This video goes far more deeply into and presents a vast array of creatures from a relatively short period of prehistoric time. Most other videos are subjects of relatively known reptiles but this vid introduces many examples of prehistoric life of which I was unfamiliar plus their evolutionary histories. The longer I watched this video the more it became like a book I couldn’t put down!
Enjoyed the use of Frightening and monstrous! Also the narrators use of the English vocabulary is refreshing and fantastic. Excellent Narration; very informative piece.
I agree. Too many documentaries try to make the researchers and scientists look like “rock stars”. Every scientist has their own viewpoint and focus, and may not be entirely true (or even wrong!) I like the facts, without personality mixed in.
@@bigedslobotomy ironically enough this channel has mistakes in most of their videos, so a paleontologist checking the facts wouldn’t hurt in this case
I’m so happy that this video gives an all-round tour of many types of life, such as plants, insects and other overlooked niches! That’s very rare, so thank you for that!
@@davidsheckler4450 don't tell me you believe that none of it happened? The fossils that are found all around the world are what, figments of our imagination? Although many things are, possibly, conjecture, based on hints found in the fossil record, we can't just say that these creatures didn't exist. What are you going to say next? That the earth is flat, and all the other celestial bodies revolve around us? xD
@@maddevil3165 No belief involved. There isn't any verifiable REAL evidence. Only "fossils" anyone can learn to make online. Go research it. No one was there so how can YOU sanely believe in any of this 🤷 how about Santa 🤷 The Tooth Fairy 🤷 Easter Bunny 🤷 still "believe" in that unproven nonsense 🤷
I love your channel and I'm so grateful that: 1) I came across it 2) it's regularly updated and kept current with new, high quality content For anyone familiar with the "horse girl anesthetic" meme, I was a dinosaur girl throughout the entirety of my childhood and have carried that fascination ever since. Lately I've myself indulging that sense curiosity to an especially frequent degree. I've found myself utterly obsessed by topics relating to the history of life on Earth a real scarcity of high quality, long-form content on
@@susanmccormick6022 I like dinosaurs and somehow feel childish talking about my grown man excitement over them and other ancient life with people who don't know what I'm so excited about. 😆 oh well. History of life on earth is fascinating.
@@SoulDelSol I can relate to that.I once thought of doing paleontology as a career,but 'older & wiser' relations discouraged it as "Dinosaurs were only for children!"Same as a house I liked with a spiral staircase into the living room(like the Monkees!)but was talked out of it as I hate the cold & was warned it would be a draughty place to live due to that staircase.And lastly,re: wedding "You can't back out now!"I could,I really could!And saved a lot of hurt.Moral I learned too late was Decide For Yourself & don't let anybody put you off,no matter how well meaning they are.Its funny how many people visit sites of archaeology & ask if we've found any dinosaurs yet.'The Boss' always takes a deep breath & says "That's paleontology,this is archaeology!"I live in hopes of reincarnation & listening to nobody but myself about important decisions.Where r u based & what's your fav Dino?They're not Dino's,but I love plesiosaurs.Probably because I am a water child missing the ocean.Peace.
@@susanmccormick6022 I wanted to be a paleontologist when I was younger too. Spiral staircases are really cool! As for marriage you're right it wasn't too late, it's never too late to make a change. And no one knows you better than you. Well intentioned people just don't know what's best. I always try to foster automony in others and not to make major decisions on impulse, emotion, or without weighing pros and cons. Do you work in archeology now? If so what type of a site are you working on? Is it too late to do an internship in paleontology if that's what you still want to do? I have a green and black fabric hanging from a piece of wood on a door in my house that says "become loyal to your inner most truth, follow the way when all other abandon it, walk the path of your own heart". I like plesiosaurs too!! I also like ankylosaurs, they're cool. I like learning about other lines of animals from before and after the dinosaur eras too. I'm in Massachusetts, what about you?
Astrid vvv:I cannot remem how to change this name I hate to a better handle.Maddening!I was & am horse,dog,cat,anything gal Inc Dino's.They fascinate me.Have u a fav?
@@SoulDelSol Off & on, officially retired though it doesn't feel like it.A couple of years ago we were working on an Abbey site.The bulldozers were coming in that aftnoon.Just b4 they started,we found a medieval floor inches below the surface.It was pristine.If those diggers had been earlier-gulp!The farther back in time we go,the more fascinating it becomes for me.And I Def draw the line after around 1920s.
I’m only 10min+ in, and aside from the irritating “Jura”, which probably no one has ever called it, at least in recent times, and I’m betting there’s a good chance it was made up here, this video is all over the place! I keep having to replay parts cause I’m sure I’m mishearing, but I’m not! So much stuff contradicts itself on here, usually in the following sentences, and some stuff is just absolute nonsense factually, and also just as far as making sense verbally! I’m gonna watch it thruough out of curiosity, but I’m sure I’ll hafta actually update this comment to add to my astonishment of the videos “quality content”.
"Archosaurs" refers to the entire grouping of crocodilians, non-avian dinosaurs, theropod dinosaurs (including birds). Saying that any of these groups descended from archosaurs is saying that these groups descended from themselves, which is impossible. "Archosaur" is a collective noun including all those groups.
“The crustaceous period.“ 😅 I think they meant the Cretaceous, but that is hilarious! 4:18 it’s a really good idea to thoroughly proofread before you have your AI render text to speech
"Herberius" Was that what he said? Tell you all, I've seen scores of videos and TV shows on the Jurassic, and read several books on the same, but this is the first time I've ever heard the Jurassic referred to as " the Jura".
Great video! This is entertaining. However, we can’t actually confirm the true details of these creatures behavioral tendencies during this time period. We can give it mankind’s best guess though!
I do truly appreciate and enjoy all this information make me look life in a totally different perspective ,my daughter said to me " I believe in God but we're here by evolution
Referring to dinosaurs as "reptiles" is like calling mammals "reptiles." Both groups descended from reptiles, but are (remember: living birds are dinosaurs, too) themselves different from reptiles in a lot of ways, especially when it comes to hot-bloodedness. True reptiles are cold-blooded, requiring external sources of heat to move around, catch prey, mate, and so on, whereas dinosaurs, including birds, and mammals don't.
reptiles aren’t distinguished by exclusively being cold blooded. *most* are, but not all. even still there are mammals that do things that are considered ‘non mammalian’ such as laying eggs. sooo its not hard to believe that egg-laying scaly vertebrates (some of which are warm blooded) would still be classified as a reptile. any basic scholarly resource would classify them as such.
While Coelophysis got redeemed by further research, it should be noted that cannibalism among reptiles isn't unusual. It's pretty common with a lot of animals, in fact. Humans are in the minority as species that are averse to it (and I'm not interested in joining that majority)
I started watching this with interest, but after a few names being butchered, I had to give up - I was waiting for the next one. Crustachious - for cretaceous, and herberious for herbivorous. Too funny!
@@timsaho1462 Its great to share the same interests and hobby. I hope to take my vacation on Svalbard next summer and looking for fossils. Mabe from a " Pliosaur". The T-Rex of the deep.... who knows whats lurking in the ground !
What is missing is WHY was there such a variety of any animal? What is the driving force for changes in totally different animals. Why are there no large reptiles anymore?
18:00 Dilophosaurus had Head-Crests, NOT Neck-Frills. It was a dinosaur, not a bearded dragon... there is no fossil evidence of neck frills on a dinosaur. that was purely an invention of the Jurassic Park movie. 21:00 Coelophysis = "See-lee-oh-fi-sis" NOT "See-lee-ee-oh-fi-sis" some very simple mistakes here
Back in the 50s my dad was plowing a field in Oklahoma and pulled a dinosaur bone. He used for a door stop by the front door. One day he came home asking my mom where the giant bone was. She told someone from a university came by and took it. They never got it back even after trying.
the jurassic era is not called the age of reptiles, its the mesozoic era. and unlike in your opening scene and other scenes there are no t rex in the jurassic era. also no deinocheirus or oviraptor - they're all from the cretaceous era
Ok video was ok lots of outdated and outright incorrect info though. First dinosaurs were not, actually are not reptiles. Also Dilophosaurus was an apex predator that ate large prey. The jaws and teeth were re-examined a few years ago and it was discovered that what was originally thought to be lightly built bone structure in the head was simple degraded structure that was originally heavily reinforced. It had powerful jaws with heavily reinforced bone and robust teeth all for biting big animals really hard. Which is why they found a bunch of the teeth at the site of a large herbivore. It lost the teeth killing it. Also loosing teeth didn't necessarily indicate some great struggle to kill the prey. Like sharks therapods continuously lost and replaced teeth. Loosing teeth during a hunt was a common accurance.
Although I’ve heard that the Jurassic period was named after the Jura mountains, I have never, at anytime, ever heard someone refer to the period simply as “Jura”. And that term is used about 4000 times in this video.
There's many fossils but the eons of time can overlap and bones end up in the same area often, from floods, most ideas of how they lived are estimates, new fossils will help piece together more but the distant past is elusive, especially for our own species, human remains are rare and always fragmented, the earth is a great recycler, every living being will meet it's end, including us, the distant future, who knows how we will evolve.
The video gets the whole section on coelo physis wrong: It says celiophysis, which is a nonsense word. The name is coelophysis, pronounced "SEE-loe-fie-sis". And lyco-rhinus means wolf-nose, not wolf-face.
Is this a documentary? I know that you can't film dinosaurs in their natural habitat, and everything you show is, by necessity, fiction, in as far as imagining how it was is as good as we can do - but does that scene at 1:59 and 9:11 have any part in this? It is a clip from a science fiction movie, a magical depiction of another planet, based only on pure imagination, and has nothing to do with anything on earth or from the fossil record.
To be very, very picky with an otherwise very good video ... The wording regarding the 'formation of the continents': They are still 'forming' .. It kinda hinted at the, now outdated, idea that 'things are evolving to be as they are now' .. I think we now admit that 'things are always evolving.'
I'm not a child but I still love 🦖 dino documentaries! 🤷✝️📖 Don't believe in evolution since that's just a theory! I'm a creationist! It makes more sense.
Sorry not to majorly critique but starting around 9:35 Brachyopoids (long a, poid at end) not Brachiopods. Brachyopoids were a group of late Temnospondyls (modern amphibian relatives). Brachiopods are a group of invertebrates not particularly related to mollusks but with bivalved shells (these are what you showed).
I don’t know why this hour old video was recommended to me but I’m glad it was.
Welcome!
Same!
Fax😭
Ty for this video love anything in the prehistórico earth
Who recommended it to you.?
The CGI in this is amazing! The artists behind them deserve a huge round of applause... 🦖🐉🐊🐍🦎
You do realize some of these are from a video game right
@@codyknight6897 he already said CGI computer generated , think he does know lol
@@codyknight6897 Yup. Jurassic World Evolution even.
@@codyknight6897 and we can't praise them for their efforts?
@@codyknight6897 THEY SAID ARTIST , LEARN TO COMPREHEND WHAT PEOPLE ARE TRYING TO SAY.
This video goes far more deeply into and presents a vast array of creatures from a relatively short period of prehistoric time. Most other videos are subjects of relatively known reptiles but this vid introduces many examples of prehistoric life of which I was unfamiliar plus their evolutionary histories. The longer I watched this video the more it became like a book I couldn’t put down!
So than let's read..
Fake-a-saurses
Need more of these
Enjoyed the use of Frightening and monstrous! Also the narrators use of the English vocabulary is refreshing and fantastic. Excellent Narration; very informative piece.
Dinosaurs' ancestors weren't archosaurs in the sense the two groups are separate. Dinosaurs WERE a type of archosaur.
True. Birds today are archosaurs as well
@@BarnsOfChrisI always picture a t Rex being a massive rooster that wakes up in the dawn and starts screaming up at the sky
Terrifying.
"The crustaceous period"
That is too funny.
The time of the crab will come
Another great documentary with not cutting to the parts of paleontologists or scientists explaining things.
I agree. Too many documentaries try to make the researchers and scientists look like “rock stars”. Every scientist has their own viewpoint and focus, and may not be entirely true (or even wrong!) I like the facts, without personality mixed in.
@@bigedslobotomy ironically enough this channel has mistakes in most of their videos, so a paleontologist checking the facts wouldn’t hurt in this case
What a trip. History of the world till now makes the head spin!
I love these types of videos. Keep up the great work.
I’m so happy that this video gives an all-round tour of many types of life, such as plants, insects and other overlooked niches! That’s very rare, so thank you for that!
It's so sad that you believe any of this ever happened
@@davidsheckler4450 don't tell me you believe that none of it happened? The fossils that are found all around the world are what, figments of our imagination? Although many things are, possibly, conjecture, based on hints found in the fossil record, we can't just say that these creatures didn't exist. What are you going to say next? That the earth is flat, and all the other celestial bodies revolve around us? xD
@@maddevil3165 No belief involved. There isn't any verifiable REAL evidence. Only "fossils" anyone can learn to make online. Go research it. No one was there so how can YOU sanely believe in any of this 🤷 how about Santa 🤷 The Tooth Fairy 🤷 Easter Bunny 🤷 still "believe" in that unproven nonsense 🤷
Great work by cameraman who shoot all this alongside Dinosaur..
But I like watching such videos and thanks TH-cam for recommendation.
Well done! All of these videos mix well together and the narration is excellent. YOu've got a new subscriber 🙂
I love your channel and I'm so grateful that:
1) I came across it
2) it's regularly updated and kept current with new, high quality content
For anyone familiar with the "horse girl anesthetic" meme,
I was a dinosaur girl throughout the entirety of my childhood and have carried that fascination ever since. Lately I've
myself indulging that sense curiosity to an especially frequent degree.
I've found myself utterly obsessed by topics relating to the history of life on Earth
a real scarcity of high quality, long-form content on
@@susanmccormick6022 I like dinosaurs and somehow feel childish talking about my grown man excitement over them and other ancient life with people who don't know what I'm so excited about. 😆 oh well. History of life on earth is fascinating.
@@SoulDelSol I can relate to that.I once thought of doing paleontology as a career,but 'older & wiser' relations discouraged it as "Dinosaurs were only for children!"Same as a house I liked with a spiral staircase into the living room(like the Monkees!)but was talked out of it as I hate the cold & was warned it would be a draughty place to live due to that staircase.And lastly,re: wedding "You can't back out now!"I could,I really could!And saved a lot of hurt.Moral I learned too late was Decide For Yourself & don't let anybody put you off,no matter how well meaning they are.Its funny how many people visit sites of archaeology & ask if we've found any dinosaurs yet.'The Boss' always takes a deep breath & says "That's paleontology,this is archaeology!"I live in hopes of reincarnation & listening to nobody but myself about important decisions.Where r u based & what's your fav Dino?They're not Dino's,but I love plesiosaurs.Probably because I am a water child missing the ocean.Peace.
@@susanmccormick6022 I wanted to be a paleontologist when I was younger too. Spiral staircases are really cool! As for marriage you're right it wasn't too late, it's never too late to make a change. And no one knows you better than you. Well intentioned people just don't know what's best. I always try to foster automony in others and not to make major decisions on impulse, emotion, or without weighing pros and cons. Do you work in archeology now? If so what type of a site are you working on? Is it too late to do an internship in paleontology if that's what you still want to do? I have a green and black fabric hanging from a piece of wood on a door in my house that says "become loyal to your inner most truth, follow the way when all other abandon it, walk the path of your own heart". I like plesiosaurs too!! I also like ankylosaurs, they're cool. I like learning about other lines of animals from before and after the dinosaur eras too. I'm in Massachusetts, what about you?
Astrid vvv:I cannot remem how to change this name I hate to a better handle.Maddening!I was & am horse,dog,cat,anything gal Inc Dino's.They fascinate me.Have u a fav?
@@SoulDelSol Off & on, officially retired though it doesn't feel like it.A couple of years ago we were working on an Abbey site.The bulldozers were coming in that aftnoon.Just b4 they started,we found a medieval floor inches below the surface.It was pristine.If those diggers had been earlier-gulp!The farther back in time we go,the more fascinating it becomes for me.And I Def draw the line after around 1920s.
I’m only 10min+ in, and aside from the irritating “Jura”, which probably no one has ever called it, at least in recent times, and I’m betting there’s a good chance it was made up here, this video is all over the place! I keep having to replay parts cause I’m sure I’m mishearing, but I’m not! So much stuff contradicts itself on here, usually in the following sentences, and some stuff is just absolute nonsense factually, and also just as far as making sense verbally! I’m gonna watch it thruough out of curiosity, but I’m sure I’ll hafta actually update this comment to add to my astonishment of the videos “quality content”.
Jura is correct to French and German speakers
Yeah I think it's sloppy and outdated.
What a long winded Sheeple with zero factual physical evidence
I know right? It's very annoying...
I think Jura is more correct and is probably what it is called in many more languages and probably correct for English as well.
The study of history makes me realize how young the Human Race is. It’s amazing
"Archosaurs" refers to the entire grouping of crocodilians, non-avian dinosaurs, theropod dinosaurs (including birds). Saying that any of these groups descended from archosaurs is saying that these groups descended from themselves, which is impossible. "Archosaur" is a collective noun including all those groups.
A lot of these dinosaurs featured weren’t even from the Jurassic Period such as Tyrannosaurus, Mononykus, and Hatzegopteryx.
Loving this channel. Thanks.
glad you're here! Thank you!
Very interesting and informative video. 👍
Thanks!
this is one of those gems that you wish it was longer..well done
“The crustaceous period.“ 😅 I think they meant the Cretaceous, but that is hilarious! 4:18 it’s a really good idea to thoroughly proofread before you have your AI render text to speech
they always show dinosaurs running through grasses, but there were no grasses back then. just lots of ferns and related species.
Great video, very insightful 👍👍
"Herberius"
Was that what he said?
Tell you all, I've seen scores of videos and TV shows on the Jurassic, and read several books on the same, but this is the first time I've ever heard the Jurassic referred to as " the Jura".
I'ts Jura in Swedish.
@@HawkJedilord
Oh. Was the video Swedish? Really don't know.
@@daverobson3084 No. The video was English. I meant that here in Sweden our word for Jurassic is Jura. Cheers m8.
@@HawkJedilord
Something like 80% of Swedes speak English, so, a video could be Swedish( made in Sweden) but be in English.
@@daverobson3084 Yeah. That's true. Good point.
Es ist immer wieder faszinierend in die Jurassicwelt einzutauchen . Danke fürs Video . 💖😍🐊🦕🦖
I really hate it when a video is posted about dinosaurs with a picture of an animals that isn't a dinosaur is featured on the cover of youtube.
Great video! This is entertaining.
However, we can’t actually confirm the true details of these creatures behavioral tendencies during this time period. We can give it mankind’s best guess though!
Wonderful & very informative video & the narrator's voice is just very soothing.
This is not sensational tripe, like other channels. I like this.
Great Work. I think its clever of Noah to fit all these on the Ark as well.
😂 lmao ok Kent Hovind. You're joking, right? Unfortunately in these times poes law rules.
@@gypsylee333 I wondered if I had to put (Sarcasm) at the end of my post.
@@australiagreg3179 lol you never know these days but glad you're not an idiot 😂
How do you know the mind of God?
@@andrewdock7288 Its really easy when there isnt one.
Lots of interesting information here. Nice video, thanks!
I do truly appreciate and enjoy all this information make me look life in a totally different perspective ,my daughter said to me " I believe in God but we're here by evolution
One of the best videos on this that I have seen. If no the best. Excellent job.
Wow! And it got way more dino CGI than all the jurassic movies combined. Awesome work.. Great video
It's all stolen footage, narrated by an AI voice
Thank you. The video is really useful and beautiful.
Referring to dinosaurs as "reptiles" is like calling mammals "reptiles." Both groups descended from reptiles, but are (remember: living birds are dinosaurs, too) themselves different from reptiles in a lot of ways, especially when it comes to hot-bloodedness. True reptiles are cold-blooded, requiring external sources of heat to move around, catch prey, mate, and so on, whereas dinosaurs, including birds, and mammals don't.
No, dinosaurs are reptiles
reptiles aren’t distinguished by exclusively being cold blooded. *most* are, but not all. even still there are mammals that do things that are considered ‘non mammalian’ such as laying eggs. sooo its not hard to believe that egg-laying scaly vertebrates (some of which are warm blooded) would still be classified as a reptile. any basic scholarly resource would classify them as such.
Where dinosaurs warm blooded? I know it's theorised that they could have been but I didn't think we knew for sure
@@lilyeves892 they're like birds
@@gypsylee333 Welp that completely answers my question...
This video is so well made It earned the hell out of my subscription
I was trying to figure out what sikades were. Finally realised he's talking about cycads (sy as in science. Cads as in bounders)!
yeah that threw me off too
While Coelophysis got redeemed by further research, it should be noted that cannibalism among reptiles isn't unusual. It's pretty common with a lot of animals, in fact. Humans are in the minority as species that are averse to it (and I'm not interested in joining that majority)
Just about to say, cannibalism is a dire situation for animals to choose.
Oh good ... lol ..:-)
Come on humans are cannibals too. Just do a tiny minuscule bit of research.
@@annoyeduk With a strong instinctual aversion to it. Take your own damn advice. And also maybe try reading the comment you're replying to.
Fair play. Reading comprehension fail. Lol not that deep
Outstanding documentary!!!!!!!
It needet me 5 mins to sleep with this video your voice is so relaxing love you vids
That's one heck of a cold case, you never give up.
Great Animation, and I wondered how deep light went in water. Serendipity
Wow so fast love u 😍
And we love you!
Excellent. Loved it
Great video, but what about the Australian Frill Neck Lizard, it runs around on two legs.
I wonder why the films were given the title of Jurassic, maybe cretaceous was too hard to spell.
It was simply because cretaceous park sounds rubbish for a film title whereas jurassic park has a cool sound to it. You're welcome
I still think the third movie should have been called “Triassic Park”.
I started watching this with interest, but after a few names being butchered, I had to give up - I was waiting for the next one. Crustachious - for cretaceous, and herberious for herbivorous. Too funny!
Phenomenal content. Fascinating!
Amazing information and especially the clips. may I ask you how you get this clips? Do you make this by yourself?😀
The narrator was well chosen. Great voice.
Glad to see info like this here !
Exellent documentarfilm. Best greetings from Norway.
I'm glad you liked it! Norway, hi!
Also watching from norway.
@@timsaho1462 Its great to share the same interests and hobby. I hope to take my vacation on Svalbard next summer and looking for fossils. Mabe from a " Pliosaur". The T-Rex of the deep.... who knows whats lurking in the ground !
@@oleandreasjensen5263 ja det er flott at man kan utforske slikt på norsk territorium.
I just subscribed and then at was great viewing thanks 😊
A fascinating doc, and in metric, yay!
What is missing is WHY was there such a variety of any animal? What is the driving force for changes in totally different animals. Why are there no large reptiles anymore?
People under estimate how long millions of years really is
Probably like millions of years long
One more year than 999,000.
21:08 South Africa, South Africa and Zimbabwe... Did I hear that correctly?
where is all the CGI footage from? or is some of it games? i don't recognize all of it.
Some is from Avatar - see th-cam.com/video/ahT78Rzqv6k/w-d-xo.html
Realistic, imaginative images!
18:00 Dilophosaurus had Head-Crests, NOT Neck-Frills. It was a dinosaur, not a bearded dragon... there is no fossil evidence of neck frills on a dinosaur. that was purely an invention of the Jurassic Park movie.
21:00 Coelophysis = "See-lee-oh-fi-sis" NOT "See-lee-ee-oh-fi-sis" some very simple mistakes here
True. Also, pterosaurs didn't evolve in the jurassic, they came from the triassic period
Actually, depending if you pronounce in classical or medieval Latin, it should be "Koelofisis" or "Chelophysis", not "Se..."
@@BarnsOfChris ...And they were not even dinosaurs.
17:18 The herbivore is attacked from the left, but the wounds inflicted appear on the right😄.
Because It's from a video game
@@codyknight6897 troll
@@bonysminiatures3123 ok?
Great video 👍🏾
Really like this!
Back in the 50s my dad was plowing a field in Oklahoma and pulled a dinosaur bone. He used for a door stop by the front door.
One day he came home asking my mom where the giant bone was.
She told someone from a university came by and took it.
They never got it back even after trying.
Thanks so much 👍👍👍
Between 9:58 and 10:12 the narrator confuses "brachiopods" with "temnospondyls" - nevertheless, thank you for creating & uploading!
Yeah, but how? And even the video was correct... ''tearimg prey apart'' while seeing little brachiopods...
I liked this
the jurassic era is not called the age of reptiles, its the mesozoic era. and unlike in your opening scene and other scenes there are no t rex in the jurassic era. also no deinocheirus or oviraptor - they're all from the cretaceous era
This channel is legit 💯💪🏾
13:16 what the hell is "herberious"???
I love the dormers the design is beautiful
Awsome channel
Ok video was ok lots of outdated and outright incorrect info though. First dinosaurs were not, actually are not reptiles. Also Dilophosaurus was an apex predator that ate large prey. The jaws and teeth were re-examined a few years ago and it was discovered that what was originally thought to be lightly built bone structure in the head was simple degraded structure that was originally heavily reinforced. It had powerful jaws with heavily reinforced bone and robust teeth all for biting big animals really hard. Which is why they found a bunch of the teeth at the site of a large herbivore. It lost the teeth killing it. Also loosing teeth didn't necessarily indicate some great struggle to kill the prey. Like sharks therapods continuously lost and replaced teeth. Loosing teeth during a hunt was a common accurance.
Not once, outside of this doc, has anyone said the "jura".
Yes somebody has. The austrian use it.
The swede, French, German and probably many more
Although I’ve heard that the Jurassic period was named after the Jura mountains, I have never, at anytime, ever heard someone refer to the period simply as “Jura”. And that term is used about 4000 times in this video.
Ahh, I love the famous movie, "The Jurassic Park"
Did ever do any voice work for sdpbs..? (Black hills specifically)your voice seems familiar.
"to 174.1 million years". Could you please tell us the date and time?
Very nice, the red stripes of the dilophosaurus ... Most probably to be better seen by its preys and let them the time to flee away ?
good job
There's many fossils but the eons of time can overlap and bones end up in the same area often, from floods, most ideas of how they lived are estimates, new fossils will help piece together more but the distant past is elusive, especially for our own species, human remains are rare and always fragmented, the earth is a great recycler, every living being will meet it's end, including us, the distant future, who knows how we will evolve.
Fossils...AHAHAHAHA...fake-a-saurses...AHAHAHAHA...oh wait...hold on...AHAHAHAHA AHAHAHAHA AHAHAHAHA AHAHAHAHA AHAHAHAHA AHAHAHAHA AHAHAHAHA AHAHAHAHA AHAHAHAHA AHAHAHAHA AHAHAHAHA AHAHAHAHA
@@davidsheckler8417 you need to lay off the crack pipes they have obviously damaged your brain
@@davidsheckler8417 stop showing how uneducated you are David.
Ótimo documentário, a evolução dos dinossauros foi longa e duradoura.
It was also long and entertaining.
The video gets the whole section on coelo physis wrong:
It says celiophysis, which is a nonsense word.
The name is coelophysis, pronounced "SEE-loe-fie-sis".
And lyco-rhinus means wolf-nose, not wolf-face.
Sounds like this guy created the universe,yo!😎🤘
Video about dinosaurs and the thumbnail has a pterosaur... Pterosaurs are not dinosaurs. 🙄
but they lived in the same time frame as the true dinosaurs
@@bonysminiatures3123 check the title of the video. It doesn't say 'Dinsosaurs and other creatures of the Jurassic Period'.
@@davidbeazley1958 for its says dinosaurs of the beginning of the Jurassic
What was the percentage of oxygen in air at the time of Jurassic period
And to think we are special in a millisecond time frame of human existance,ridiculous.
Is this a documentary? I know that you can't film dinosaurs in their natural habitat, and everything you show is, by necessity, fiction, in as far as imagining how it was is as good as we can do - but does that scene at 1:59 and 9:11 have any part in this? It is a clip from a science fiction movie, a magical depiction of another planet, based only on pure imagination, and has nothing to do with anything on earth or from the fossil record.
To be very, very picky with an otherwise very good video ... The wording regarding the 'formation of the continents': They are still 'forming' .. It kinda hinted at the, now outdated, idea that 'things are evolving to be as they are now' .. I think we now admit that 'things are always evolving.'
I dont think the Vulcanadon @15:09 in the lower left is on two legs for the reasons you mentioned!!!!...omg lol
This is the only U.S. dinosaur channel I have subscibed to. This video is as good as any from the BBC.
This dinosaur channel gets ALOT of stuff wrong. like, alot. In every video.
So, if I click a title that reads " plants of the jurrasic" I'll get to see some dinosaurs?
I'm not a child but I still love 🦖 dino documentaries! 🤷✝️📖 Don't believe in evolution since that's just a theory! I'm a creationist! It makes more sense.
Nope evolution makes more sense
Sorry not to majorly critique but starting around 9:35 Brachyopoids (long a, poid at end) not Brachiopods. Brachyopoids were a group of late Temnospondyls (modern amphibian relatives). Brachiopods are a group of invertebrates not particularly related to mollusks but with bivalved shells (these are what you showed).
4:19 Again with the *crustacious* period. Was the narrator hungry for pizza while recording this? It's the *cretacious* .
“Some reptiles got wings” simples 😮
Thank you 🧚🏿♀️
Nice dinosaur in the thumbnail
I’ve always wondered how do we know what noise they made when there was no recorded evidence
Wonderful !
🤝🤝🤝🤝🤝🤝🤝🤝