This is actually kinda sad. After the ammonite’s shells are cracked, it seems like they know they’re about to die, and there’s nothing they can do about it. They don’t even struggle after being disabled, like they know there’s no point.
Realmente no es por eso, sino porque las conchas contienen cámaras vacías que son las que proporcionan flotabilidad al amonite, igual que actualmente a los nautilus
This is actually kinda sad. After the ammonite’s shells are cracked, it seems like they know they’re about to die, and there’s nothing they can do about it. They don’t even struggle after being disabled, like they know there’s no point.
Realmente no es por eso, sino porque las conchas contienen cámaras vacías que son las que proporcionan flotabilidad al amonite, igual que actualmente a los nautilus
@@raulsoto6253I know that. I meant they aren’t even moving their tentacles once they start falling.
Don't worry, it's only a computer animation based on many assumptions. We don't know if they really hunted like this.
@@JohnyG29 great white sharks do hunt seals like this though. they take a bite then wait for them to bleed to death then eats it.
It's the ciiiiircle of liiiiiiiife~~
2:28 The part that got my heart pumping once the _Globidens_ swished its tail to go after the ammonites
Globidens, a mosasaur that definitely deserves more opportunity to shine.
Yeah! Like Jurassic World Evolution 2.
Indeed, and other prehistoric documentaries.
3:58-4:03 Well, that looks appetizing.
Like calamari from 66 million years ago
@@LiamDyCstill better than gas station sushi.
😛😋
It actually does look pretty delicious!
I must have replayed that scene twenty times. Craving calamari now.
Why am I the first to comment on this video, especially about how brutal yet beautiful Globidens is?
1:54 I love the tongue that comes out. Lol
Well, _Globidens_ is related to lizards, and modern monitor lizards have forked tongues, so it makes sense.
2:58 Hans, your Dark Knight is showing
0:05
And went right through the middle of the continent.
I didn’t think I’d start my day crying at 5 am over the death of a 25 million year old computer generated snail but here we are.
66 million year old shelled squid, actually.
"recently mated" How exactly did tiger ammonites mate?
Probably by having the females lay the eggs and the males dumping sperm on them. That's how many animals mate tbh
Same way nautilus mate today.
You can see for yourself in Prehistoric Planet's first episode of season 1.
This all speculation people, calm down
y el mosasaurio chupándose los dedos 😢
Did you see the ammonite open it’s eyes3:38-3:40
The ammonite's eye was dilating upon death