Make sure to check out Ivano Borghi's artstation at this link! Thanks to Badbyte as well for the Augmented Reality integration! www.artstation.com/infestedivy Badbyte, badvisor.io/
When I draw a T-Rex, I give it mane of feathers and some small arm feathers. I also give it a feathered tuft at the end of its tail. Why. Because most large theropods used feathers for display. Now if it's Spinosaurus, I would consider feathers impractical because of how they would weigh the semi-aquatic dinosaur down. T-Rex had feathers. Cope and seethe.
Ironic how scaling Tyrannosaurus skull fragments is considered too unreliable, but Giganotosaurus is often claimed to be the largest terrestrial carnivore because of that same metric.
If you're referring to the dentary specimen, then yes. As soon as the potential size of the dentary specimen were published, people were quick to treat it like gospel. At the same time, these same individuals claim that using the same method to calculate the overall size and mass of fragmentary specimens that are more complete than the Giga dentary is faulty and unreliable. Safe to say people only believe what they want to believe, facts are secondary to their own personal narratives.
Cope's measurements are as follows: Maxilla: At least 775 mm Femur length: 1270 mm from greater trochanter to lateral condyle (Sue's 1321 mm is using the same technique) Femur circumference: 630 mm Tibia length: 1230 mm (not including tibiotarsus as Larson stated that no elements of the astragalus were preserved when I directly asked him) Fibula length: 1080 mm (this was not used to scale in the video since it was not a weight-bearing bone, but it is further support for Cope being gigantic) Cope's 12.8 meters represents an intermediate of multiple techniques to obtain body length, but is chiefly based on projected total leg bone length compared to a 12.37 m Scotty assuming its femur was compressed. You can get as low as 12.5 meters from non-compressed leg bone ratios or above 13 meters with tibia-fibula scaling and higher estimates of Scotty. 12.5-13 meters is a likely range for Cope overall.
I have a question what about the idea that there where small amount of T rexs that where 70% larger then the normal common T rex like a T rexs that where 7M tall 8M tall 9M tall or even 10M tall 🤔🤔🤔
@adrammelechthewroth6511 that's irrelevant, and there are a couple of sauropods that rival the blue whale in weight, not just length.Also the blue whale isn't the longest animal of all time either
It seems that this individual T-Rex was doing something different to what other specimens were doing. Perhaps this one wasn't working with others of its own kind when hunting? Possibly it may have been more aggressive in its hunting as a result.
That’s interesting. It could be a combination of having healthy food sources, genetics from a strong family line, and successfully reaching an older age beyond what is predicted for Tyrannosaurus’ life span. Also perhaps dinosaurs had the ability to continuously grow or build mass. This stuff is fun to imagine and think about with how they were.
@dinosaurfan2409 It probably lived longer due to being a dominant male, probably more aggressive than the rest. I'm guessing smarter too. Or it could have spent most of its life on its own and hunted accordingly, a fierce creature indeed.
@@williambuchanan77 it would be great to learn more about individual variations and if there was any between male and females and if included size differences and if it connects to the Robust and Gracile morphs.
@@williambuchanan77 I have wondered about that. I think it can make sense. We have subspecies in modern animals and I think this would fit maybe a bit better than the multiple species theory.
00:04 - "Anybody got any snacks?" That's the friendliest Tyrannosaur I've ever seen. 😊 Backed by the possible intellect of a primate, makes it very believable that even this animal doesn't have to be 'hyper-aggressive' 24/7 as we are used to in modern media.
it's crazy to see the size difference between Cope Rex and Stan... poor Stan looks diminutive by comparison. Also you accidentally listed the Saurophaganax as 45 feet when 1280cm should be 42... unless you meant 45 in which case it should be 1371.6 cm. Great video, keep up the awesome updates mate.
I love your hard work, guys! Thank you for showing us more about this 8th wonder of the world, and congratulations on reaching 25k subscribers, Vividen! Let's see if we can reach 50k by the end of the year!
It would be very helpful to know the age of Cope. I’m no paleontologist but considering the incredible growth of Tyrannosaurus rex, going from a long legged slender animal to the behemoth that we know in a relatively short period of time, it always made sense to me that the older a Tyrannosaurus rex got, the larger and thicker it got. The sexual dimorphism always seemed pretty weak to me for this very reason, sure Sue is a lot more bulkier than Stan is, but it is also 10 years older ! The same comparison applies to the wankel Rex compared to Trix or Scotty. I think what we are seeing now with the discovery of Cope, Sue, Scotty and other large specimens, it how big mature Tyrannosaurus rex were. Something we never knew for the start because a disproportionate amount of specimens are young adults that died probably at the breeding season. The large amount of specimens that had been bitten and injured tend to show this. When it comes to size in Tyrannosaurus rex, I’m pretty sure age is the key
Cope was 30+. I thought it was a litte more but that was all we could say for sure. I believe Sue was 29 and Stan was 25. Bucky was 16. We did growth ring analysis on Cope and Bucky at the Childrens Museum
One Paleontologist I like you to try to get in touch with is David Hone, because he is the one who studied the T Rex's feet, and the Arctometatarsalian condition.
In a previous video, you mentioned there was an even bigger specimen being... reviewed? excavated? something?... Any word on that? Does that specimen have a name?
Its Not the we much More on cope than a 10 cm lower Jaw and we found have alot rexes but not the Same with the giga its much easyer to reconstruckt a Rex with some bones than a giga with 1. 10 cm Bone with almost no giga Skeleton that is a really Bad comparsion
another forum mentioned a very large t rex skull surpassing any known ,but its in private collection...oddly enough the largest tarbosaurus skull is also in a private collection...
To elaborate a bit more on what possibly might be going on when I talked about compression or distortion with the femur, Cope in its original metrics came out as a statistical outlier when using the original metrics. Using the other specimens as a baseline, I was able to hash out a rough formula on how the proportions would change in relation to increases in length, circumference, or volume against one another. Cope was consistently cropping up to have a length between ~4-6% shorter then the lowest end of the given range and a girth nearly the exact same amount above the expected given range. The sample size was very small so this isn't definitive, but coupled with the visible fracturing and bending in several spots on the femur, it seemed to me that it was possible to femur was compressed very slightly end to end, which would explain both the fractures and the middle girth flaring out. Applying the correction percentage which reduced the girth and increase the length by roughly the same numbers, Cope wound up with very similar numbers either just above, between, or below Sue and Scotty. This would give it a circumference in the upper 500s mm and a length somewhat over 1330-1350mm. Effectively about the same size as Sue and Scotty in respect to this specific bone.
Tyrannosaurus rex bones structure literally much more massive robust wider and thicker than others large theropods(graceful flattened thin and narrower)
I have a metaphysical view of ultra predators like the T rex. I feel like they're universal archetypes taking physical form through evolution, rather than just a coincidence through random mutations and natural selection.
Wow! "Cope" was immensely massive, even for a T. rex! I'm shook! By the way, I am surprised that Saurophagonax was about as long as "Cope" (although "Cope" was clearly more robust)! I am also shook that the Spinosaurus specimen that was showcased in the video was as long as it was at nearly 50 feet in length! Wow! It turns out these critters were bigger than we gave them credit for!
im not really surprised because iv heard this for years, it was always suggested saurophagnax could reach 14m based on the largest specimens..also the largest spinosaurus specimen was a sub adult and this was confirmed by experts that studied it...
Correct me if I'm wrong but isn't E.D Cope believed to be the rest of the Manospondylus specimen? I think I read that Cope was found in the original M.gigas site
It's possible! Larson told me that he personally believes that Cope is the rest of Manospondylus, but he also said he couldn't prove it decisively. It would make sense, though, since the M. gigas vertebrae were reported to be larger than Sue's!
But get this, their are bigger spinos and gigas that our waiting to be found that could possibly dethrone average rexs and compete with the few "abnormal" rex individuals
@TheVividen is sauro really 45 feet long? I know there was a pic of the thigh bone of sauro that shown it really was a giant but it seems like theres a lot of hidden info about this dinosaur that isnt being spoken about
I'm still very wary of making either Cope or Bertha the new 'largest Rex' when both are quite fragmentery when compared to Scotty. It would be one thing if either had at least a complete skull as when they were found since we could compare head sizes to see who's really larger, but we don't even have that.
Well, scaling using skull size isn't exactly reliable due to how much individual variation there is in Tyrannosaurus skulls. AMNH 5027 and Stan are significantly smaller than Sue, yet they both have disproportionately huge skulls for their size.
Wow, Cope seems to fit quite comfortably in the 9-11 ton range. That’s insane. It seems that the average rex size may have been substantially heavier than the most often touted 6-7 tons.
Would you mind if you told me the lowest and highest size for Copium? (Including height) because im doing something And IF you can Bertha's expected size
There’s a great joke to the irony of this tyrant gigachad being named cope. But it’s just low hanging fruit at this point. Goes to show that the field is ever changing though. Like we all know that. But there’s some humour In forgetting that paleo giant anomalies always seem to show up especially this time lool Great work as usual but especially on the calcs on this one too vividen👏🏾💪🏾❤️
great video and have you heard of a t-rex named bertha and it may be an even larger t-rex than E.D cope and if you are interested in doing a future video about it?.🦖
Lower probably, from what we can tell the average size for tyrannosaurus was 40-43ft long. And they show no signs of sexual dimorphism in their skeletons
I have a large 300kg rock that has amazing preserved scales still attached to arteries/veins and spikes covering this rock. I am making a new Video on this find that has very similar markings as that of a Ankylosaur! I have a one minute vid on my channel from the original find
Given that it's femoral and tibia lengths are in such a different ratio to Stan and Sue, would it not be pertinent to consider the possibility its not a T. Rex. I mean, I have never heard of drastic differences in leg morphology which would likely drastically change the animal's ecology being due to individual variation.
Certainly an interesting idea! Hopefully the specimen receives a proper description eventually and the rest of the material can give us a better idea of what Cope was like.
The Subscribe or..."Joke" made me dislike and not want to watch the channel much less subscribe. I know it's a joke but I still remember the era of the internet where those "jokes" were common and much more serious. It's a good video and I pray this comment helps in the future. :)
Ed cope es mas pesado que Scotty pero Scotty es mas alto? Me preguntó entonces lo de la carroña t rex es real? Por que t rex de 12 toneladas es muy lento, definitivamente Ed Cope es un t rex gordo 🐻
I know this is all interesting and whatnot but internet culture has rotted my mind to the point where I just laugh at the name because of how the word Copium is used online.
Make sure to check out Ivano Borghi's artstation at this link! Thanks to Badbyte as well for the Augmented Reality integration!
www.artstation.com/infestedivy
Badbyte, badvisor.io/
Please Allosaurus fragilis accurate
And Dilophosaurus wetherilli accurate
This brings of whole new meaning to "Cope and Seethe".
When I draw a T-Rex, I give it mane of feathers and some small arm feathers. I also give it a feathered tuft at the end of its tail. Why. Because most large theropods used feathers for display. Now if it's Spinosaurus, I would consider feathers impractical because of how they would weigh the semi-aquatic dinosaur down. T-Rex had feathers. Cope and seethe.
So how tall is the trex at the hip compare to Sue and Scotty? What about the other trex? Is it about 13-15ft tall hip
How many times are you going to increase your size?
Rex: *yes*
Everyday I get more terrified of tyrannosaurus but fascinated at the same time
@@HughMongusJazzhole Thank you for being the one person on here to say the actual name.
Rex who? Funny how with the size increase, his actual name DECREASES. Soon he'll just be: TRX or TX.
@@kyachdistent1301😂😂😂
@@kyachdistent1301😂😂
Ironic how scaling Tyrannosaurus skull fragments is considered too unreliable, but Giganotosaurus is often claimed to be the largest terrestrial carnivore because of that same metric.
Por fin--la hipocresia
I ain't ever heard someone call giga the biggest carni
Its Bad comperson and why i did. say it in a comment
If you're referring to the dentary specimen, then yes. As soon as the potential size of the dentary specimen were published, people were quick to treat it like gospel. At the same time, these same individuals claim that using the same method to calculate the overall size and mass of fragmentary specimens that are more complete than the Giga dentary is faulty and unreliable. Safe to say people only believe what they want to believe, facts are secondary to their own personal narratives.
*Was published*
Cope's measurements are as follows:
Maxilla: At least 775 mm
Femur length: 1270 mm from greater trochanter to lateral condyle (Sue's 1321 mm is using the same technique)
Femur circumference: 630 mm
Tibia length: 1230 mm (not including tibiotarsus as Larson stated that no elements of the astragalus were preserved when I directly asked him)
Fibula length: 1080 mm (this was not used to scale in the video since it was not a weight-bearing bone, but it is further support for Cope being gigantic)
Cope's 12.8 meters represents an intermediate of multiple techniques to obtain body length, but is chiefly based on projected total leg bone length compared to a 12.37 m Scotty assuming its femur was compressed. You can get as low as 12.5 meters from non-compressed leg bone ratios or above 13 meters with tibia-fibula scaling and higher estimates of Scotty. 12.5-13 meters is a likely range for Cope overall.
I have a question what about the idea that there where small amount of T rexs that where 70% larger then the normal common T rex like a T rexs that where 7M tall 8M tall 9M tall or even 10M tall 🤔🤔🤔
how big l am now
Thanks for the up date and great video.
@@aleague238 tonnes 💀
@@sussy_dino thanks 😊
The ultra heavyweight of all carnivores !!
Those who tread the land are jokes for those who lurk in the depths of the sea...
That title goes to blue whales my guy.
@adrammelechthewroth6511 that's irrelevant, and there are a couple of sauropods that rival the blue whale in weight, not just length.Also the blue whale isn't the longest animal of all time either
Ah yes, the actual ultra heavyweight of all carnivores, the blue whale
@@adrammelechthewroth6511
@@Texasmade74 dude saurpods are irrelevant in this conversation. Also, I'm pretty sure a 80 ton saurpod isn't equal to a 200-ton whale.
Hoped there will be more on Bertha soon
The leg structure of Cope is similar to that of Trix, and more reference should be made to Trix's body structure to estimate its body shape.😏
Day 49385573894 of waiting for a Trix description paper
It seems that this individual T-Rex was doing something different to what other specimens were doing. Perhaps this one wasn't working with others of its own kind when hunting? Possibly it may have been more aggressive in its hunting as a result.
That’s interesting. It could be a combination of having healthy food sources, genetics from a strong family line, and successfully reaching an older age beyond what is predicted for Tyrannosaurus’ life span. Also perhaps dinosaurs had the ability to continuously grow or build mass. This stuff is fun to imagine and think about with how they were.
@dinosaurfan2409 It probably lived longer due to being a dominant male, probably more aggressive than the rest. I'm guessing smarter too. Or it could have spent most of its life on its own and hunted accordingly, a fierce creature indeed.
@@williambuchanan77 it would be great to learn more about individual variations and if there was any between male and females and if included size differences and if it connects to the Robust and Gracile morphs.
@dinosaurfan2409 could be a subspecies of T Rex
@@williambuchanan77 I have wondered about that. I think it can make sense. We have subspecies in modern animals and I think this would fit maybe a bit better than the multiple species theory.
I remember when you used to upload on a monthly basis. Now we’ve gotten 3 uploads in the past week. Nice work, Vividen.
00:04 - "Anybody got any snacks?" That's the friendliest Tyrannosaur I've ever seen. 😊
Backed by the possible intellect of a primate, makes it very believable that even this animal doesn't have to be 'hyper-aggressive' 24/7 as we are used to in modern media.
Thank you!
@prehistorichero2755 what's your book titled?
@prehistorichero2755 I already can tell I will like it, with a title like that.
“More built for speed than other rexes”
Oh come on! The thing is already op enough!
Now all we need is Bertha description paper to come out
Cope is officially the Moto Moto of T. rex
it's crazy to see the size difference between Cope Rex and Stan... poor Stan looks diminutive by comparison.
Also you accidentally listed the Saurophaganax as 45 feet when 1280cm should be 42... unless you meant 45 in which case it should be 1371.6 cm.
Great video, keep up the awesome updates mate.
I love your hard work, guys! Thank you for showing us more about this 8th wonder of the world, and congratulations on reaching 25k subscribers, Vividen! Let's see if we can reach 50k by the end of the year!
It would be very helpful to know the age of Cope. I’m no paleontologist but considering the incredible growth of Tyrannosaurus rex, going from a long legged slender animal to the behemoth that we know in a relatively short period of time, it always made sense to me that the older a Tyrannosaurus rex got, the larger and thicker it got. The sexual dimorphism always seemed pretty weak to me for this very reason, sure Sue is a lot more bulkier than Stan is, but it is also 10 years older ! The same comparison applies to the wankel Rex compared to Trix or Scotty.
I think what we are seeing now with the discovery of Cope, Sue, Scotty and other large specimens, it how big mature Tyrannosaurus rex were. Something we never knew for the start because a disproportionate amount of specimens are young adults that died probably at the breeding season. The large amount of specimens that had been bitten and injured tend to show this.
When it comes to size in Tyrannosaurus rex, I’m pretty sure age is the key
yea ur right,but all the same there are adult specimens of t rex ,its just so many more are sub adults around 30-35ft...
Cope was 30+. I thought it was a litte more but that was all we could say for sure. I believe Sue was 29 and Stan was 25. Bucky was 16. We did growth ring analysis on Cope and Bucky at the Childrens Museum
that rex wearing luh calm fit CUH.
One Paleontologist I like you to try to get in touch with is David Hone, because he is the one who studied the T Rex's feet, and the Arctometatarsalian condition.
I've watched some of your videos and have been really enjoying them. I've just subscribed. Thanks.
Now we have to wait for Bertha and the tyrant specimen of the south that might be capable of hunting alamosarus
ngl, if we keep finding more bigger tyrannosaurus rex fossils then the average weight of tyrannosaurus rex might be 10 tons
Ironic that it's the heaviest specimen and also the fastest. T.rex truly was an evolutionary marvel.
The true power of Mother Nature.!
When are they gonna drop Seethium and Maldium Rex?
Cope and seethe, spino fans
In a previous video, you mentioned there was an even bigger specimen being... reviewed? excavated? something?... Any word on that? Does that specimen have a name?
Specimen's name is Bertha. She's currently being studied and described; there will be a paper about her in the future.
Its Not the we much More on cope than a 10 cm lower Jaw and we found have alot rexes but not the Same with the giga its much easyer to reconstruckt a Rex with some bones than a giga with 1. 10 cm Bone with almost no giga Skeleton that is a really Bad comparsion
another forum mentioned a very large t rex skull surpassing any known ,but its in private collection...oddly enough the largest tarbosaurus skull is also in a private collection...
To elaborate a bit more on what possibly might be going on when I talked about compression or distortion with the femur, Cope in its original metrics came out as a statistical outlier when using the original metrics. Using the other specimens as a baseline, I was able to hash out a rough formula on how the proportions would change in relation to increases in length, circumference, or volume against one another. Cope was consistently cropping up to have a length between ~4-6% shorter then the lowest end of the given range and a girth nearly the exact same amount above the expected given range.
The sample size was very small so this isn't definitive, but coupled with the visible fracturing and bending in several spots on the femur, it seemed to me that it was possible to femur was compressed very slightly end to end, which would explain both the fractures and the middle girth flaring out. Applying the correction percentage which reduced the girth and increase the length by roughly the same numbers, Cope wound up with very similar numbers either just above, between, or below Sue and Scotty. This would give it a circumference in the upper 500s mm and a length somewhat over 1330-1350mm. Effectively about the same size as Sue and Scotty in respect to this specific bone.
Tyrannosaurus rex bones structure literally much more massive robust wider and thicker than others large theropods(graceful flattened thin and narrower)
Bertha and E.D cope they are monstrously sizes.!
Giganotosaurus spinosausus or carcharadontosaurus they are not “rivals” in size.!
Thank you for being a part of it, Dr. Tarbtano!
did you now more about bertha the rex
We don't have any official measurements, but she's going to be huge!
@@TheVividen How did science miss yo momma's grave for so long?
Yet another reason that Tyrannosaurus rex is my all-time favorite dinosaur.
I have a metaphysical view of ultra predators like the T rex. I feel like they're universal archetypes taking physical form through evolution, rather than just a coincidence through random mutations and natural selection.
TLDR: Copium
h
Yes
Giganotovirgins COPE, DRINK, EDWARD!
Wow!
"Cope" was immensely massive, even for a T. rex! I'm shook!
By the way, I am surprised that Saurophagonax was about as long as "Cope" (although "Cope" was clearly more robust)! I am also shook that the Spinosaurus specimen that was showcased in the video was as long as it was at nearly 50 feet in length! Wow! It turns out these critters were bigger than we gave them credit for!
im not really surprised because iv heard this for years, it was always suggested saurophagnax could reach 14m based on the largest specimens..also the largest spinosaurus specimen was a sub adult and this was confirmed by experts that studied it...
Correct me if I'm wrong but isn't E.D Cope believed to be the rest of the Manospondylus specimen? I think I read that Cope was found in the original M.gigas site
It's possible! Larson told me that he personally believes that Cope is the rest of Manospondylus, but he also said he couldn't prove it decisively. It would make sense, though, since the M. gigas vertebrae were reported to be larger than Sue's!
I personally feel 12.8 metres Is a bit conservative, I feel it would be around 13.2 to 13.4 metres in length. But that’s just my opinion.
tyrant lizard king ! no land predator can dethrone rexy!
But get this, their are bigger spinos and gigas that our waiting to be found that could possibly dethrone average rexs and compete with the few "abnormal" rex individuals
@emptyglass7867 Thats like sayin fox's and dogs can cope cause they arent on the same peak as bears.
@nigerjohnson4977 no there likely isn't any that will compete with the sheer length/weight/bite force of Tyrannosaurus Rex overall
@@nigerjohnson4977longer, but never heavier 🥱
@@nigerjohnson4977😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂maybe in your fantasy
Here before the powerscalers.
and then the arctometatarsalian condition allows the t rex to hold that speed for a super long time
I've been looking forward to this.
I didnt expect it to be that much bigger than an acrocanthosaurus :O
Thanks for the vids
E.d Cope Real size: 13 feet tall, 43 feet long, 11.5 to 11.7 tons in weight
Most likely over 11.7 tons
Any chance you will do a video on the 45 ft saurophaganax specimen in the relatively near future?
That's currently in development!
@@TheVividen awesome, saurophaganax is a personal favorite of mine.
That's a 42 feet Saurophaganax ( 12.8m)
@TheVividen is sauro really 45 feet long? I know there was a pic of the thigh bone of sauro that shown it really was a giant but it seems like theres a lot of hidden info about this dinosaur that isnt being spoken about
@@SamirZehar-ol1dc 1280cm is 42 feet not 45 feet. 🤦
Hi vividen
What's the height of copium rex?
Likely about 4 meters!
4:36 that's 45 feet Saurophaganax?
I'm still very wary of making either Cope or Bertha the new 'largest Rex' when both are quite fragmentery when compared to Scotty. It would be one thing if either had at least a complete skull as when they were found since we could compare head sizes to see who's really larger, but we don't even have that.
Bertha and cope they are monstrously sizes.!
Well, scaling using skull size isn't exactly reliable due to how much individual variation there is in Tyrannosaurus skulls. AMNH 5027 and Stan are significantly smaller than Sue, yet they both have disproportionately huge skulls for their size.
Wow, Cope seems to fit quite comfortably in the 9-11 ton range. That’s insane. It seems that the average rex size may have been substantially heavier than the most often touted 6-7 tons.
@@symphonyofshred 8 to 8.5 tons is the average weight for T. rex.
@@rhedosaurus2251 most likely even more
And who’s Seething?
we'll find the Seether Rex soon enough.
My vote is for Bertha
Giganotosaurus, duh
So Cope was not just huge he was also the Usain Bolt of T. rexes, he definitely was a Chad but potentially Bertha may make him a sigma.
Could you make a video of the T-Rex specimen called UCMP 137538, in the past it was estimated to be almost 15 meters and at least 16 tons?
The Edmontosaurus fans have been real quiet ever since the Copium Rex specimen got discovered.
I want more rl full scale pictures and size comparison 😮 huuuge
*heavy breathing intensifies*
Would you mind if you told me the lowest and highest size for Copium? (Including height) because im doing something
And IF you can Bertha's expected size
A true king
I think Rex speeds are underestimated. Their sheer size allowed for a stride length that I think enabled speeds closer to 30km/hr
Most likely over 30km
There’s a great joke to the irony of this tyrant gigachad being named cope. But it’s just low hanging fruit at this point.
Goes to show that the field is ever changing though. Like we all know that. But there’s some humour In forgetting that paleo giant anomalies always seem to show up especially this time lool
Great work as usual but especially on the calcs on this one too vividen👏🏾💪🏾❤️
Its name being "cope" is a message to all spino and giga fanboys saying rex was weak
@@Ledinosour673lol
@@Ledinosour673 I can hear their cries in the distance…..
“It’s true they do move in herds💀🫠”
Still waiting for a 43 foot T-rex.
Una sugerencia bro:
E.D. Cope vs FMM UV-32 T.rex
This thing was the Gustave of T.Rexes
Question for you, who would win in a fight between a deinosuchus hatcheri or ED Cope T-rex specimen.
I would think it would depend on who got the best initial grip with their mouth.
Deinosuchus hatcheri
@@Benglavosaurus 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@rodrigopinto6676Deinosuchus hatcheri 14 tons 🗿
@@Benglavosaurus 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Now for the paper on Bertha.
Cope next to spino looks insane
Rex just can’t stop getting buffed up
Isn't scotty was 13m who it's becoming shorter than sue but bigger in 400kg??
great video and have you heard of a t-rex named bertha and it may be an even larger t-rex than E.D cope and if you are interested in doing a future video about it?.🦖
Scotty is 13,1m long
I believe most tree were around 45 feet on average for females and 42-43 for males
Lower probably, from what we can tell the average size for tyrannosaurus was 40-43ft long. And they show no signs of sexual dimorphism in their skeletons
So one of putting in , eds femur was about twice the size of ljn yamatos main guns
cool science fiction on these fossils!
Ikr, some people believe that dutch sailors saw flightless pigeons that could turn themselves invisible😂 They call them “Doe-does”😂
@@Alioramusremotusthey could not turn invisible wdym
Can I say how great it is that the biggest is called "cope"... its like "I'm big, deal with it". Makes me laugh every time I hear it.
Please make about bertha the t Rex😊😊😊
Is this a new rex
@@evilcrashbandicootthetouho2753hnm
Bertha was probably more bigger than a a Ed cope
5 years later half of the info was wrong and it gets downsized or not even the same creature
I have a large 300kg rock that has amazing preserved scales still attached to arteries/veins and spikes covering this rock.
I am making a new Video on this find that has very similar markings as that of a Ankylosaur!
I have a one minute vid on my channel from the original find
Scotty will always be the true king to me.
Just cause I like his name.
I cannot think of a better name for a T. rex tbh (other than the obvious Rex lol).
“The mass is increasing, She ca’nna take much more, Cap’n!”
@@Tempusverum "Beam me up Scotty"
Great work man i really love the analyze you are doing with Cope.
Hablo el “experto” que mide dibujos con la regla de tres🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Thank you, Darknix! I'm really excited to see your Top 10 video. You've put so much hard work and research into it!
I bet it T rex can get to 45 foot maybe a little more , They have only found far less than 99.99% fossilised T rex skeletons .
Scotty is long 12,37 or 12,4 m??and Sue weigh 10.000 kg(Randomdinos 2023)or 10.100 kg??
Someone should cope about Copium Rex lol.
Hey! This VR Trex doesn't fit in my living room!
The V Rex is Real
still if cope is the biggest specimen of rex rn id say sue and Scotty are the best rexes (for me) still
noo i missed the premire
Given that it's femoral and tibia lengths are in such a different ratio to Stan and Sue, would it not be pertinent to consider the possibility its not a T. Rex.
I mean, I have never heard of drastic differences in leg morphology which would likely drastically change the animal's ecology being due to individual variation.
Certainly an interesting idea! Hopefully the specimen receives a proper description eventually and the rest of the material can give us a better idea of what Cope was like.
Yeah, I am looking forwards to hearing more from the Cope Tyrannosaurus!
Are we not going to talk about that monster of a saurophaganax? 4:37
Oh, we will...should be coming out in December!
T rex may be the strongest. But carcharodontosaurs are the coolest.
T. rex was the ultimate terrestrial predator
@@rodrigopinto6676There really isn't a thing like a "ultimate predator." T.rex was however the strongest terrestrial predator.
@@ReptiliansRule also the ultimate terrestrial predator
Must have been really slow as an adult. Kill stealer like male Lion at some occasion I guess.
“Slow” totally wrong
Scotty was 13.3 or 13.5 meters long
Scotty's length is wrong it's been established that it was 42.6 feet long
No. Scotty is 12.4 metres or 41.3 feet . Ed Cope is the one that's 12.8m metres or 42.6 feet
@@Benglavosaurus take it up with live science
Makes me wonder if we’ll ever discover the “ED Cope” of animals.
We thought Sue and Scotty were giants. But then this mf showed up.
The Subscribe or..."Joke" made me dislike and not want to watch the channel much less subscribe. I know it's a joke but I still remember the era of the internet where those "jokes" were common and much more serious. It's a good video and I pray this comment helps in the future. :)
Who gives a shit. Grow a backbone
ok
Waiting Bertha
❤
Copium is the king congratulation the vividen good night❤😊😊😊
Everyone knows femur size doesn't matter it's how you use it
Ed cope es mas pesado que Scotty pero Scotty es mas alto? Me preguntó entonces lo de la carroña t rex es real? Por que t rex de 12 toneladas es muy lento, definitivamente Ed Cope es un t rex gordo 🐻
No es “real” y no entendiste nada del video o a lo mejor no sabes el inglés…
I know this is all interesting and whatnot but internet culture has rotted my mind to the point where I just laugh at the name because of how the word Copium is used online.
He would eat bush elephants for breakfast in modern Africa.
That's just devil jho bro
For all the edmontosaurus fans out there... trex > edmontosaurus copium pills are right down the streets take one lol
And yet there's a fossil of edmontosaurus surviving a rex bite.
@@ReptiliansRule which means it ran away because its main defense was broken?
@@AdamWingard_Official honestly I have no idea what I was trying to say with that comment it was late and I was tired.
@@ReptiliansRule ahh okay
no no no no no no, are we just gonna skip over its name being *copium*, like is this the official dinosaur of the titanfall community or what
Cope and seethe giga simps
copium
He he, cope
I will gay
sure you will
Wha?