Added: 1 year ago
From: Mrjohn5533
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  • At least the Tyrannosaur has a chance at killing a Triceratops. Against an Ankylosaurus, it had pretty much no chance of eating it. Not only were they covered completely in an impenetrable armor, they also had the dinosaur equivalent of a billy club attached to their tail. I'd rather face off against a Triceratops than an Ankylosaurus. Since Ankylosaurus brains were so small, they didn't think too clearly, and they also got REAL angry if anything that seemed threatening got near them.

  • @sergeantassassin2 If the ankylosaur makes a stupid move, it might be killed, or if it somehow flips over on its back (dont know how it'll do that, but i guess it could happen...)

  • hes funny lol

  • "It's like a gigantic white rhinoceros on steroids"

    Lmao

  • holy shit at 2:10 i dont mean this the wrong way that guy looks like kim jong II

  • the sauropoisedon that got killed by those 2 little dinosaurs he was still big to defend himself to me.

  • glad they are gone

  • is the dinatocus the same as the raptor?

  • @Arukana1000 I think what you are trying to say is deinonychus which yes it's a raptor. It's much larger then velociraptor(which are much smaller then jp's depiction) yet smaller then utahraptor(about the size as jp1's raptors).

    I guess you can say it was the size of jp3's raptors(some what there)

  • its like a gigantic white triceratops on steroids LMFAOOOO

  • can someone tell me what the arms of a Trex were used for?! It didnt even look like they use them for organizing their eggs. What do they clap for victories or something?

  • @Arukana1000 YES.

  • @Arukana1000 Well, as you can see the tyrannosaur's head and neck are EXTREMELY large. To develop such immense size and still be able to move, it had to give something up: it's arms. If it had large arms it would have been too front heavy to pick itself up off the ground.

  • @DragonxXxShadow That's why spino's arms are actually a more hindering attributed then spino fans lead themselves to believe. For starters they were actually less then half the size of the arms from jp and they weren't design nor able to grip. They also lack maneuverability and aren't flexible, let alone they're too slow due to their size and weight(which is still smaller and shorter then jp3's) and too front heavy especially with its sail.

    The arms are pretty much useless for large theropods

  • @DragonxXxShadow omg lawly LOL cant stop laughing XD

  • @Arukana1000

    No use. They're called vestigial structures, like the appendix, ear lobe and finger webbing in humans.

  • Triceratops FTW! 

  • "Sense of smell equivalent to about a hundred bloodhounds all duct -taped together"

    WHAT IF SOMEONE FARTED IN HIS FACE?!

  • wow, young sauropods are walking meals.

  • dont we all see in 3d?

  • @MrMaxlockhart humans do, but herbivores dont because they dont need to be able to judge distance since they eat plants, which obviously aren't gonna be moving around

  • @stix365 no, most creatures ever on earth see in 3d, since the first creature to develop eyes, i forgot the name but just watch 'before the dinosaurs', we all see in 3d because we couldnt operate efficiently.

  • @shoshanish Most creatures TODAY can see in 3d. Almost all dinos from the past actually had troubles seeing in depth, distances, clarity and 3 dimensions. It's really the more advance of creature that have the ability of superb sight(mainly carnivores) and rex was the latest and most advance large theropod discovered. At this point, all dinos had to be more advance due to more drastic changes and rex actually had one of the greatest seeing abilities ever discover(from both living and extinct)

  • @TopPhilosopher1 true most of that is, they still saw in 3d, even if it was bad.

    if the small creatures dino's come from can see in 3d, it wouldnt make sense for them to loose it.

  • Is anyone else's video laggy?

  • No footprints from adolescent Sauroposeidon, could this point to an aquatic phase? That would be one way to protect themselves, go into water until too big to be hunted. But I guess there were predators in the water also.

  • @paulmelville11 makes no sense, if you would grow up in water your legs would not be able to bear your weight when you go back to land again. also walking into water wouldn't help much against a t-rex, it actually would make you a prime target

  • A t-rex sense of smell is like a hundred blood hounds duct taped together - ROFL!

  • Pretty decent show, excellent animation, but some of it was far too speculative.

  • "Sense of smell equivalent to about a hundred bloodhounds all duct -taped together"

    I nearly wet myself laughing! I wanna meet this guy!

  • @ViennPeri as expected from prof. bakker, always loved that guy~

  • @ViennPeri its true but a funny way to put it though

  • @ayrtonsenna2798 the fact is true

    

  • The asian paleontologist reminds me of the old guy in the movie "UP". Haha.

  • Never understimate a triceratops that doesn't want to die.

  • stabbing the king -queen in the eye...dick move

  • @BrontoSmilodon1 Actually this may be a little over exaggerated!

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