighty ichthyosaurs and most pleisiosaurus went extinct allowing these reptiles to proliferate.
@@robinsonray6766didn’t mosasaurs and most late Cretaceous marine reptiles make it to the KT extinction? Their fossil record stops right there along with the dinosaurs, so it was the impact that of course effected their food supply like ammonites and intern larger prey
@@isaiahrowe8367 they did. What he meant is that the previous oceanic extinction removed most ichtyosaurs and also apex predators such as the short neck plesiosaurs (aka pliosaurs), allowing mosasaurs to thrive
Imagine sailing the boat in the middle of the ocean, and then suddenly a 20+ meter predator bumps out of the water near you. My heart would definitely stop at that moment
Humpback Whales will leap out of the water just to belly flop next to boats and splash people. They're twice the size of Mosasaurs too. Obviously there's video of it here, it looks funny for the whale and absolutely terrifying if you're on the boat.
@@robinsonray6766 That would be insane if it ever really happened and someone caught it on video. It seems like I don't hear nearly as much about blue whales or what their "personalities" are like as animals. Maybe because they're just too large for humans to be around them safely.
Lol 😂 The longest mosasaurs, based on a specimen of Mosasaurus hoffmanni, are estimated to have been 17 metres (about 56 feet) in length. most common forms were no larger than modern porpoises (3 metres). 20 meter only in the movies. Jurassic fanboy??? 🤣
@@stealthtyrannusAnd it is for that exact reason that orcas are even more dangerous than mosasaurus. Heck, if we were to drop a large family of orcas into the sea during the late cretaceous, those orcas would do very well. They'd easily be the smartest lifeforms on the planet during those times. Their intelligence would enable them to dominate the sea even with the existence of mosasaurus and other such sea reptiles.
@@pilkers2 Humans dominating the earth should tell you that size doesn't always equal supremacy. Sometimes it's intelligence that will get you there, and orcas are incredibly intelligent.
why am i seeing so many comments saying its just “idle speculation” or “its just a lie” or smth similar to that OF COURSE there is going to be speculation when they’re making a documentary like this if you’re gonna come here to talk shit, then don’t watch it at all Like please, just watch the documentary and take it as it is
Thats what we do. It's not a movie, it's a serious documentary, you know. One that proclaims to be "based on science" or to be "the most accurate dinosaur documentary ever made". And yes, it is a great one, BUT it makes some really big mistakes. The worst thing are not even the behaviours (some of them are very pausible in fact), but the anacronisms: Velociraptor didn't live on the same area and time that Tarbosaurus, for example. Quetzalcoatlus hasn't been found in South Africa or in any other place that is not North America, and science says that it couldn't have been a very efficient flyer, so it makes no sense that it could have traveled between continents. Again, this is not Jurassic World or some movie just for entertaining. This is been presented as a serious documentary. Many people will believe all that is presented here as it was true, when it is not.
@@Jie_Hua it's also understandable. I have come myself to this particular scene because I think it's spectacular, especially for the music and the direction, which is *chef kiss. But it is because I really like the series than I am also critical of it. And to be fair a lot of people have a point here and there (not all the people, some are just criticizing without too much of idea).
@@manuelm465 You seem to be missing some context: -The Velociraptors aren't actually Velociraptors, they're unnamed velociraptorines who's remains have been found but it's easier to call them simply that. It might be misleading, but it's no different than calling a lion as well as a leopard a pantherine when they appear on screen. It's the best thing to do instead of calling them unnamed velociraptorines every time they appear. That would become tiring after a few times. - Giant Azhdarchids like Quetzalcoatlus were in fact efficient flyers, able to do intercontinental flights. Darren Naish, one of the lead consultants of Prehistoric Planet, confirmed this is why the Quetz is shown in Africa.
I won't lie I did want more hunting in season 1, it was my one gripe but they didn't disappoint in 2. Binged it all in one night. The night time t rex ambush was so good.
Okey, but can we talk about the music and set up in this? The scene starts with this tense music that, along the shadows and lights in the water makes you a bit uncomfortable. Then at 0:31 sounds like this deep growl as the head of the Mosasaurus appears behind the reef, like a sinister sea chant announcing that something enormous and ancient is lurking in the deeps. Then at 0:39 the predator looks upwards and we see the elasmosaurs like dancing in the light, with all these enchanting screams that sound almost like sirens songs, o like the terrified souls of the previous victims of the beast, almost as if they were trying to warn of the slaughter that may come. Meanwhile, we can hear in all the scene this unsettling beat in the background, like a heartbeat in the deeps... or like a haunting tick tock, counting the seconds until the beast attack... at any moment. Then the Mosasaurus attacks and it fails. But when it tries again, the music goes back to the tension. A quiet shot from the surface of the sea... and then the terrifyingly astonishing view of a gargatuan deep water monster, jumping with its prey in the mouth, accompained by the loud sound of water splashing around of an animal this big. Definitely one of my favourite scenes on all the series.
The power these things had to have had to propel there body’s out of the water weighing more than 20 tonnes is crazy. 1 slap from that tail and you’re mash potato
Very much like a great white hunts. Attacks from below and behind. I have video of a great white leaping completely out of the water on an attack and turning 180 before it heads back into the ocean (can't post it here, alas). I'm sure the animators studied such "Air Jaws" video while preparing this sequence.
I have seen Camp Cretaceous, and the episode where the campers get stuck inside the mosasaurus lagoon… I just kept thinking: there is absolutely NO WAY you could ever out-paddle a mosasaur on a freaking kayak! This video just proves why, lol!
There once was a ship that put to sea. That name of the ship was the Billy O' Tea. The winds blew up, her bow dipped down. Blow my bully boys blow. Soon may the Wellerman come To bring us sugar and tea and rum. One day, when the tonguing is done We'll take out leave and go. She hadn't been two weeks from shore When down on her a time rift bore. The captain called all hands and swore He'd take his ship right through. Soon may the Wellerman come To bring us sugar and tea and rum. One day, when the tonguing is done We'll take out leave and go. Before the boat hit ancient water A Mosasaur came up and caught her. All hands to the side, harpooned and fought him. When Mosa dived down low. Soon may the Wellerman come To bring us sugar and tea and rum. One day, when the tonguing is done We'll take out leave and go. No line was cut, no Mosa freed. The captain's mind was not on greed He believed t'was the only way he could take Mosa home Soon may the Wellerman come To bring us sugar and tea and rum. One day, when the tonguing is done We'll take out leave and go. For forty days or even more The line went slack then tight once more. All boats were lost, there were only four But still did Mosa go Soon may the Wellerman come To bring us sugar and tea and rum. One day, when the tonguing is done We'll take out leave and go. As far as I've heard, the fight's still on. The line's not cut, and Mosa's not gone. The Wellerman makes his regular call to encourage captain, crew and all. Soon may the Wellerman come To bring us sugar and tea and rum. One day, when the tonguing is done We'll take out leave and go. Soon may the Wellerman come To bring us sugar and tea and rum. One day, when the tonguing is done We'll take out leave and go.
You know what gets me is that this would be 100 times crazier this tiny bait ball MILES wide with hundreds of predators hunting the fish and getting hunted by other predators this shit would be an EVENT
I was free diving off blacks beach san diego and i saw something too large too identify suggestion dont paint yee boat red.........i dont paddle out since that day i dont swim in pools and am afraid to sit on toilet..it had a tusk or sabre toothed creature very very large.
@@peterpan3022 It's speculation backed by many experienced scientific consultants and Palaeontologists like Dr Darren Naish and Dr. Mark Witton,among others.
Being a bit skeptical and listening other paleontologists opinions about this (there are a lot of videos here in youtube talking about what is is true, based on fossil record, what could be true and what is all made up). In this case it could be true, but some details like the initial acceleration rate of the predator seems a bit off.
It's all speculation,nobody knows what these creatures looked like how they lived and hunted.Their brains were also tiny too,it seems that intelligence is not that important for survival in nature,e.g. the spiders and insects hardly have a brain but these creatures have been on this planet for a long time.
So we’re just going to agree how this went? Obviously no live evidence. The way it’s described in the present tense is annoying and troubling. Maybe, not for sure, maybe.
@@ExtremeMadnessX yes but they don't show any official paper, nor much of the data. Me and many others would like to see some details of that supposed study. Reviews are essential in science. When a scientist doesn't show their data or the details of their study... it looks a bit suspicious for the rest of scientists. It would be nice that they would have put at least a link with the details of such study.
Even the most uptight paleo nerds are looking at this comment and rolling their eyes. Also the speculation is hardly unreasonable. There are animals alive today bigger than this that can breach just as well.
Lovely voice, but a sadly clouded mind - all this is speculative, imaginative NONSENSE. We were not there, so such ideas are just idle speculation, and wrong because they are based on false premises.
@@Jie_Hua And biomechanical studies show Mosasaurus was indeed capable of all this.Just because an animal is extinct doesn't mean it's inferior.Quite the opposite in some cases actually.
The fact that the impact alone killed the elasmosaur is incredible
Great white sharks can stun sea lions with impact. Orcas do the same to Dolphins, Dolphins do it to some fish.
Ramming is very effective.
The scariest evidence seen was an early orca fossil where the robs were literally crushed in, it's believed the superpredator megaladon was the culprit. For whatever reason meg didn't eat the orca, allowing it to fossilize
Sharks do this fairly regularly with seals as well.
No way you'd survive that. Like a scaly lizard torpedo.
Shakrs and Orca's both have been observed to do the same thing. In water or not having a multi-tonne heavy animal slam into you at several dozen miles per hour is extremely fatal.
@@robinsonray6766 probably got scared off by the pod or something. Or maybe the corpse just flew into an area the Meg couldn't reach, we don't know how high up in the air it went
Man it’s actually horrifying how a creature that large can move so fast in the blink of an eye
I was wondering that, doesn’t seem very realistic, it’s moves like a tuna.
@@Jbarack98 orcas do this today and they can get close to the size of this predator.
The mighty megaladons did this, we have fossil evidence of a meg crushing an orcas ribcage, these sharks were massive far larger than these reptiles.
@@Jbarack98it is realistic. Many reptiles, including mosasaurs close relatives like monitor lizards and iguanas can make quite sudden bursts of speed so it’s in their behavioural nature. Also many whales similar or even heavier than mosasaurs breach out of the water after reaching high speeds and their anatomy matches the ability.
@@isaiahrowe8367 "it is realistic. Many reptiles, including mosasaurs close relatives like monitor lizards and iguanas can make quite sudden bursts of speed so it’s in their behavioural nature"
- innateness isn't the consideration, size is! A mosasaur cannot possibly match the explosive acceleration of a monitor or iguana, physics of size bear upon that, as does the inertia of water. This animation is closer to what a monitor or iguana is capable of. I, as a zoologist won't outright refute it for it's not my field, but it appears unachievable to me.
"Also many whales similar or even heavier than mosasaurs breach out of the water after reaching high speeds and their anatomy matches the ability."
- irrelevant, breaching wasn't mentioned
@@Dr.IanPlect you’re just avoiding the logic, saying whales are irrelevant… It’s the fact that their anatomy is fairly similar and many species are bigger than mosasaurs, so of course breaching is important to consider because it requires quick bursts of speed for such a heavy animal to leap full body out of water, the same applies to mososaurs needed speed to hunt and like in the video, it literally breaches. And it’s common sense that mososaurs won’t match their modern relatives speed to body relativity, but weighing in the factors it would still be a fast animal. Anyway it’s pointless you arguing it as we have their exact diet in the fossil record: ammonites, belemites, fish, other marine reptiles etc so there’s no way a predator like that would exist if it couldn’t catch that prey.
Wow, that shot of it arcing its body, aiming its head up to the surface is fucking sublime!
Badass
I didn’t know HD existed back then
Like a great white shark after sea lions
No, It's Orca after great white, sea lion, dolphins, other whales 😈😈😈😈😈😈😈
@@monsterversestudiosgodzill9591 I think they're saying it looks like a great white attacking a sea lion. The same way they attack from below and often breech the water with it.
@@The_Scouser yeah I know that bro
Like edp after children. Hidden In the dark, hunting the young
@@rohail9886 relatable
Ocean man,
take me by the hand,
lead me to the land,
That you understand...
Ocean man,
the voyage to the corner of the globe
is a real trip
@@aaronramos4178
Ocean Man,
the crust of a tan man imbibed by the sand.
Soaking up the thirst of the land.
Ocean man can you see through the wonder and amazement
@@prickledickle5238
at the Oberman
Ocean Man, the crust is illusive when it casts forth to the child-like man
Ocean Man, the sequence of a life form braised in the sand
Soaking up the thirst of the land.
Ocean Rex
I immediately knew that the scene of the Mosasaurus jumping out of the water with a plesiosaur in its mouth was directly based on Great White Sharks doing that to seals that I’ve seen countless times now.
I also think its size is yet again exagerated.
@@94sweetmochi Not really… 45 to 60 feet long was the average size I know of for a Mosasaurus Hoffmannii, so it’s possible for one to have grown 60 feet long.
Have you seen great white hunt in real life??
@@stembird8791 I mean that in the sense of having watched them hunt in documentaries.
Mosasaurs experienced an astonishing radiation and success rate. As predators, they were among the fiercest and strongest that have ever lived on Earth.
They had success for a short time and only because there was an oceanic extinction a few million years before the meteorite.
The mighty ichthyosaurs and most pleisiosaurus went extinct allowing these reptiles to proliferate.
@@robinsonray6766didn’t mosasaurs and most late Cretaceous marine reptiles make it to the KT extinction? Their fossil record stops right there along with the dinosaurs, so it was the impact that of course effected their food supply like ammonites and intern larger prey
@@isaiahrowe8367 they did. What he meant is that the previous oceanic extinction removed most ichtyosaurs and also apex predators such as the short neck plesiosaurs (aka pliosaurs), allowing mosasaurs to thrive
@@jujumusique1305 exactly. Mosasaurs unfortunately didn't get much time in the oceans, late cretaceous Mosasaurs just started evolving caudal fins
@@jujumusique1305 ah yes, rereading now it makes sense.
Imagine sailing the boat in the middle of the ocean, and then suddenly a 20+ meter predator bumps out of the water near you. My heart would definitely stop at that moment
Humpback Whales will leap out of the water just to belly flop next to boats and splash people. They're twice the size of Mosasaurs too. Obviously there's video of it here, it looks funny for the whale and absolutely terrifying if you're on the boat.
@@EGarrett01 I wonder if blue whales do it too
@@robinsonray6766 That would be insane if it ever really happened and someone caught it on video. It seems like I don't hear nearly as much about blue whales or what their "personalities" are like as animals. Maybe because they're just too large for humans to be around them safely.
Lol 😂
The longest mosasaurs, based on a specimen of Mosasaurus hoffmanni, are estimated to have been 17 metres (about 56 feet) in length.
most common forms were no larger than modern porpoises (3 metres).
20 meter only in the movies. Jurassic fanboy??? 🤣
It was only in two movies, and they were jurassic world movies, ya uncultured HACK
Everything sounds better when Sir David is narrator
He got air on that one
the cameraman who took the video footage deserves an award. Imagine how scary it must have been for them!
And.. again the prove.. the cameraman always survives!
Never thought i'd see some absurdly realistic fluid simulation ever again
O C E A N M A N
1:03 that is legitimately terrifying
My god, imagine if these still existed.
Orcas exist, are similarly large, hunt in pods, and are supremely intelligent.
@@stealthtyrannusAnd it is for that exact reason that orcas are even more dangerous than mosasaurus.
Heck, if we were to drop a large family of orcas into the sea during the late cretaceous, those orcas would do very well. They'd easily be the smartest lifeforms on the planet during those times.
Their intelligence would enable them to dominate the sea even with the existence of mosasaurus and other such sea reptiles.
@@pn5705 Exactly!!
@@pn5705orcas aren’t more dangerous than mosasaurs, maybe they are smarter, but mosasaurs are 3-4x the weight of an orca
@@pilkers2 Humans dominating the earth should tell you that size doesn't always equal supremacy. Sometimes it's intelligence that will get you there, and orcas are incredibly intelligent.
I'm scared as hell of the open sea, but these videos of sea animals still fascinate me 😨😱
why am i seeing so many comments saying its just “idle speculation” or “its just a lie” or smth similar to that
OF COURSE there is going to be speculation when they’re making a documentary like this
if you’re gonna come here to talk shit, then don’t watch it at all
Like please, just watch the documentary and take it as it is
Thats what we do. It's not a movie, it's a serious documentary, you know. One that proclaims to be "based on science" or to be "the most accurate dinosaur documentary ever made". And yes, it is a great one, BUT it makes some really big mistakes. The worst thing are not even the behaviours (some of them are very pausible in fact), but the anacronisms: Velociraptor didn't live on the same area and time that Tarbosaurus, for example. Quetzalcoatlus hasn't been found in South Africa or in any other place that is not North America, and science says that it couldn't have been a very efficient flyer, so it makes no sense that it could have traveled between continents. Again, this is not Jurassic World or some movie just for entertaining. This is been presented as a serious documentary. Many people will believe all that is presented here as it was true, when it is not.
@@manuelm465 ok fair enough, i was just here to enjoy somewhat “accurate” dinosaurs and flying and marine reptiles
@@Jie_Hua it's also understandable. I have come myself to this particular scene because I think it's spectacular, especially for the music and the direction, which is *chef kiss. But it is because I really like the series than I am also critical of it. And to be fair a lot of people have a point here and there (not all the people, some are just criticizing without too much of idea).
@@manuelm465 You seem to be missing some context:
-The Velociraptors aren't actually Velociraptors, they're unnamed velociraptorines who's remains have been found but it's easier to call them simply that. It might be misleading, but it's no different than calling a lion as well as a leopard a pantherine when they appear on screen. It's the best thing to do instead of calling them unnamed velociraptorines every time they appear. That would become tiring after a few times.
- Giant Azhdarchids like Quetzalcoatlus were in fact efficient flyers, able to do intercontinental flights. Darren Naish, one of the lead consultants of Prehistoric Planet, confirmed this is why the Quetz is shown in Africa.
@@robinliesens7983so pretty much keyboard paleontologists thinking they’re know it alls
the VFX are freaking amazing! Movie level skills!
That shot of it jumping out of the water! Wow
I won't lie I did want more hunting in season 1, it was my one gripe but they didn't disappoint in 2. Binged it all in one night. The night time t rex ambush was so good.
Okey, but can we talk about the music and set up in this? The scene starts with this tense music that, along the shadows and lights in the water makes you a bit uncomfortable. Then at 0:31 sounds like this deep growl as the head of the Mosasaurus appears behind the reef, like a sinister sea chant announcing that something enormous and ancient is lurking in the deeps. Then at 0:39 the predator looks upwards and we see the elasmosaurs like dancing in the light, with all these enchanting screams that sound almost like sirens songs, o like the terrified souls of the previous victims of the beast, almost as if they were trying to warn of the slaughter that may come. Meanwhile, we can hear in all the scene this unsettling beat in the background, like a heartbeat in the deeps... or like a haunting tick tock, counting the seconds until the beast attack... at any moment. Then the Mosasaurus attacks and it fails. But when it tries again, the music goes back to the tension. A quiet shot from the surface of the sea... and then the terrifyingly astonishing view of a gargatuan deep water monster, jumping with its prey in the mouth, accompained by the loud sound of water splashing around of an animal this big. Definitely one of my favourite scenes on all the series.
These creatures really existed. People wouldn't be able to even go into the ocean
Nah we would’ve hunted them to extinction..
I wish prehistoric planet explored South America and North Africa during the cenomanian age. Still the best prehistoric documentary there is!
Season 3, perhaps?
The power these things had to have had to propel there body’s out of the water weighing more than 20 tonnes is crazy. 1 slap from that tail and you’re mash potato
Very much like a great white hunts. Attacks from below and behind. I have video of a great white leaping completely out of the water on an attack and turning 180 before it heads back into the ocean (can't post it here, alas). I'm sure the animators studied such "Air Jaws" video while preparing this sequence.
Fun Fact: this breach use for the Mosasaur is an actual breach they filmed on Air Jaws th-cam.com/video/GbOTSi0Bpok/w-d-xo.html
Why hello, thalassophobia. No, I don't know why the TH-cam recs led me here either.
2:18 *_OCEAN MAN-_*
doc is so well made
This IS FREAKING INSANE
this dudes voice is iconic.
ocean man
My gawd incredible footage
damn that jump it did like almost catch a pterosaurus
Attenborough could read a safety manual and I'd be enthralled.
Nice.
Where I can record the PP S2 clips like how you did on Google?
Can you show me the link where did you record this scene?
Please
We’re gonna need a bigger boat !
wow, once in a lifetime footage
The Mosasaurus use it's tail for speed like a Megalodon Shark!
The energy used is insane
It amaze how the prey gets killed by the impact instead of tear and bite of Mosasaurus. Which reminds me of great whites sharks and orcas.
Finally mosasaurus hoffmanni was Is a documentary
Almost as ferocious as a drop bear.
This is like an upgraded version of the Liopleurodon grabbing the Eustreptospondylus from WWD lol
I have seen Camp Cretaceous, and the episode where the campers get stuck inside the mosasaurus lagoon… I just kept thinking: there is absolutely NO WAY you could ever out-paddle a mosasaur on a freaking kayak! This video just proves why, lol!
2:28 “AND HIS NAME IS JOHN CENA!!!!”
*john cena theme intensifies*
Excelente ese documental.....
The drama of predator and prey, it has gone on throughout the history of life on Earth and it is still going on now.
2.25 imagine yourself in a boat that close. 15m of full power killermode is coming up like that.
There should be sea shanty about a pirate crew that encounters a time rift within a storm and ends up in the western interior seaway.
There once was a ship that put to sea.
That name of the ship was the Billy O' Tea.
The winds blew up, her bow dipped down.
Blow my bully boys blow.
Soon may the Wellerman come
To bring us sugar and tea and rum.
One day, when the tonguing is done
We'll take out leave and go.
She hadn't been two weeks from shore
When down on her a time rift bore.
The captain called all hands and swore
He'd take his ship right through.
Soon may the Wellerman come
To bring us sugar and tea and rum.
One day, when the tonguing is done
We'll take out leave and go.
Before the boat hit ancient water
A Mosasaur came up and caught her.
All hands to the side, harpooned and fought him.
When Mosa dived down low.
Soon may the Wellerman come
To bring us sugar and tea and rum.
One day, when the tonguing is done
We'll take out leave and go.
No line was cut, no Mosa freed.
The captain's mind was not on greed
He believed t'was the only way he could take Mosa home
Soon may the Wellerman come
To bring us sugar and tea and rum.
One day, when the tonguing is done
We'll take out leave and go.
For forty days or even more
The line went slack then tight once more.
All boats were lost, there were only four
But still did Mosa go
Soon may the Wellerman come
To bring us sugar and tea and rum.
One day, when the tonguing is done
We'll take out leave and go.
As far as I've heard, the fight's still on.
The line's not cut, and Mosa's not gone.
The Wellerman makes his regular call to encourage captain, crew and all.
Soon may the Wellerman come
To bring us sugar and tea and rum.
One day, when the tonguing is done
We'll take out leave and go.
Soon may the Wellerman come
To bring us sugar and tea and rum.
One day, when the tonguing is done
We'll take out leave and go.
You know what gets me is that this would be 100 times crazier this tiny bait ball MILES wide with hundreds of predators hunting the fish and getting hunted by other predators this shit would be an EVENT
Mission impossible theme track starts
Even an adult elasmosaur can be on the menu because of the moasasaurs astonishing speed
0:33 ngl that was tense
What part of the soundtrack is this?
when it came out of the water i said woah
when it fell back into the water i said DAMNNNNNNNNNN
2:18 majestic
Prehistoric Planet version of great white shark vs. cape fur seal.
The camera man has no fear💀
It attacks with the same ferocity as a modern women armed with the local family court.
Absolutely ruthless.
Did this creature have a fish like tail?
So Mosasaurus basically hunts like a great white.
I am hungry again.
Tuarangiosaurus hunts the fish and the mosasaurus hunts them
"This enormous animal uses its huge tail to accelerate to astonishing speed
me, astonished: 😲
The mosasaurs always have a creepy look on their face
Real life sea dragon.
why was i expecting ocean man music
Mosasaurs is an ambush predator
That was real.
Steudies show they would have besn able to hit 0-50knotts underwater with a single second
It's 30 but still fast
Give it another few regurgitations, it'll become 0-150mph in half a second. 🤣
@@ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid I read 0-50 in another fuckin article bro tf do you want from me
@@ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid btw 30mph is 50 Knotts which would technically be the correct measurement anyway
That's horrifying
Oi mortro.monosauros esta fumto.dos mares astralhia ou pasifico
02:19 weeeeee
I went to Jurassic World on vacation and saw a Mosasaurus jump out of the water and swallow a great white shark! 😋😆🦖
And thank God it's EXTINCT!
How? They Looks So Gorgeous, Yet So Terrifying!
Pobrezinho 😭😭
Humiliated and angry
I'm believe they just bigger than whale n more deadly becuz they have sharper teeths.
1:03 fuck bro!
This is not tuarangesaurus
GREAT WHITE SHARKS AND SEALS
I’m grateful I don’t see the lame and overused cameraman joke.
I was free diving off blacks beach san diego and i saw something too large too identify suggestion dont paint yee boat red.........i dont paddle out since that day i dont swim in pools and am afraid to sit on toilet..it had a tusk or sabre toothed creature very very large.
Walrus?
@@redlizerad8268 imagine looking at a mountain with a tusk and shipwrecks all over it. I never saw far eastern boats made of paper untill that day.
@@redlizerad8268 wormsighting movie dune best way to describe a worm with a tusk or sabretooth
@@redlizerad8268 Godzilla Levithan poseiden or the largest saltwater crocodile ever
@@lurkenyautja5681 maybe you saw a funny shaped rock bro
camera man
This has to be the most nicest shot in tv show history 🎉
how do we know it’s speed based on fossil bones ?
They made a bonus short at the end of the episode explaining the scientific reasons why certain animals were depicted the way they are
How can we know if any of this is true?
seems highly speculative at best, i agree
@@peterpan3022 It's speculation backed by many experienced scientific consultants and Palaeontologists like Dr Darren Naish and Dr. Mark Witton,among others.
Being a bit skeptical and listening other paleontologists opinions about this (there are a lot of videos here in youtube talking about what is is true, based on fossil record, what could be true and what is all made up). In this case it could be true, but some details like the initial acceleration rate of the predator seems a bit off.
I swear to god i saw one mosasaurus jumped out of the water when i was young. And still creeps me out when i remember that moment.
Good ol days
How old are you exactly ?
@Qbz14 around 10 years old i guess. I swear to god i saw it. It does look like a saltwater crocodile but i dont know how it jump out of the water.
@@albertsguppyadventure429310 years old? You mean 100 million years old right?
@HammerfellWanderer no sir im nott joking. Thats why i have phobia in deep water because i remember that thing. Im not making up stories.
I thought there was no cameras during the dinosaurs era
Old Man Wheezing Voice.
Looks like Loch Ness monster just saying
Completely exaggerated lmao
Cope
@@inhabitantofantarctica oxygen thief
GIVE YOUR LIFE TO THE LORD JESUS CHRIST TODAY
mythology
It's all speculation,nobody knows what these creatures looked like how they lived and hunted.Their brains were also tiny too,it seems that intelligence is not that important for survival in nature,e.g. the spiders and insects hardly have a brain but these creatures have been on this planet for a long time.
You should probably stop talking about subjects you don't know shit about.
speculation is inevitable when you’re creating a documentary like this, so what’s your point
@@Jie_Hua Nothing,just a note
@@bayramaktas4135 ok fair enough, have a good day
@@Jie_Hua No offense,thank you,you too
Is it just me or are the CGI animations quite bad for an 2022 series?
It looks phenominal in my opinion
So we’re just going to agree how this went? Obviously no live evidence. The way it’s described in the present tense is annoying and troubling. Maybe, not for sure, maybe.
Just shut up and enjoy the show dude.
They made research and explained in an official short video on their channel.
@@ExtremeMadnessX yes but they don't show any official paper, nor much of the data. Me and many others would like to see some details of that supposed study. Reviews are essential in science. When a scientist doesn't show their data or the details of their study... it looks a bit suspicious for the rest of scientists. It would be nice that they would have put at least a link with the details of such study.
They never exist
wdym
They did.There's tons of fossils of Mosasaurs from late Cretaceous rock layers all over the world.
filled to the brim with speculation, and the character models movement is stiff and unconvincing.
If you have a time machine I’m sure the producers would be interested...twat
pov: you don't know anything about prehistory
@@yutyrannusfanboy5873 what do you claim to know that I do not?
Even the most uptight paleo nerds are looking at this comment and rolling their eyes. Also the speculation is hardly unreasonable. There are animals alive today bigger than this that can breach just as well.
@@deusvultpictures6550 calm down and go watch some more disney+ if you need a safe space to enjoy watching animations intended for entertainment, lol
Lovely voice, but a sadly clouded mind - all this is speculative, imaginative NONSENSE. We were not there, so such ideas are just idle speculation, and wrong because they are based on false premises.
the speculation is hardly unreasonable though, great white sharks pull this type of stuff with seals
@@Jie_Hua And biomechanical studies show Mosasaurus was indeed capable of all this.Just because an animal is extinct doesn't mean it's inferior.Quite the opposite in some cases actually.
@@eybaza6018 exactly
OMG, you guys made ANOTHER one of these?! 🤦♂
The first one wasn't embarrassing enough, I guess...
Bro what
wdym by embarrassing enough, what’s wrong with it
The only embarrassment here is your existence.
Embarrassing like your comment?
@@AmazingAkribanefr 💀
This is all cap
Nope
really isnt, they have an entire video on how a Mosasaurus could actually do this
ocean man