Added: 1 year ago
From: Gorillazunleashed
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  • Is it just me, or does lieplouridon look smaller on land?

  • i have this on VHS..good memories...good memories...

  • they are showing this to my 7th grader in school she says this is disgusting

  • @MsSanetta nature is disgusting... yet so fascinating, a random fact you should tell her, the human mouth holds more bacteria than the average butthole, now thats disgusting :)

  • @Gorillazunleashed An Ora-Brush can help... a lot! Nice fact though.

  • @Gorillazunleashed liopleurodon is my favorite creature of all time thk u for uploading this i love seeing stuff that made me happy

  • HARRY YOU'RE A GOD DAMN MOSASAUR!

    Harry: I'm just harry!

    Hagrid: Harry, you're a mosasaur!

    Harry: IM JUST HARRY!

    Hagrid: Just harry, you're a mosasaur just harry!

  • its a liopleurodon charlie~

  • 4:20 IT'S A TRAP

  • It annoys me how he keeps calling it a leupleradon..leupleradon ( can't spell it.) Is the family name for that section of the species..or so I believe, in every other documentary I have watched so far, the big one is a Mosasaur, the biggest under race of the Leupleradon family...I think so..

  • @knekochansmiles actually, mosasaurs and pliosaurs are two entirely different species, pliosaurs, such as liopluerodon here, are evolved from plesiosaurs who are evolved from nothasaurs. Mosasaurs are evolved from land dwelling monitor lizards. they have no relation aside from both being aquatic reptiles.

  • I wonder why BBC decided to make Liopleurodon 70 feet or so.....it has never been found to be close to that size. More like 20 feet.

    I hope they fix it in future revisions.......

  • @AceofDlamonds well there were some moasasaurs that were right about megladon's size range but honestly this was a silly idea to make it so huge

  • @WeInterruptThsProgrm

    Well, in terms of length yes....

    and yea....agreed

  • @AceofDlamonds and weight

  • @WeInterruptThsProgrm

    No. No mosasaur was even close to Megalodon's weight.

  • Comment removed

  • @AceofDlamonds i dont mean weight i mean size. I see how you might get that impression but when i wrote "and weight" i was talking about them misinterpreting or exaggerating liopleurodons weight, not the mosasaur

  • @AceofDlamonds cuz there were mosasaurs that were as long or slightly longer than a megladon but couldnt ever compete in weight because theyre so slender

  • @WeInterruptThsProgrm

    Well I dunno about that....as far as I'm aware, the largest estimated length of a Mosasaur was almost 49 feet for Mosasaurus.

    Hainosaurus was estimated at 56 feet and Tylosaurus almost as long, but those estimates have since been reduced....... to about slightly above 40 feet.

    Most C. megalodon were like 40 feet anyway, so you may be right. But at max lengths, there's no competition.

  • @AceofDlamonds well its certainly more likely for a mosasaur to be that long than a pliosaur, thats for sure.

  • @AceofDlamonds well as of right now, megalodon has been bumped to about 50 to 60 ft long. All mosasaurs, including tylosaurus are somewhat out of the competition for top marine predator, right now the greatest contender is predator x, a jurassic pliosaur of the same length and bite force as megalodon. Based on the body physiology of a meagalodon however, i would say that both predator x and tylosaurus would win.

  • @natesdevices

    Yes, the largest reliable estimates I would say are from Gottfried et al. And perhaps Thompson. Large individuals exceed 52 feet and exceptional specimens reach 65.5 ft or more.

    Mosasaurs were quite gracile. I would not bet on any mosasaur, especially Tylosaurus, which could be very long, but weigh much less than a 50 foot Megalodon. Predator X would have had a higher bite force at parity than Meg, but also weigh less still.

  • On the website that calls itself the "plesiosaur site" it has also info on pliosaurs and has an article of Liopleurodon

  • @WeInterruptThsProgrm

    Thank you! someone referring to that excellent site.

  • Actually Liopleurodon wasnt nearly that size. No complete skeleton has been found and thus its all estimate. The estimates generally range from about 20 feet to 50 feet. Nothing larger than 50 feet. Also nowhere near 150 tons. More like 10 tons. Its one of only a handful of inaccuracies of this amazing series.

  • @WeInterruptThsProgrm

    I'll go one further, Liopleurodon has never been found to exceed 9 meters. (30 feet) The largest skull was 4.9 feet.....and multiply that by 5 based on Kronosaur reconstructions and you get a largest specimen of approximately 25 feet.

    Megalodon is still the largest macro-predator ever to swim the seas, at a maximum estimated length of 66 feet and mass of 103 tons or more.

  • For some reason the Eustreptospondylus jumping all over the place and snapping at the pterosaurs makes me laugh. kinda reminds me of my cat going after birds.

  • this is my favorite episode of walking with dinosaurs, this episode to me is truly amazing, its the ocean its so beautyful, great location, great music, cute dinosaurs, and outstanding sound effects.

  • Poor Liopleurodon. :(

  • 1:05

    Like a ninja...

  • over 100 years old and they kill him in 30 mins

  • i love like this documentary is not only about running and hunting t-rexes, but it tries to describe the whole environment and nature, just like with the bark beetles and horseshoe crabs :) great series, when i was younger i was addicted to it and i even wrote my own walking with dinosaurs scenary :)

  • Yay they survived

  • Those poor babys are stuck in the storm!

  • @callum710 You are an ass.

  • Sharks: Stalking you for the last 200 million years!

  • Somehow I get the feeling this is just completely incorrect. Something tells me nature was much, much more colorful then is portrayed here... they're all green monstrous lizards in this series.

  • @zimonslot This show IS pretty colorful. The photorealistic quality just makes it seem less so. The Rhamphorynchus have bright pink faces and green bodies, the Liopleurodon is a striking black and white, the Hybodus have light yellow tail tips, and the Opthalmosaurs are blue blotched with pale yellow.

  • where's ben stiller?

  • 0:34 - 0:41 much better than justin and rebecca !

  • @MrDustinHome I concur. Better than them any day.

  • god i love the theme at the end and the show period i miss my childhood. i watched this all the time.

  • @callum710 lol i never backed down and i could care less about feeling big i just wanted to remove your pointless comments ;) take care and hopefully youll find someone who actually cares :P

  • 0:20 - 0:50 It seems to me unlikely that a big, t-rex style of dinosaur could move fast enough to pluck the small flying ones out of the air.

  • @trashcanalive Incorrect. Eustreptospondylus was a lithe megalosaurid, and was definitely fast enough to chase down a fleeting pterosaur, especially if it struck by surprise, which it did.

  • @callum710 chill the fuck out kid...

  • @callum710 how so?

  • a dead liopleurodon: a 5 months supply of food for those dinos...

  • 0:08 are those dinos allosaurus ??

  • AWESOME i loved it

  • Comment removed

  • @WarriorX9000 im sorry im not trying to hate but i truly commend you for one of the dumbest questions i have ever seen XD that was so much of a fail that it was a win lol :)

  • @Gorillazunleashed lol, indeed

  • @WarriorX9000 Hybonus (i hope im spelling this right and i hope this help)

  • @WarriorX9000 Hybodus

  • @WarriorX9000

    They're called Hybodus. Megalodon doesn't exsits for a few million years yet

  • @WarriorX9000 just a shark

  • Lol 0:36 "You killed Kenny ! "

  • All the female liplerodon wanted to do was eat a shark and thanks to the territorial male liplerodon, the sharks are gonna eat her :'(

  • @pepperbocook

    and then they're gonna eat me...OH MY GOOOOOOOD!

  • 1:05 *looks, Oh hell no!

  • 3:22 - NOT TODAY HO!

  • nooooo the magical liopleurodon has dieeeeeeeed!!!!!!! how will i find candy mountain noooooow?????? lol just kidding this an awesome episode

  • Finally a video that got the real sound lol

  • loser who hated this right?

  • @helsinking12

    the two of them were snacks for liopleurodon

  • did you know blue whale is the biggest animal ever existed, and it still here

  • @gunawanfahri That exists now, not ever.

  • D: that would of sucked to have lived that long only to be washed up at shore to be a meal at a flint stone block party.

  • Horseshoecrabs are awesome! This species is around for so long almost unchanged in shape.

  • Swimming with Dinosaurs.  Awesome.

  • @whereisthequeen Swimming reptiles to be more precise!

  • 0:53

    Dinosaur: What's with all teh racket!? I'm trying to sleep!

  • At the end when lipleurodon had died you almost see those scavengers saying "get stuck in lads, plenty for everybody."

  • @ Liopleurodon :- Dude u shud FLIRT with her, not to EAT her you fool!!!! :P :P :P

  • The Liopleurodon is dead? How will we ever find Candy Mountain now?!

  • I don't understand why Ophthalmosaurus are considered reptiles when they gave birth to pups instead of eggs...

  • @sw33tnl Platypuses lay eggs; that doesn't make them reptiles. Bats can fly, but that doesn't make them birds. Icthyosaurs like Opthalmosaurus are reptiles because they were descended from other reptiles and, egg-laying aside, share the common characteristics that reptiles possess.

  • @GodzillaGuy92 Animals are classified as birds not because they can fly, but because they have feathers. Chickens have feathers, though with limited flying ability, they are categorized as birds. Giving births to live young is a key feature of mammals. Dolphins give birth to pups, they are categorized as marine mammals as opposed to marine reptiles. I believe that the reason Platypuses are considered as mammals is because the young rely on the mother's milk when they break from the eggs...

  • @sw33tnl Live births aren't exclusive to mammals, however; even today, some species of skinks, chameleons, and snakes also give birth to live young. Similarly, dromaeosaurs and some other theropods were still dinosaurs rather than birds even though they had feathers, and pterosaurs were still reptiles instead of mammals despite the fact that they had fur. Icthyosaurs' giving birth to live young did not make them mammals, just as their fins and streamlined bodies did not make them fish.

  • @sw33tnl

    The Icthyosaurs/Opthalmosaurus pup don't depend on their mothers milk, too.

  • @sw33tnl Plus. Mammals in the Mezozoic were really small. They depended on that for survival. The bigger creatures were the reptiles.

  • best episode of walking with dinosaurs

  • the mightiest carnival the world has ever seen... take THAT megalodon lovers! :D

  • @abcnutid Carnival? OH BOI JURASSIC CLOWNZ :P

  • @abcnutid I don't think the Liopleurodon and the Megalodon are the biggest carnivores. The Megalodon is more likely the largest predator of it's time. Same with Liopluerodon.

  • It's a magical liopleurodon! :D

  • @NeoBattousaiGX Ohhh nooooooo, the Magical Liopleurodon is dead.... Chaaaaaaaaaarrlieeeeeeeeeee.

  • @Chirostenotes Nuuuuuu D:

  • i wonder how deep was the deepest part in the ocean then, like the mariana trench today

  • Lio </3

  • D: Leo </3

  • *SPOILER ALERT* 7:30 - 7:37

  • @woodythewoodchuck1 as usual

  • What an undignified way to go for the mighty, old liopleurodon.

  • Shallow seas hold more life then anywhere else on earth. More shallow seas than any other time means more life then any other time.

  • I wonder what was in the very deep of the ocean in that time. You know, in the black part of the ocean. *shudder* Creepy.

  • some weird stuff. i guess that back then some parts of the deep ocean would be shallow sea or land now.

  • @TheLegoboyaz1 Good point dude, we dont even know all that are alive today down there, maybe theres something still alive from way back when, something that would make the lochness monster seem like a kitten.

  • @TheLegoboyaz1 the same as what is in it now. little has changed in the deep sea

  • @TheLegoboyaz1 something with an about 1000 foot long head

  • @TheLegoboyaz1 luckily, nothing worse than lipleurodon quote part 2 of this episode "at 25 meters long weighing 150 tons, it is the largest carnivore the world has ever seen"

  • @TheLegoboyaz1 LIke the challenger deep?

  • @TheLegoboyaz1 well i think its not as deep as it is now i mean 65 million years to change the earth from the time the dinosaurs were exticnt but u know maybe the depth of the ocean hasn't changed at all

  • @TheLegoboyaz1 Oceans werent deep back then

  • @cliffthelightning ??? Oceans are always deep enough to have abysal zones... And further more, oceans were even deeper in the Jurassic than they are today.

  • @Asterite100 No they weren't

  • @TheLegoboyaz1 probably the same as what's there now, tbh

  • @TheLegoboyaz1 If there are so many scary creatures down in the modern abyss, imagine what the hell they have back then...

  • thanks for uploading this, i love this show !

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