The thing I really like about this one is that putting the dinosaurs in familiar surroundings gives you a real feel for how big they are, which is something you don't get from most dinosaur documentaries.
@@Typhon888 it's like how police scales cocaine with coin money. It's not hard to imagine a 2kg square but it might be a bit bigger than what our own imagination would produce. Also not everyone has the same capacity to just imagine a 20foot dinosaur.
@Typhon888 um, different peoples' brains work differently. Not a difficult concept. Plus, speaking for myself, I like imagining what it would look like if a dinosaur walked down the street. Again, different brains.
As a kid I was always fascinated by dinosaurs and I always loved them I would watch documentary's about dinosaurs all day nonstop I'm currently 14 rn and I'm still interested in dinosaurs
21 year old here; I've actually come to work at a natural history museum following my own passion! Never give up on your passions, kiddo - you're going to need to work to make them come true, but it will be worth it!
This is sooooo cute with the narrator AND the respected guest speakers enacting scenarios where dinosaurs are on the loose is modern Britain !! I love it !!
The scenes of the Dino's in the modern world are fun, but the reactions of the people are mild compared to the actual level of sheer panic that would happen. Good Show
@@dakotatheskeleton In comparison to some Movies, yes but you have to know, CGI Animation isnt that easy to make and even if you able to make them look good, this will take a massive amount of Time and would cost a lot, so they just saved a bit of money and is it bad to do, no, like i said its not a Movie it is a Documentary, i like it a lot, ive seen worse, be glad that they still implemented that CGI Animation with reactions from other People, just to say, MAKE IT BETTER @dakotatheskeleton2255.
firstly I've got to say the animation of the dinosaurs are fantastic, far better then some high budget hollywood movies, and the host is beautiful, I fully enjoyed this
Animating then into modern time is such a interesting idea and kinda makes it more real that these guys really existed and how large they would be and act. Makes it more real that they are once real living animals
Yeah it was nice. But think about this as well. If dinos survived they would probably continue to evolve! And people...well...monkey with stick vs giant demon lizard...yep
Brilliant documentary, loved the engaging format and detailed information. Being British, it's great to learn more about our Prehistoric and Geographic history as well. British history is often focused too heavily on our human past.
As informative and interesting this documentaries are, I wish we got more series similar to Walking with Dinosaurs, just animals living their daily life as if it were a NatGeo Wild documentary
It would be so cool if they did a Walking With Dinosaurs 2 showing the 20 years of research that's been done since then...given how popular the original series was and how successful the Atenborough sequels have been I'm really surprised they haven't done it yet.
Loved seeing the fossils encased in the rocks. And the Dinosaurs walking amongst tourists in the museum and outside as well. Great documentary to get us ready for the newest sequel to the Jurassic World series. . .
Kind of childish. Would have been better without the bad acting and just having those dinosaurs in the scenes for scale instead of people running and screaming like idiots.
@@olwynskye417 It's educational so why not make it appeal to younger people since that's the best time to educate people? not "childish" when you consider that fact. Childish would be to expect educational videos to cater to your own personal preference.
What a brilliant documentary. I can only imagine how they pitched it to Ellie! Producer “Hey Ellie, we want you to present a documentary on Dinosaurs that lived in Britain” Ellie “Oh wow, yes please !” Producer “Can you run?” 😂😂😂
It’s amazing to watch these documentaries. I know a thing or two and I was able to guess the families or species the fossils belonged to before she said it
The record for largest dinosaur predator in Europe has actually been broken. A 30 foot spinosaur, Ceratosuchops, was discovered recently on the Isle of Wight.
@@carloduroni5629 CERATOSUCHOPS. It is a real spinosaurid dinosaur not a giant crocodile ancestor. It was also was around 26 feet long according to the fossils we have
@Carlo Duroni Not Ceratosuchus, Ceratosuchops. It's a recently describes Spinosaur found on the Isle of White along with its sister taxon Riparovenator.
I LOVE how you incorporated CGI dinosaurs into the viddy, especially the little touches like the one trying to grab the fish in the display case and having it trip on the power cord of the floor buffer. It not only made the program even more interesting, but delighted my artistic sense of mischief. Thank you!
What is science ? There is loads of things identified as science then few years later another science proves the opposite and claimed the previous theories are bullocks. So what is science but a term used for political gain. Also most of these things are made up theories and someone imaginary drawn how these creatures looked like not necessary the truth and also many of these bones found separated in fragments and they imaginary tries to complete e skeleton again fantasy. The reality saying you have to listen to other opinions to have a mature opinion but it you listen to one person talking about himself of course you’ll be impressed
@@leoscarpe4199 What other word can we use to describe it? If anything politics are scared of science, while it's true that all we have are the bones this is our best guess all we know is that they existed, where they existed and when they existed, I have my own opinions alright.
@@gerrardjones28 what is science you are just repeating what they are showering your mind with. Science today is false info tomorrow Thousands of what is called scientific articles are disapproved by recent what is called scientific articles which make what is calle just a political agenda use the term to pass some ideology exactly like the medieval times the only difference once was the church and now is secularism and human being has no freedom and no free access to info and data. Educate yourself qnd don’t pick anything throwing to you
One newer discovery: _Dearc,_ the largest rhamphorynchid, discovered in Scotland last year! If only it was discovered early enough to be included here!
I love that the Velociraptors - or rather, the ‘Destructors’ - are correctly portrayed as a hopping, chirruping menace rather than the snarling walking crocodilians of _Jurassic Park._
@@neganrex5693 Dinosaurs would have avoided tea plants had they existed in the Mesozoic because caffeine is poisonous. Also, tea plants are Chinese, so a British dinosaur would not be eating them.
@@dweebteambuilderjones7627 What's poisonous is me not getting my caffeine in the morning or I have no getup and go and a nasty head ache. Maybe the British dinos traded with the Chinese dinos. It was one big landmass at the time. LOL. Anyway have you noticed nothing but poison and flu bugs come from China now. That maybe why the dinos are extinct.
I love paleontology , the thought of the earth's age is mind boggling , individual life is so fleeting, it's hard to wrap your head around billions of years.
It's amazing that nature allowed for the process of fossilization. If only it was less absurdly rare than it is. There's so many creatures we will never know anything about.
It's not. But the British thinks they are hoity toity, AND LIKE THEY CAN SAYTHOSE WERE "THE INLY FISH EATERS, ALWAYS HAVING TO ONE UP THE REST OF THE WORLD...GOD I HATE SO MANY COUNTRIES OR more like the people in them.
Their brains were basic and therefore didn't need things like emotions and making daisy chains in the sunset... their purpose was to survive a harsh world. Anything other than being ferocious would put them at a disadvantage. Think of todays tarantulas, unchanged for millions of years, no emotions, no real thought processes... just basic instinct. The reason they didn't evolve a fully functional brain is because it's not needed. Dinosaurs were much the same as tarantulas are now. I highly doubt they'd be sat around a camp fire singing and having a jolly old time when they were too busy surviving.
You know, I kinda feel bad for Megalosaurus. The first dinosaur to ever be identified by science, but it always gets looked over simply because people don’t find it very interesting.
23:50 The tooth that Mantell discovered was given to his son, Walter, who later emigrated to New Zealand. That tooth is now one of the hidden secrets in Te Papa Museum in Wellington. Well, moderately hidden - it is on display in one of the family rooms in the Te Taiao / Nature exhibition.
Actually the velociraptors in Jurassic Park were originally supposed to be deinonychus but Hollywood called them velociraptors because it sounds cooler.
Bc there are more velociraptor spicies the small ones were velociraptor mongoliensis and the biger one was called velociraptor enteropis also known as deinonychus in the movie they didnt mension the whole name
@@geckoraptor9397 I like your comment as well. But also movies should stand on their own so my comment and yours don’t mean anything to defend the movie.
Beautiful documentary brilliantly displayed l really luvd the parts wen the dinosaurs came to lyf, it really helped me understand how they lukd like, wat ey ate and all the other unanswered qsns l had abt dinosaurs
Sir Richard Owens... Thank you Sir 1860s ... How very blessed we are . To continue to grow and learn and expand our story through so many great minds . How far Dinosaurs have come . Because of human passion to discover and share our knowledge. ☺️ Makes me happy.
Sir Richard Owens was a massive dick. Not only did he outright deny modern science in favor of his own ludicrous hypotheses, he used his position to silence the critics of his works and to attack his contemporaries.
It's very fascinating to learn about these prehistoric predators of Dinosaur . Very interesting to learn more about them. I did learn about them Way Back in the seventy in America . still Very interesting to learn more about them . Thanks for sharing with me.
I have the honor of being one of Dr Martill's undergrad students back in the day (2013-15) for his Vertebrate paleontology course at Portsmouth University. Such an awesome teacher of this field of study. Btw the final dino in this vid is now called DRACORAPTOR.
The running scenes from the raptor remind me of Rose with Nine or Ten in Doctor Who! 😊 @32:40 Actually, the raptor had only to bite down on the doorhandle, push it down and pull it back. I think they could have figured it out pretty quickly, if they could get their mouth around it. I was actually waiting for that to happen while the guy was explaining that they couldn't get in, just like the Dalek suddenly levitating up the stairs when everyone thought it couldn't and they were safe. 😊 PS: @35:00 Darn! I was really hoping to see that the actor and singer David Soul had become a paleontologist! 😊
Er, I hate to bring this to you but Baryonyx was not the first fish eating dinosaur we found. In the very least, Spinosaurus predates Baryonyx by a good 70 years or so. True, they didn't know at the time it was a fish eater, but they knew it was different.
It was the first dinosaur we had actualy evidence for. Spinosaurus was blown up not too long after it's discovery and description, so at the time we had no idea that it was a fish eater. That is why Baryonyx is always called the first fish eating dinosaur.
I really enjoyed watching this. I've been to Charmouth beach and found ammonites and bellomnites (spelt wrong I know). Was so happy I found something, and even gave some of my best finds to a young lad with downs syndrome who was watching me. His face lit up when I asked if he wanted to have a go at finding some.
🙌🏽 you may have aided in that beautiful young man’s love of wildlife and nature! Being a parent of a teenage child with autism kindness to these beautiful children goes such a long way and they remember that act for longer than you could ever imagine! ❤️
I know it’s a documentary not a sci-if show but I can’t help but feel like this is how the world of Primeval would be if more people knew about the Anomalies. Documentary makers just waiting to capture whatever prehistoric creatures come through then film what their behaviour was like in the modern world.
After my 2 massive chickens attacked me, I saw them as nothing more than carnivorous Velociraptors, disguised with feathers. At one point I had 33 dead, headless doves in my freezer that my chooks had killed in just over a week. I was waiting for him day to throw them out while avoiding the stench of the carnage. At just over 2 feet tall mine were a massive breed used as professional layers, but I did not ever expect them to fly like they could, nor knock me off my feet then try going for my eyes. Largest One flew up at my face from ground level to knock me over too. 1 phone call and they went to a farm. Had those from day old chicks too, the savages they turned out to be. Bloody good layers though sometimes giving up to 5 eggs a day. That's not a joke either.
@@outinthesticks1035 mine were Hyline Browns. Professional layers, that grew much larger than I've seen any chickens. A woman I caught up with 2 weeks ago, has a small Hyline Brown and it's not even 6 months old, but is already much larger than all her other chickens.
@@marykatherinegoode2773 When I used to go to the London Natural History Museum in the 1970s, they did have a T Rex skeleton mounted on the wall. But for some reason they took it down in the early 80s.
@@davidmccann9811 I hope I don't scare you off with what I am about to say, but I have had time to dwell on what you replied. Forgive me if I am a motormouth. That is truly awful-they killed off Norbert!! Somebody has to shake the nerds that work there silly and remind them that children need wonder like they need air. And as terrible as it sounds, they need to get asses through the door before they can educate anyone and do serious research: one funds the other. And children need to go, "Wow!" before they can ever become the next generation of scientists. I have been to many museums over the course of my life and I admit I have been spoiled by the one NYC has. Right after Europe started realizing the bones did not come from dragons, people started digging in the West and the American Museum of Natural History funded the early digs. ( They funded Barnum Brown: he discovered T Rex and his specimens are still there, some not even on display.) The lobby has an Allosaurus in it posed as if doing battle with a Diplodocus. (The T Rex in the lobby from "Night At the Museum" actually was once in the lobby of the Field Museum in Chicago: Sue. Most complete Rex ever found and now with her own exhibit. Nobody is totally sure if Sue is actually female, but hey, if not, Johnny Cash would have gotten a chuckle out of it.) In my eyes, a lot of the oldest stuff from the 19th century should be put in storage to make way for new things; A lot of what I have seen in the UK and France looks too much like a set from Harry Potter or an old fashioned cabinet of curiosities. (To be fair, the rest of the Field Museum ain't no box of chocolates either since it has not been updated since the 90s; Los Angeles has a dearth in museums that could be called world class.) There should be a Rex there. Or if not him, Baryonyx. Iguanodon, Parasaurolophus, Plesiosaurus, even the real Velociraptor which was ridiculously little. (In my head I see a flock of them posed as if trying to run away from a sauropod who is seconds away from squishing them to bits.) I wonder what it would take for London to upgrade its exhibit and start showing up at auctions to buy Rex fossils. A part of me even wonders if it would be worth it to move to the South Bank of the Thames.
The thing I really like about this one is that putting the dinosaurs in familiar surroundings gives you a real feel for how big they are, which is something you don't get from most dinosaur documentaries.
Yes it does help give us a scale, doesn't it.
How can you not be able to scale it yourself? Not hard to imagine a 20 foot Dino.
@@Typhon888 it's like how police scales cocaine with coin money. It's not hard to imagine a 2kg square but it might be a bit bigger than what our own imagination would produce. Also not everyone has the same capacity to just imagine a 20foot dinosaur.
@@Typhon888 M
@Typhon888 um, different peoples' brains work differently. Not a difficult concept.
Plus, speaking for myself, I like imagining what it would look like if a dinosaur walked down the street. Again, different brains.
I love how they made this documentary. They added the people in this time so they made it more realistic. I love it.
As a kid I was always fascinated by dinosaurs and I always loved them I would watch documentary's about dinosaurs all day nonstop I'm currently 14 rn and I'm still interested in dinosaurs
Me too
Yesh this is how many Dino's I know polacanthus nothronychus omeisaurus shunosaurus brachiosaurus alamosaurus therizinosaurus utahraptor spinosaurus dilophosaurus coelyphisis nigerasaurus iguanodon suchomimus shamosaurus austroraptor concavenator hylaeosaurus gobisaurus giganotosaurus carchodontosaurus acrothanthosaurus amargasaurus dicraeosaurus Torosaurus giganotoraptor nedoceratops sauropisiden boreapelta Gastonia minmi corythosaurus lambeosaurus parasolalophus pentaceratops Ankylosaurus triceratops Dakotaraptor oviraptor argentinosaurus titanoceratops Medusaceratops styracosaurus edmontania saichania talalurus
Nasutoceratops T-Rex meminchisaurus jobaria daspletosaurus oxalaiai
Hauyangosaurus kentrosaurus mirigaia velociraptor microraptor stygimoloch pachycephalosaurus Stegosaurus bambiraptor
Lectoceratops muttaburrasaurus olorotitan einosaurus rubeosaurus
Fukuraptor sinraptor crylophosaurus sauropelta panaplosaurus
Ceratosaurus proceratosaurus albertosaurus Megalosaurus
Tarbosaurus carnotaurus pagatotitan titanosaurus zuniceratops
Achillobater tuojiangosaurus diceratops albertoceratops
Magyrosaurus ornithomimius galimimus
Riojasaurus abelisaurus cedarpelta
Mate I am 28. It never stops. And it's awesome.
Exactly the same here
21 year old here; I've actually come to work at a natural history museum following my own passion! Never give up on your passions, kiddo - you're going to need to work to make them come true, but it will be worth it!
This is sooooo cute with the narrator AND the respected guest speakers enacting scenarios where dinosaurs are on the loose is modern Britain !! I love it !!
"in a time when Britain was ruled by dinosaurs".
Some would argue that it still is, ..and that it is not alone in that regard.
And ill vouch for that.
R u talking about the Lochness Monster / Dragon ? True / Correct.
@@arjunganguly5521 No, they’re pretty clearly speaking of dinosaurs.
@@ramonalocksmith435 so what! this creature belongs to the dinosaur era. I certainly know what i m speaking about.
the queen of england
The scenes of the Dino's in the modern world are fun, but the reactions of the people are mild compared to the actual level of sheer panic that would happen. Good Show
And the cgi is bad
Hi ben
It's very unrealistic that there are some people on here who are not looking at their phones.
@@dakotatheskeleton In comparison to some Movies, yes but you have to know, CGI Animation isnt that easy to make and even if you able to make them look good, this will take a massive amount of Time and would cost a lot, so they just saved a bit of money and is it bad to do, no, like i said its not a Movie it is a Documentary, i like it a lot, ive seen worse, be glad that they still implemented that CGI Animation with reactions from other People, just to say, MAKE IT BETTER
@dakotatheskeleton2255.
It came off as totally cheesy, but it’s also a fun watch 😅
But Yeah: There could be a few casualties to amp up the entertainment 😂
firstly I've got to say the animation of the dinosaurs are fantastic, far better then some high budget hollywood movies, and the host is beautiful, I fully enjoyed this
That CGI is something else. Great acting by the host as well. Totally believable
"Britain used to be home to terrifying predators!" Is she talking about Jimmy Saville and Rolf Harris?
Animating then into modern time is such a interesting idea and kinda makes it more real that these guys really existed and how large they would be and act. Makes it more real that they are once real living animals
Amazing footage here, without these brave camera people back then we'd never know what dinosaurs looked like.
lol
I love the scene with the raptors at the picnic tables. It's exactly how I always pictured they'd be if they were still around.
Preet good documentary. I wish there were more dino documentaries - it seems they don't make many new ones.
@@knoxvillehermitfreemoviesm3625 Yeah. There ARE some pretty interesting amateur ones on here though.
Yeah it was nice. But think about this as well. If dinos survived they would probably continue to evolve! And people...well...monkey with stick vs giant demon lizard...yep
They would have had an extra 65 million years of technological development, so the picnic tables probably would have been made of carbon fibre...
Hopefully they would have developed some table manners too. SPLEESH! How rude...
The House of Lords is full of dinosaurs and living fossils.
in US the House of Representatives is.
Yup , and they are drunk most of the time .
@@cherrymetha3185 #Me too!
@@davidwebb1546 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Yes, but only the predatory species .
I think these guys had way to much fun filming this, entertaining none the less
Filming…dinosaurs 😕
Thankyou! Prehistoric life form an exciteing thrill for all adults& children to enjoy.
Brilliant documentary, loved the engaging format and detailed information. Being British, it's great to learn more about our Prehistoric and Geographic history as well. British history is often focused too heavily on our human past.
I feel like that is the case with most places unfortunately
@@hopper1189 ccscsvev
Because we have a lot of information about that, damn illiterate dinos
Those eyes! 😍.
I have never seen such beautiful color in a person's eyes before.
They could be contact lenses.
one of a kind documentary ... never seen something funny and informative like this .... congrats!
As informative and interesting this documentaries are, I wish we got more series similar to Walking with Dinosaurs, just animals living their daily life as if it were a NatGeo Wild documentary
I agree 👍
It would be so cool if they did a Walking With Dinosaurs 2 showing the 20 years of research that's been done since then...given how popular the original series was and how successful the Atenborough sequels have been I'm really surprised they haven't done it yet.
I wish they made something similar to Nigel Marvin, where they go back in time and have one of those on site documentaries
When I was a kid I watched walking with dinosaurs over and over again. It was great!
@@dankmouse632 Nigel Marvin was my idol lol. Met him as a kid and got my prehistoric park DVD signed
Loved seeing the fossils encased in the rocks. And the Dinosaurs walking amongst tourists in the museum and outside as well. Great documentary to get us ready for the newest sequel to the Jurassic World series. . .
This is Real Wild ! Very Splendid and Realistic Depiction ! Interesting to watch and hear. Great Presentation.
v
Kind of childish. Would have been better without the bad acting and just having those dinosaurs in the scenes for scale instead of people running and screaming like idiots.
@@olwynskye417 It's educational so why not make it appeal to younger people since that's the best time to educate people? not "childish" when you consider that fact. Childish would be to expect educational videos to cater to your own personal preference.
What a brilliant documentary.
I can only imagine how they pitched it to Ellie!
Producer “Hey Ellie, we want you to present a documentary on Dinosaurs that lived in Britain”
Ellie “Oh wow, yes please !”
Producer “Can you run?”
😂😂😂
You're not going to make any mention how hot the host is?
Hhiivv
What a great comment!!!🤣🤣🤣
Hmm.. I'd go with Ellie but I'd be thinking of Abby (primeval)...
😂😂😂
Saw this when it first aired. Never gets old years later. 👍👍👏
How long ago was this?
@@rosemaryfarell5264 Maybe 5 or 8 years ago
100 million of years ago dinosaurs
It’s amazing to watch these documentaries. I know a thing or two and I was able to guess the families or species the fossils belonged to before she said it
@@georgebushdoesntcareaboutb3890 ..yes
@@kamodo3055 so could i after watching it twice
The guy locking his bike got me in bits hahah, ahh I feel like a big kid :)
If he locked his bike it couldn't have fallen over.
I learned so much from this, despite already being a dino nerd: Thank you!
The record for largest dinosaur predator in Europe has actually been broken. A 30 foot spinosaur, Ceratosuchops, was discovered recently on the Isle of Wight.
Only, a Ceratosuchus is NOT a dinosaur. It's a distant ancestor of modern crocodiles.
Same for pterosaurs (not dinosaurs).
@@carloduroni5629 CERATOSUCHOPS. It is a real spinosaurid dinosaur not a giant crocodile ancestor. It was also was around 26 feet long according to the fossils we have
@Carlo Duroni Not Ceratosuchus, Ceratosuchops. It's a recently describes Spinosaur found on the Isle of White along with its sister taxon Riparovenator.
props to the scientist and people agreeing to do the sketch
I LOVE how you incorporated CGI dinosaurs into the viddy, especially the little touches like the one trying to grab the fish in the display case and having it trip on the power cord of the floor buffer. It not only made the program even more interesting, but delighted my artistic sense of mischief. Thank you!
I'm interested to know what the new species was called, I'm falling in love with dino documentaries now, well done, guys
Dracoraptor hanigani
Makes me more proud of my country to know what we've contributed to science, interesting video as always
What is science ? There is loads of things identified as science then few years later another science proves the opposite and claimed the previous theories are bullocks. So what is science but a term used for political gain. Also most of these things are made up theories and someone imaginary drawn how these creatures looked like not necessary the truth and also many of these bones found separated in fragments and they imaginary tries to complete e skeleton again fantasy.
The reality saying you have to listen to other opinions to have a mature opinion but it you listen to one person talking about himself of course you’ll be impressed
@@leoscarpe4199 What other word can we use to describe it? If anything politics are scared of science, while it's true that all we have are the bones this is our best guess all we know is that they existed, where they existed and when they existed, I have my own opinions alright.
@@gerrardjones28 what is science you are just repeating what they are showering your mind with. Science today is false info tomorrow
Thousands of what is called scientific articles are disapproved by recent what is called scientific articles which make what is calle just a political agenda use the term to pass some ideology exactly like the medieval times the only difference once was the church and now is secularism and human being has no freedom and no free access to info and data. Educate yourself qnd don’t pick anything throwing to you
What weve Contributed to pretty much everything!!!!
@@rosemaryfarell5264 true
One newer discovery: _Dearc,_ the largest rhamphorynchid, discovered in Scotland last year! If only it was discovered early enough to be included here!
what a cool show and what a cool host
This program is the one that introduced me to the Baryonyx. I have come to really love it as a dinosaur, and think it looks just pure badass.
Look up the Spinosaurus
I love that the Velociraptors - or rather, the ‘Destructors’ - are correctly portrayed as a hopping, chirruping menace rather than the snarling walking crocodilians of _Jurassic Park._
They still seem a bit too skinny with some rather weird feathers.😅
I'd bet that Ellies original hair color was absolutely brilliant!
This was shown. Few times before! Love it every time I see it!!!❣️☮️thank you !!!💕☮️‼️🤗
Smashing show love, this one is the tops.
The video is soo good and the realistic part is awesome really good keep it uo folks
Excellent Documentary 🦕🦖
7:01 - Baryonyx tripping on wire
17:05 - Megalosaurus chase
17:31 - Megalosaurus in selfie
18:50 - Megalosaurus scavenging a municipal bin
25:29 - Iguanodon juxtaposed among inaccurate Iguanodon sculptures
32:00 - raptor-type dinosaur's tail caught in closing doors
33:36 - raptor-type dinosaurs feeding on human food.
57:06 - Echinodon in mirror
59:08 - shadow making Proceratosaurus look bigger than it really is
1:02:59 - Proceratosaurus facing off against animatronic T.Rex
1:10:48 - epic dinosaur animation
1:16:58 - Dacentrurus eating potted tree
1:28:21 - dinosaur photobombing CCTV
All that and not one crocked tooth Dino haven a spot of tea. Some Brits they was. LOL.
@@neganrex5693 Dinosaurs would have avoided tea plants had they existed in the Mesozoic because caffeine is poisonous. Also, tea plants are Chinese, so a British dinosaur would not be eating them.
@@dweebteambuilderjones7627 What's poisonous is me not getting my caffeine in the morning or I have no getup and go and a nasty head ache. Maybe the British dinos traded with the Chinese dinos. It was one big landmass at the time. LOL. Anyway have you noticed nothing but poison and flu bugs come from China now. That maybe why the dinos are extinct.
negative rex Soooo funny!!! Great comment!!!🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😉❤❤❤
I keep on watching this and never get bored
I love paleontology , the thought of the earth's age is mind boggling , individual life is so fleeting, it's hard to wrap your head around billions of years.
Some would say our earth is only 6000 years old :)
only 6000?
@@waldofabian1202 something like that yeah .
The dinosaurs died out during the great flood....MILLIONS of years , is BS.
The earth is not billions or even millions of years old, only thousands.
I hands-on is so tiny, he's so cute. The size of a small parrot w/ a long tail. !!😍😍😍 He's so cute !!!!
Our hostess is beautiful. Wow! She seems truly enthusiastic about dinosaurs as well.
Thank you for posting this
I have never seen an adult with such blue eyes, absolutely stunning!
$$cc
It might be blue contact lenses 😂
@@skeeterinnewjersey5256it probably is ... unfortunately.
Do not watch TV anymore .BBC etc .but that was first class ..really enjoyed that.
It's amazing that nature allowed for the process of fossilization. If only it was less absurdly rare than it is. There's so many creatures we will never know anything about.
Like Godzilla. 😂👌
amazing documentary using a parallel perspective to demonstrate the knowledge behind that prehistoric titan.
I don’t know, finding dinosaurs in London is the equivalent of finding fossils in the Badlands for me
Have you been to the Badlands? My dream trip...other's may want to go to Paris FR. Not me. Dig dig dig!
It's not. But the British thinks they are hoity toity, AND LIKE THEY CAN SAYTHOSE WERE "THE INLY FISH EATERS, ALWAYS HAVING TO ONE UP THE REST OF THE WORLD...GOD I HATE SO MANY COUNTRIES OR more like the people in them.
This doco was really good and all but I am sure that dinosaurs had some different aspects to them other than the ferocious image we have of them.
Yeah
Their brains were basic and therefore didn't need things like emotions and making daisy chains in the sunset... their purpose was to survive a harsh world. Anything other than being ferocious would put them at a disadvantage. Think of todays tarantulas, unchanged for millions of years, no emotions, no real thought processes... just basic instinct. The reason they didn't evolve a fully functional brain is because it's not needed. Dinosaurs were much the same as tarantulas are now. I highly doubt they'd be sat around a camp fire singing and having a jolly old time when they were too busy surviving.
@@mickyblue9658 dinosaurs are nothing like tarantulas??? Tf you on about?
@@scrymnstrs1380 Before trying to sound smart you might want to go do some research and then come back.
@@scrymnstrs1380 it’s called an analogy bub you’d have learned about them in school with a basic 7th grade education
You know, I kinda feel bad for Megalosaurus. The first dinosaur to ever be identified by science, but it always gets looked over simply because people don’t find it very interesting.
I like it's squared shape
Nice docu, but those blue eyes , wow!
23:50 The tooth that Mantell discovered was given to his son, Walter, who later emigrated to New Zealand. That tooth is now one of the hidden secrets in Te Papa Museum in Wellington. Well, moderately hidden - it is on display in one of the family rooms in the Te Taiao / Nature exhibition.
Interdasting
I like how this shows dinosaurs in real time
I LOVE THIS DOCU!!!! It’s SO cool! I’ve seen it a lot and never tire of it! Or part 2 either!!! Thanks for the treat!!!♥️‼️☮️
Actually the velociraptors in Jurassic Park were originally supposed to be deinonychus but Hollywood called them velociraptors because it sounds cooler.
Actually, Micheal Criton, the author of the book the film was based on, named it Velociraptor. Spielberg just went with it
Bc there are more velociraptor spicies the small ones were velociraptor mongoliensis and the biger one was called velociraptor enteropis also known as deinonychus in the movie they didnt mension the whole name
@@ozzywalker609 thank you.
@@geckoraptor9397 I like your comment as well. But also movies should stand on their own so my comment and yours don’t mean anything to defend the movie.
Steven made them them look like deinonychus, the size of a Utahraptor and called them velociraptors
Can you imagine you went there with family for a tour and never comes in your mind that this will be your topic for documentary
Beautiful documentary brilliantly displayed l really luvd the parts wen the dinosaurs came to lyf, it really helped me understand how they lukd like, wat ey ate and all the other unanswered qsns l had abt dinosaurs
👍 Loved how they have the dinosaurs interact with modern-day people!
In a way I've never seen done before! 👍
we need some more docuseries like these
I wish this show made more episodes.
Sir Richard Owens... Thank you Sir 1860s ... How very blessed we are . To continue to grow and learn and expand our story through so many great minds . How far Dinosaurs have come . Because of human passion to discover and share our knowledge. ☺️ Makes me happy.
Sir Richard Owens was a massive dick.
Not only did he outright deny modern science in favor of his own ludicrous hypotheses, he used his position to silence the critics of his works and to attack his contemporaries.
This is definitely Britain's version of Jurassic World: Dominion. where we see Dinosaurs in the real world.
Dinosaurs are Spectacular! 🦕🦖
It's very fascinating to learn about these prehistoric predators of
Dinosaur . Very interesting to learn more about them.
I did learn about them Way
Back in the seventy in America . still
Very interesting to learn more about them .
Thanks for sharing with me.
Million of years ago dinosaurs
I have the honor of being one of Dr Martill's undergrad students back in the day (2013-15) for his Vertebrate paleontology course at Portsmouth University.
Such an awesome teacher of this field of study. Btw the final dino in this vid is now called DRACORAPTOR.
It's quite amazing,britain has about 70 species of dinosaurs
A lot more than that...and they're extant.
@@michaelanderson7715 That was some research i did some months ago and it's only named species,so you are correct
@@Bahouudis I think we are ships in the night...
@@michaelanderson7715 oh wait😂 you're talking about birds i just saw it
@@Bahouudis yep! 🤣I'm a PhD zoologist, but I've no idea how many non-avians lived in what is now the UK...
The dinosaur actors were terrific.
To any watching outside the UK I'd like to reassure you that we take very good care of our dinosaurs, we even give some of them crowns!
Teiwo 🤣🤣🤣❤😉
Great documentary gorgeous narratior!
The fact that they go follow the dinosaurs and then proceed to run for their lives is hilarious 🤣
👆😂😂😂
Great idea! super models and paleontologists
The running scenes from the raptor remind me of Rose with Nine or Ten in Doctor Who! 😊
@32:40 Actually, the raptor had only to bite down on the doorhandle, push it down and pull it back. I think they could have figured it out pretty quickly, if they could get their mouth around it. I was actually waiting for that to happen while the guy was explaining that they couldn't get in, just like the Dalek suddenly levitating up the stairs when everyone thought it couldn't and they were safe. 😊
PS: @35:00 Darn! I was really hoping to see that the actor and singer David Soul had become a paleontologist! 😊
Oh you mean doctor world health organization who, that flew around in a magic phone booth? Yeah we have one of that’s dr Fauci.
To me, it's Eleven and company in "Dinosaurs on a Spaceship." 😂
@@skeeterinnewjersey5256 Oh definitely! 😊
Raptor guy and ellie looked perfect together 🥂
Er, I hate to bring this to you but Baryonyx was not the first fish eating dinosaur we found. In the very least, Spinosaurus predates Baryonyx by a good 70 years or so. True, they didn't know at the time it was a fish eater, but they knew it was different.
It was the first dinosaur we had actualy evidence for. Spinosaurus was blown up not too long after it's discovery and description, so at the time we had no idea that it was a fish eater.
That is why Baryonyx is always called the first fish eating dinosaur.
What a beautiful Paleontologist! English beauty for sure.
Please we need more of this
SO WELL DONE.!!!! 👏
Imagine how many species of dinosaurs ( or life itself) didn't get fossilized..
don't imagine this trust me imagination is my department and all this does is make you sad how do I know. Because now I am sad
Millions, seeing as our influence on todays ecosystems lets hundreds of species die out dayly without us even noticing.
Awesome! Intelligently inspired.
I really enjoyed watching this. I've been to Charmouth beach and found ammonites and bellomnites (spelt wrong I know). Was so happy I found something, and even gave some of my best finds to a young lad with downs syndrome who was watching me. His face lit up when I asked if he wanted to have a go at finding some.
You are an angel
@@ariaxrose1 thank you. He melted my heart when I saw how happy he was when I let him have a go with my rock hammer. Xx
@@milly-moo9056,
A female rockhound is always a good thing.
🙌🏽 you may have aided in that beautiful young man’s love of wildlife and nature! Being a parent of a teenage child with autism kindness to these beautiful children goes such a long way and they remember that act for longer than you could ever imagine! ❤️
@@georgebushdoesntcareaboutb3890 Biden and his VP don't care about black people either.
Your content never fails to impress.
1:12:29 The same thing happened to Big Al.
Oh yeah that makes a lot of sense. Because Allosaurus and Neovenator are both allosauroids.
Entertaining & Educational ❤
They look to be on the best date ever
Didn't expect to be emotional over dino departures . . . but the whole family???
(I'm the one who cried watching Land Before Time)
17:45 "I'm being chased by a large carnivore, I know, I'll stop, get off my bike and run instead" ???
He even stops to lock his bike up 😂🤣😂🤣
Thus' is my fav video about dinosaur ..
Humans would be tasty SCREAMING lil meat pockets for dinosaurs to snack on 😂
I like the concept of the show, interaction with people very cool
I know it’s a documentary not a sci-if show but I can’t help but feel like this is how the world of Primeval would be if more people knew about the Anomalies.
Documentary makers just waiting to capture whatever prehistoric creatures come through then film what their behaviour was like in the modern world.
Amazing 😍
Ellie was the narrator for Nigel Marvin's Chased by Dinosaurs- Seven Deadly Seas episodes.
Now it's her turn to run.
Great for my research project!
THANKS!!!
After my 2 massive chickens attacked me, I saw them as nothing more than carnivorous Velociraptors, disguised with feathers.
At one point I had 33 dead, headless doves in my freezer that my chooks had killed in just over a week.
I was waiting for him day to throw them out while avoiding the stench of the carnage.
At just over 2 feet tall mine were a massive breed used as professional layers, but I did not ever expect them to fly like they could, nor knock me off my feet then try going for my eyes.
Largest One flew up at my face from ground level to knock me over too.
1 phone call and they went to a farm. Had those from day old chicks too, the savages they turned out to be.
Bloody good layers though sometimes giving up to 5 eggs a day. That's not a joke either.
What breed are those ? I had layers and they were not much bigger than pigeons , had big meat birds that were only a foot tall
@@outinthesticks1035 mine were Hyline Browns. Professional layers, that grew much larger than I've seen any chickens.
A woman I caught up with 2 weeks ago, has a small Hyline Brown and it's not even 6 months old, but is already much larger than all her other chickens.
I'm loving this program show.
Dinosaur bones were found in England long before the 1700's. They considered them the bones of dragons.
They mention that at the 14:00 mark.
Which is why the minute the Natural History Museum gets a T-Rex skeleton it must be named Norbert, no exceptions!
@@marykatherinegoode2773
When I used to go to the London Natural History Museum in the 1970s, they did have a T Rex skeleton mounted on the wall. But for some reason they took it down in the early 80s.
@@davidmccann9811 I hope I don't scare you off with what I am about to say, but I have had time to dwell on what you replied. Forgive me if I am a motormouth.
That is truly awful-they killed off Norbert!! Somebody has to shake the nerds that work there silly and remind them that children need wonder like they need air. And as terrible as it sounds, they need to get asses through the door before they can educate anyone and do serious research: one funds the other. And children need to go, "Wow!" before they can ever become the next generation of scientists.
I have been to many museums over the course of my life and I admit I have been spoiled by the one NYC has. Right after Europe started realizing the bones did not come from dragons, people started digging in the West and the American Museum of Natural History funded the early digs. ( They funded Barnum Brown: he discovered T Rex and his specimens are still there, some not even on display.) The lobby has an Allosaurus in it posed as if doing battle with a Diplodocus. (The T Rex in the lobby from "Night At the Museum" actually was once in the lobby of the Field Museum in Chicago: Sue. Most complete Rex ever found and now with her own exhibit. Nobody is totally sure if Sue is actually female, but hey, if not, Johnny Cash would have gotten a chuckle out of it.)
In my eyes, a lot of the oldest stuff from the 19th century should be put in storage to make way for new things; A lot of what I have seen in the UK and France looks too much like a set from Harry Potter or an old fashioned cabinet of curiosities. (To be fair, the rest of the Field Museum ain't no box of chocolates either since it has not been updated since the 90s; Los Angeles has a dearth in museums that could be called world class.)
There should be a Rex there. Or if not him, Baryonyx. Iguanodon, Parasaurolophus, Plesiosaurus, even the real Velociraptor which was ridiculously little. (In my head I see a flock of them posed as if trying to run away from a sauropod who is seconds away from squishing them to bits.)
I wonder what it would take for London to upgrade its exhibit and start showing up at auctions to buy Rex fossils. A part of me even wonders if it would be worth it to move to the South Bank of the Thames.
Awesome documentry
Amazing how many T-Rex discoveries have been made also. Those fuckers were everywhere. Love that the Baryonyx is a British native and Megolasaurus.
Wasn’t Iguanodon as well?
@@OncelerKidsAreCringe there is an American species of Iguanodon called Dakotadon
@@gergopiroska5749 but we’re talking british
Rosemary, T-Rex should be T. rex
Michael Anderson sorry Grammar Sgt!!!!
Loved this.only thing was I thought the thumbnail was a spino