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walking with dinosaurs: cruel sea part 3 (HQ)

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Uploaded by on Jul 23, 2010

walking with dinosaurs

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Education

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Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 4 dislikes

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Uploader Comments (Gorillazunleashed)

  • 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 :)

  • WHAT KIND OF SHARK MAGALODON OR JUST A SHARK??

  • @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 :)

Top Comments

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

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All Comments (129)

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  • Is it just me, or does lieplouridon look smaller on land?

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

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

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

  • @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.

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

  • @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.

  • @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.

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