Tarbosaurus & Velociraptors hunting - [Prehistoric Planet] season 2

2023 ж. 10 Мау.
432 294 Рет қаралды

As the Tarbosaurus terrorize the sauropod herd, the Velociraptors attack the Prenocephales as they flee to the highlands for safety.
from Prehistoric Planet season 2 episode 2

Пікірлер
  • You can’t just spring fluffy lil’ velociraptor babies on me like that man, I wasn’t ready 😭🥺

    @chasemcnab7610@chasemcnab761010 ай бұрын
    • @@VulguseEdgy

      @Latenivenatrix_Mcmasterae@Latenivenatrix_Mcmasterae6 ай бұрын
    • @@VulguseEdgy

      @joseph_is_cool@joseph_is_cool6 ай бұрын
    • ​@@VulguseEdgy

      @GenericDan@GenericDan5 ай бұрын
    • THEY'RE JUST FALLING ALL OVER THE PLACE

      @dracodracarys2339@dracodracarys23395 ай бұрын
    • lmao

      @blankspace2241@blankspace22412 ай бұрын
  • The sound design in this is ETHEREAL. The singing, booming calls of the sauropods, the clicking of the raptors, the hissing and growling of the Tarbosaurus, it all sounds so unique and blends together perfectly. Masterpiece.

    @GalvyTheTom@GalvyTheTom5 ай бұрын
    • There's a youtube channel on here that makes scientifically accurate dinosaur sounds as well as aquatic reptiles and pterosaurs.

      @johnsteiner3417@johnsteiner34175 ай бұрын
    • @@johnsteiner3417 I know, they’re fantastic and intriguing.

      @GalvyTheTom@GalvyTheTom5 ай бұрын
    • ​@@johnsteiner3417 What is the name of the channel pls?

      @bertille701@bertille7015 ай бұрын
    • @@bertille701 It's called *Studio* and the videos are called Dinosaur Vocalization Study.

      @johnsteiner3417@johnsteiner34175 ай бұрын
    • Thank you!!!!​@@johnsteiner3417

      @GoldenHordeofBerke@GoldenHordeofBerke5 ай бұрын
  • That’s got to be some of the best prehistoric planet footage I’ve ever seen. I love how they have been able to make the dinosaurs run

    @Sonsbitchesall@Sonsbitchesall5 ай бұрын
    • They just went back in time and filmed it?

      @gagnarork@gagnarork5 ай бұрын
    • @@gagnarork Some of those cameras from 65 million years ago had some damn good lens in them ;-))...

      @thezanzibarbarian5729@thezanzibarbarian57295 ай бұрын
    • I love how the Velos have the little Donald Duck lookin ahh bum fluff

      @BermudaHawk47@BermudaHawk474 ай бұрын
    • I mean, you'd hope the most recent series would have "some of the best" footage, no?

      @johnmartinez7440@johnmartinez74404 ай бұрын
    • @@johnmartinez7440 life on our planet moment :(

      @FrostFall0261@FrostFall02613 ай бұрын
  • Tyrannosaurs and Raptors hunting side-by-side. Making them the two most famous hunting partners of all time.

    @anthonybusch4407@anthonybusch440710 ай бұрын
    • *Tarbosaurus, mate; the distant Asian cousin of the T.Rex

      @jjrj8568@jjrj85688 ай бұрын
    • @@jjrj8568 Tarbosaurus was a species of Tyrannosaur

      @redlycan5064@redlycan50648 ай бұрын
    • ​@@redlycan5064No they ain't

      @OrgulhosoPortugal@OrgulhosoPortugal8 ай бұрын
    • @@OrgulhosoPortugal What do you mean it's not? Sure, it's not a species of Tyrannosaurus, but Tarbosaurus is still a species of Tyrannosaur, or Tyrannosaurid, just like Nanuqsaurus, Albertosaurus, Daspletosaurus, and Alioramus, among others.

      @redlycan5064@redlycan50648 ай бұрын
    • @@redlycan5064 I thought you said Tarbosaurus was A T-rex Subspecies,

      @OrgulhosoPortugal@OrgulhosoPortugal8 ай бұрын
  • I love seeing predators hunt tactically instead of turning every hunt into a deathmatch it really shows how intelligent theropods are by having them make excellent use of their terrain

    @pattonramming1988@pattonramming19884 ай бұрын
  • Finally tarbosaurus in action all we saw it do in season 1 was drink and sleep, now it's finally hunting

    @Kory-Editz2024@Kory-Editz20248 ай бұрын
    • They actually did more in first season hahhahhahh

      @nblastoise4479@nblastoise44794 ай бұрын
    • And we STILL don't see them make the kill. Prehistoric Planet's aversion to showing onscreen violence is getting frustrating. Season 2 has done a better of showing the dinosaurs hunt than season 1, but it still feels pretty sanitized. Compare this with BBC's Walking with Dinosaurs which was excellent at not only portraying the dinosaurs as realistic animals, but also showing the dangerous and often brutal lives that dinosaurs often lived.

      @windowsVD@windowsVD3 ай бұрын
    • @@windowsVD exactly lol people praise them for showing dinosaurs as animals instead of monsters, but they forget that animals are also violent

      @Kfruistik@KfruistikАй бұрын
    • @@Kfruistikexactly ! I mean, it isn’t uncommon for predators like Komodo dragons or bears to start eating their prey even when it is still alive

      @Charlie-Charlot@Charlie-Charlot20 күн бұрын
  • You can't just bring the tiny velociraptor babies to the shot my heart wasn't ready

    @marmalade8915@marmalade89157 ай бұрын
    • Oh, hush now. Let the boy have his moment.

      @anthonybusch4407@anthonybusch44072 ай бұрын
  • I really like how it's less blood and gore and the dinosaurs aren't slaughtering each other, instead they just died of natural causes, which is quite common in real life too.

    @admiralcat3809@admiralcat38094 ай бұрын
    • Nothing is more natural than being kicked off a cliff. This isn’t sarcasm btw, I’m trying to reference eagles that drag goats off cliffs

      @Latenivenatrix_Mcmasterae@Latenivenatrix_Mcmasterae3 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Latenivenatrix_McmasteraeI think that what he mean is that he is proud that in this documentary they don't represent dinosaurs as brainless monsters

      @markellopedebergara6930@markellopedebergara69302 ай бұрын
    • @@markellopedebergara6930read the rest of my comment

      @Latenivenatrix_Mcmasterae@Latenivenatrix_McmasteraeАй бұрын
  • Omg smol velociraptors soo cuteeeeee.

    @Call-me-Avi@Call-me-Avi4 ай бұрын
  • Aww the babies raptors so cute ❤❤

    @shawn_gaming729@shawn_gaming72910 ай бұрын
    • Small Birds☺️

      @KingCarcha12@KingCarcha1210 ай бұрын
    • I’d eat one ngl

      @tzg1Z@tzg1Z9 ай бұрын
    • ​@@KingCarcha12If you're gonna take this long to finish your documentary then atleast give me some chicken jerky!

      @Uberpod3@Uberpod34 ай бұрын
    • @@Uberpod3 joke😂

      @KingCarcha12@KingCarcha124 ай бұрын
    • @@tzg1Z Fluffy chicken nuggets. 😋

      @TyrannoWright@TyrannoWright7 күн бұрын
  • i just wish prehistoric planet would start showing herbivores successfully fleeing or defending themselves, because for a series intended to break common tropes it's really insistent on showing anything other than carnivorous theropods as unable to win fights, easily frightened and easily manipulated into killing itself in some particularly egregious scenes

    @madceratophryid@madceratophryid9 ай бұрын
    • The tarbos didn’t kill the sauropod it fell and died during the panic, crushing itself under its own weight. The tarbos only frightened them. However, I do agree that we need to see more capable herbivores😁.

      @tort1395@tort13959 ай бұрын
    • I mean there was the one scene where the giant Majungasaurus got spooked off by the little plant eatin’ croco thingy and the zamoxes not getting eaten by the mosa and the morosaurus getting away from the raptors, all in one episode

      @Woopor@Woopor9 ай бұрын
    • @@Woopor that's true, i just wish that wasn't the minority and we really need to see a hadrosaur or sauropod kick some major ass at some point because the general public sees them in particular as incapable of fighting anything or running away from anything, the dreadnoughtus fight in s1 was a good start

      @madceratophryid@madceratophryid9 ай бұрын
    • hunts do fail in this show

      @DGAIRELAND@DGAIRELAND7 ай бұрын
    • ⁠And, in fact, like David Attenborough also said last season, Most hunts throughout the history of life fail most of the time.

      @anthonybusch4407@anthonybusch44076 ай бұрын
  • Velociraptor, the most famous of all the Dromaeosaurids. Tarbosaurus, Asia’s Top Predator.

    @anthonybusch4407@anthonybusch44076 ай бұрын
  • 4:07 I like to imagine one of these dinos falling into loose or wet sand, or being covered over after they collapse due to disease or injuries, and becoming fossilized.

    @EGarrett01@EGarrett015 ай бұрын
  • Finally a full episode of the show and i don’t have to paid for it 🔥🔥🔥

    @rexyzilla9340@rexyzilla93404 ай бұрын
    • Apple+ offers 1 free week,i used It to waith the show

      @nblastoise4479@nblastoise44794 ай бұрын
  • this show is PERFECTION!

    @Supertitan351@Supertitan351Ай бұрын
  • It’s a neat bit of speculation that Velociraptors would think of pushing their prey off cliffs the way golden eagles do to mountain goats. Dromeosaurs were the closest non-avian dinosaurs to birds(aside from Celoeurosaurs) so it doesn’t seem too far fetched that they may have been at least as smart as eagles/hawks.

    @lufsolitaire5351@lufsolitaire53514 ай бұрын
  • wait so no one’s gonna say it? does this scene not remind you of the disney dinosaur 2000 movie? when bruton and his scout were checking the perimeter of the dried lakebed?

    @1997mclarencongo@1997mclarencongo4 ай бұрын
    • Y'know, it really does. Also, that film doesn't get _nearly_ the credit it deserves. Hell, even the CGI is still incredible compared to some of what we see nowadays.

      @NoobsofFredo@NoobsofFredo4 ай бұрын
    • @@NoobsofFredo my thoughts exactly‼️

      @1997mclarencongo@1997mclarencongo4 ай бұрын
    • Hodgepodge mentioned that in his review of this episode.

      @speedracer2008@speedracer20084 ай бұрын
    • ​@@NoobsofFredoIt really gets the credit my guy everybody praises the film.

      @Afraglis@Afraglis4 ай бұрын
    • @@Afraglis Everyone familiar with it does. Sadly, it's still quite obscure outside of people particularly enthused about dinosaurs (carnotaurus and iguanodon particularly).

      @NoobsofFredo@NoobsofFredo4 ай бұрын
  • Tarbosaur and Velociraptor are coelurosaurs(which we know them as feathered dinosaurs).

    @gigatron4578@gigatron45782 ай бұрын
  • Prehistoric planet 3 is coming back next year

    @NajbAhmed-ll3wv@NajbAhmed-ll3wv8 ай бұрын
    • Really?! 😃

      @anthonybusch4407@anthonybusch44076 ай бұрын
    • @@anthonybusch4407 I dont know

      @NajbAhmed-ll3wv@NajbAhmed-ll3wv6 ай бұрын
    • I hope it does. This is a very good show but has too few episodes

      @Chippin05@Chippin056 ай бұрын
    • Hopefully it sets in Late Triassic period or late Cretaceous Campanian (before maastrichtian).

      @themightyspartan1012@themightyspartan10122 ай бұрын
  • I like how they said family and not pack for the Velociraptors

    @burnedsmackdown4209@burnedsmackdown42096 күн бұрын
  • the latest tyrannosaurids like Tyrannosaurs, Tarbosaurus, qianzosaurus, Albertosaurus, are the only coelurosaurs that were scally instead of feathered tough less visible just like elephants hair, those that lived in warms environments.

    @gigatron4578@gigatron45782 ай бұрын
  • I like how this show focuses on how mindless ferocity and needless violence are rare in animals, but they fail to capture how BRUTAL a force NATURE is. That sauropod’s death should’ve been way more slow and graphic (not by my desire ofc), as a broken limb obviously doesn’t mean instant death (unfortunately), and the velociraptor kill looked way too easy and without struggle. It’s a fine line to tow and this show gets it right even better than Walking With, but not perfect

    @bannedwagoner69@bannedwagoner695 ай бұрын
    • they're heavy as hell so falling from that height would indeed be fatal

      @nathan_hi8052@nathan_hi80525 ай бұрын
    • @@nathan_hi8052 absolutely but realistically such a death wouldn’t be mercifully quick sadly, since I would think the neck would protect the head from an impact strong enough to be a sudden death

      @bannedwagoner69@bannedwagoner695 ай бұрын
    • it was more of how it was written the writer didn't want to much gore or violence in this which explains why scenes like the pachyrhinosaurus got killed from afar exist

      @knowncoralconsumer@knowncoralconsumer4 ай бұрын
    • This show is heavily sanitized compared to what we actually know about how violently these animals really lived

      @SmokeDog1871@SmokeDog18714 ай бұрын
    • @@SmokeDog1871 thats how it was actually written but its still the best dino doc ever

      @knowncoralconsumer@knowncoralconsumer4 ай бұрын
  • Reminded me of that 2005 king kong scene

    @nblastoise4479@nblastoise44794 ай бұрын
    • Yup

      @SniperRed0092@SniperRed00923 ай бұрын
  • Excellent graphics.

    @Angelman_1@Angelman_1Ай бұрын
  • Kinda remind me to that scene in 2005 King Kong

    @alang.bandala8863@alang.bandala88635 ай бұрын
  • Nice video and give some inspiration 😮

    @TerraTimeCapsule@TerraTimeCapsule4 ай бұрын
  • Weird to think how they thought. Lizards and snakes don't seem to "think" too much. Scary to imagine large reptiles... thinking

    @jonathanrichards5024@jonathanrichards5024Ай бұрын
    • Birds...

      @ExtremeMadnessX@ExtremeMadnessX29 күн бұрын
  • What a piece. Those babies though..😊😊

    @phillipayoung10@phillipayoung10Ай бұрын
  • I hope we get a season 3

    @RandomMackem3247@RandomMackem32474 ай бұрын
    • Me too.

      @anthonybusch4407@anthonybusch44073 ай бұрын
  • ❤ David Attenborough and Morgan Freeman ❤️ Is the best narrator ❤

    @MarkanthonyOgatia@MarkanthonyOgatia4 ай бұрын
    • They both are.

      @anthonybusch4407@anthonybusch44073 ай бұрын
  • Toll, alle neueren Erkenntnisse sind genutzt worden. Great, all the newer findings have been used.

    @nikimuhlfeld7202@nikimuhlfeld7202Ай бұрын
  • Sir Attenborough's voice legendary

    @whalley723@whalley7234 ай бұрын
    • Oh yeah, he could read the script for Beavis and Butthead and he'd still sound godly.

      @adamholland-gresock3522@adamholland-gresock35227 күн бұрын
  • Wow, used to be some BIG HUNTERS! John P.

    @user-gt2lh2ec9e@user-gt2lh2ec9eАй бұрын
  • I really love bird looking velociraptor

    @chairulmaulana1963@chairulmaulana19636 ай бұрын
  • A pack of three lions scared off a heard of elephants and one triped and died. 😒. None the less, the fkn animations are superb!

    @Alebabe@Alebabe6 ай бұрын
    • Rather more akin to a pack of three wolves scaring a herd of bison. Tarbosaurus in particular had a different skull anatomy to T. rex that made it more capable of hunting sauropods than its North American cousin, so especially those Nemegtosaurs were right to be worried.

      @marcustulliuscicero5443@marcustulliuscicero54432 ай бұрын
  • Queria que eles fizessem uma cena de luta entre um T-rex e um Sauropodes, mas que mostrasse especialmente, os herbívoros ganhando também, até porque nem sempre os carnívoros conseguem finalizar sua perseguição, vemos isso na natureza atual por exemplo, o que certamente em toda a história, se repetia, em questão dos dinos, o povo romantiza muito que os carnívoros, sempre deviam conseguir tudo na hora que quer, mas acredito fielmente, que eles não seriam capazes de enfrentar outros dinos 2 vezes maiores que eles, como os Sauropodes por exemplo, sabemos que na natureza alguns animais, só enfrentam os gigantes em último caso de extrema fome, ou se os carnívoros de sua espécie estiverem em bando, pra ter melhor resultado, já que sim, tamanho é documento na natureza, pode ser o animal mais carnívoros de todos, mas não quer dizer que ganhe todas as lutas, até porque os herbívoros tem suas defesas, não podemos e nem devemos tratá-los como tolos, a ganhos e à perdas para ambos lados.

    @cicerolinns@cicerolinns9 ай бұрын
  • Finally, we can see a hunting scene without the predators being depicted as the bad guys ❤

    @lucatortorizio9718@lucatortorizio971813 күн бұрын
  • Largest Megatheropod dinosaurs size ( All 5+ tonnes Megatheropods In May 2024) 1. Tyrannosaurus rex- 11.7 tonnes 2. Giganotosaurus- 10.2 tonnes 3. Mcraeencies- 8.8 tonnes 4. Carcharodontosaurus- 8.5 tonnes 5. Mapusaurus- 8.4 tonnes 6. Spinosaurus- 8.3 tonnes 7. Saurophaganax- 8.3 tonnes 8. Sauroniops- 7.6 tonnes 9. Tyrannotitan- 7.5 tonnes 10. Bahariasaurus- 7.2 tonnes 11. Deinocheirus- 7.1 tonnes 12. Zhuchengtyrannus- 7.1 tonnes 13. Alamotyrannus- 6 tonnes 14. Titanovenator- 5.8 tonnes 15. Meraxes gigas- 5.7 tonnes 16. Acrocanthosaurus- 5.7 tonnes 17. Torvosaurus- 5.5 tonnes 18. Therizinosaurus- 5.5 tonnes 19. Suchomimus- 5.4 tonnes 20. Sigilmassasaurus- 5.3 tonnes 21. Tarbosaurus- 5.3 tonnes 22. Suciasaurus- 5 tonnes

    @SheshaZilla@SheshaZillaКүн бұрын
  • How good it would be if we had a time machine.

    @philipnorris6542@philipnorris65425 ай бұрын
  • It's hard to put the eons of time in perspective, a thousand years, a million years, our lifetime is fleeting

    @johnshields6852@johnshields68522 ай бұрын
  • the raptors look like chickens :D they are so small ^^

    @DJJumpdancer@DJJumpdancer5 ай бұрын
    • More like turkeys. Velociraptor weighed about 15kg.

      @grahamstrouse1165@grahamstrouse11654 ай бұрын
  • Fossil record shows that raptor babies didnt eat the same food as their parents and likely lived on their own

    @SmokeDog1871@SmokeDog18714 ай бұрын
    • Adolescents*. They still probably stayed close to their parents until they were old enough to fend for themselves. Like many solitary animals do.

      @collinfulling3223@collinfulling32234 ай бұрын
  • amen

    @adamkameron6562@adamkameron656214 күн бұрын
  • Dude imagine the mega fauna required to feed these giants.. Like trying to mow the lawn at the end of the week like "shit, more megafauna!"

    @coffeepot3123@coffeepot3123Ай бұрын
  • Animators be like : Lets make a fluffy baby slip and fall for shits and giggles

    @warmfebruaryrain@warmfebruaryrain19 күн бұрын
  • J'aimerais que cette époque des dinosaures reprennent à nouveau dans notre ère actuel car ces créatures préhistorique me manque 😢😢

    @Hanowk-sd2gn@Hanowk-sd2gn21 күн бұрын
  • Can you even imagine seeing a titanosaur falling over?

    @norbis3939@norbis39393 ай бұрын
  • I have a hypothesis of sorts, the bidrectional development of an ideal ratio of small animal brain size and skull capacity to larger muscolo-skeletal development and adult epistemology. Making such movements by dinosaur species also a result of nega-turbelent instinctive reactivity that also is bidrectional to heightened animal photonic salience sequencing within genetic toilitization of learned and high salienated survival memories, against the low tentative and low salience qualia towards bidrectional singuality concious stop-gap spatio-temporal recollection - also commonly understood as a present awareness during conciousness, in relation to its nervous system and neuro-pyschological impedement.

    @TheSquidUK@TheSquidUK2 ай бұрын
  • How the sauropods could live in the desert with that amount of weight and height (makes no sense) waht they ate??? air and sand?

    @andersonoliveiramagalhaes1785@andersonoliveiramagalhaes1785Ай бұрын
    • They explained that they migrated over desert here.

      @ExtremeMadnessX@ExtremeMadnessX29 күн бұрын
  • Tarbosaurus~ 11 meters & 5,392 kgs

    @SheshaZilla@SheshaZilla2 ай бұрын
  • В этом фильме все динозавры какие-то отёкшие ...

    @T_BDK@T_BDK4 ай бұрын
  • more

    @jeremybennett2168@jeremybennett216811 ай бұрын
  • but the weird thing that Velociraptors and Tarbosaurus didn't live at same time

    @Pixel_Entriment24@Pixel_Entriment24Ай бұрын
  • I just wanna buy this series on Blue Ray PLEASE ill pay anything

    @caseycat@caseycat2 күн бұрын
  • Tarbosaurus = T. - Rex of Asia

    @aleksandarvil5718@aleksandarvil57184 ай бұрын
  • hi its me

    @adamkameron6562@adamkameron656214 күн бұрын
  • Why cant they show it on netflix i dont have apple and i hate them for only showing it on apple tv

    @jaspyjiindust.9227@jaspyjiindust.92273 ай бұрын
  • 3:38

    @juliusrosen7190@juliusrosen719010 ай бұрын
  • tarbo suhars tata 1613::tarbo intar kular pawar istiring

    @user-pb5ph7gw2h@user-pb5ph7gw2h5 ай бұрын
  • 2024 February, 28, 29 , in the house without a heart beat , cillian or john Murphy. A leap year.

    @jamierobertson-fx6eb@jamierobertson-fx6ebАй бұрын
  • Bari alt yazılı olsaydı

    @bilocantorun8948@bilocantorun89484 ай бұрын
  • King Kong 2005 vibes

    @SniperRed0092@SniperRed00923 ай бұрын
  • i don't like apple, but i do like dinosaurs

    @ketaminefetishist@ketaminefetishist4 ай бұрын
    • I assume they had good reason to side with Apple. Netflix definitely wouldn't be an ideal choice with what they come out with and the reputation they've built.

      @TyrannoWright@TyrannoWright7 күн бұрын
  • Bros went through the backrooms

    @staciekeller7515@staciekeller75154 ай бұрын
  • Tarbosaurus is not a Trex but pretty big for a carnivore

    @JarodFarrant@JarodFarrant4 ай бұрын
    • They are still a part of the tyrannosauridae. Almost of equal size to T. rex, but with their own special trait of locking jaws.

      @TyrannoWright@TyrannoWright7 күн бұрын
  • Whos this man talking?

    @LscVip@LscVip2 ай бұрын
    • David Attenborough

      @mitkoogrozev@mitkoogrozev2 ай бұрын
  • The Tarbosaurus kill sauropods

    @Ninaqureshi611@Ninaqureshi61118 күн бұрын
  • I know there is a scientific reason that the supercontinent(s) broke up into what we have today....but I still like to think it was caused by all these giants stompin around all day🤔

    @xxsmack_dabxx396@xxsmack_dabxx3962 ай бұрын
  • Archaeopteryx Reptiles with feathers ? This is new. Many years Dino was reptile. Now it has feathers. I gues is legal to Smoke that leaf that is not harmfull to us. Exception is Archaeopteryx. Thats the small Dino going into bird. But, what do I know ? It seems, today, everybody has an exerienced opinion. Lets change all the data and put it in AI. The future is bright.

    @manosmack@manosmack4 ай бұрын
    • Literally what are you saying with this word salad

      @collinfulling3223@collinfulling32233 ай бұрын
    • New? We already knew dinosaurs were more bird-like since the 90's. You've been digging around too much in public knowledge that's purely based on Hollywood.

      @TyrannoWright@TyrannoWright7 күн бұрын
  • This is all conjecture and speculation. No one knows what dinosaurs were really like or how they lived.

    @JOHNNYHOLIDAY2475@JOHNNYHOLIDAY2475Ай бұрын
    • No fucking shit, Einstein. What did you expect? Of course alot of it is gonna be conjecture and speculation, these animals are long gone. We can’t observe them.

      @metalinstinct7041@metalinstinct7041Ай бұрын
  • That would be an Adasaurus not Velociraptor.

    @kaustavbhattacharyya2217@kaustavbhattacharyya22175 ай бұрын
    • yup

      @knowncoralconsumer@knowncoralconsumer4 ай бұрын
    • The showrunners based this one on an unnamed velociraptorine and called it _Velociraptor_ for simplicity. It could turn out to be a third species of _Velociraptor_ , but it's definitely not _V. mongoliensis_ or _osmolskae_ .

      @dweebteambuilderjones7627@dweebteambuilderjones76274 ай бұрын
    • @@dweebteambuilderjones7627 oh dang well i dont see why they didn't use adasaurus tho

      @knowncoralconsumer@knowncoralconsumer4 ай бұрын
    • Oh, Hush, Now. Let The Show Have It's Moments.

      @anthonybusch4407@anthonybusch44072 ай бұрын
    • @@knowncoralconsumer _Velociraptor_ has brand recognition, and the material may not be enough to tell what genus it really belongs to.

      @dweebteambuilderjones7627@dweebteambuilderjones76272 ай бұрын
  • Why do they run , they got those domes to fight back

    @aleximanon7713@aleximanon771310 ай бұрын
    • Most herbivores that have weapons on their head generally use it for mating rituals. Most horns and modified skulls are too fragile to be used as weapons against predators. Also the head is the most vulnerable anatomy on your body, and predators know this, hence why most strike for the neck for a quick and swift kill. Herbivores do often fight back but when surprised in an ambush situation like this, no herbivore is thinking about fighting, for all they know the predator is literally behind them and in a fight or flight situation, herbivore's instinct is to run and outrun your predator.

      @WatcherMovie008@WatcherMovie00810 ай бұрын
    • It more to do with mating displays. The rarely going to use their heads when facing predators Plus they are aware the predators can able to dodge their attacks and go after the weak points. So the best thing to do for them to go flight mode just to save their lives. This is similarly to how antelopes and deers are running away from predators. From leopards to wolves and lions.

      @themightyspartan1012@themightyspartan101210 ай бұрын
    • Herbivores that utilize ramming generally don’t do that for predator defense, they generally flee, as it’s technically useless due to the time it takes to utilize the domes at full capacity Bighorn sheep, for example, don’t use their horns to defend against predators, they use their preferred habitat (mountain slopes) to hopefully avoid predators, seeing as when predators go after them it doesn’t end well for the sheep

      @WildWorld81@WildWorld8110 ай бұрын
    • It's worth remembering that what initially spooked them wasn't the raptors but the Tarbosaurs, the former just took advantage of the situation.

      @GandalfTheTsaagan@GandalfTheTsaagan6 ай бұрын
    • They were originally running from the Tarbosaurus and panicking sauropods, which they would have no chance against. They certainly weren't expecting the Velociraptors to ambush them.

      @GalvyTheTom@GalvyTheTom5 ай бұрын
  • The brontos really just sacrificed a baby to the tarbos? 🤣 cold, man

    @H484R@H484R4 ай бұрын
    • That aint brontos, brontosaurus isn't even a valid dinosaur spiecies as I recall. Those are tytanosaurs and the smaller ones are not babies or adolescent, just another, smaller spiecies of sauropod

      @krzysztofkuzniacki6416@krzysztofkuzniacki64164 ай бұрын
    • @@krzysztofkuzniacki6416 _Brontosaurus_ got its validity back in 2015, and even before then it was a valid species, just not a valid _genus_ (it was a third species of _Apatosaurus_ for most of the 20th century). You're right that those sauropods are not _Brontosaurus_ ; the small ones are _Nemegtosaurus_ , which were only about 43 feet long as adults, while the big ones are an unnamed species of giant titanosaur only known from footprints.

      @dweebteambuilderjones7627@dweebteambuilderjones76274 ай бұрын
    • ​@@dweebteambuilderjones7627 I wish that didn't happen.

      @Afraglis@Afraglis4 ай бұрын
    • @@Afraglis Wish what didn't happen?

      @dweebteambuilderjones7627@dweebteambuilderjones76274 ай бұрын
  • Velociraptors wailt big dinosaurs are dead.

    @jasonhero982@jasonhero9829 ай бұрын
  • Love the designs of the dinosaurs here, pretty up to date accuracy, but I have a few problems with the behavior. There is no proof that velociraptors did any kind of cooperative hunting, nor do I find it very believable that they would attack something so much larger than themselves, especially when there's a group of tarbosaurs making a kill RIGHT THERE that they could scavenge? Second, I don't think the tarbosaurs stand a chance against sauropods of that size, and why would they risk injury or death to fight a whole herd of them when there are smaller prey available? Just one of those sauropods is way more food than several tarbosaurs could eat in a month, why go to the trouble of trying to take one down, much less attack a herd of them? At least they spared us their rationalizing it by having them kill one off screen, maybe they were just trying to sow confusion in the herd, hoping one would get trampled to death.

    @apeman505@apeman505Ай бұрын
  • I don't see any way possible that could have worked out as depicted. No fully grown sauropod would fear a tarbosaurus while it was alive, the moment they come within walking distance the tail whips them down, any closer and it's neck swinging distance, closer still and it's stomping distance. There's a reason why tyrannosaurs own the size niche in their environments, their juveniles are the one size over the next species in their environment because that's how they avoided competition as predators over any common prey. The prey was never living sauropods, but dead ones, the analogy is when multiple species of vultures have a pecking order based on beak strength. Tyrannosaurs were the alpha predator needed to rip open a sauropod carcass, juvinile tyrannosaurs afterwards got their chance to feed, they're not built to take down living specimens and wouldn't have any need to. Tarbosaurus is in the same niche formula, they don't have the real power to meaningfully threaten a sauropod herd, and the adults have no cause to defend smaller specimens, they wouldn't even mingle in the same herd. An adult Tarbosaurus could enjoy a juvenile sauropod as an individual or as a family unit against a single specimen, as would a mega-pack of velociraptors akin to lions hunting giraffe. Velociraptors would have about the same threat index as a jackal to an oryx, they could slip in and out between adult sauropods without any relevance, so smaller herbivores much like juvenile sauropods wouldn't have any reason or safety traveling inside of such a herd, the protection of safety in numbers isn't real.

    @DaniMartVtbr@DaniMartVtbr5 ай бұрын
    • About the tail whip part, they would have to Severely Injure their tail to actually deal fatal damage

      @Uberpod3@Uberpod34 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Uberpod3 I don't believe so. Sauropods similar to these have evolved tail clubs which means their ancestors would've had to have been using them as bludgeons beforehand. Otherwise there would've been no selective pressure to toughen up the tails.

      @matthewbadger8685@matthewbadger86854 ай бұрын
    • @@matthewbadger8685 Well, i am talking about ones who have no osteoderms nor club-tails, but i don't know if any sauropod lacks these traits.

      @Uberpod3@Uberpod34 ай бұрын
    • @@Uberpod3 I'm aware. For those traits to evolve, the animal has to be using the limb aggressively without those traits, so it'd need to attack with the bare tail. This creates a selective pressure for a stronger tail.

      @matthewbadger8685@matthewbadger86854 ай бұрын
    • @@matthewbadger8685 that's odd then.

      @Uberpod3@Uberpod34 ай бұрын
  • i'm so sick of sauropods being painted as stupid, cowardly, and helpless. this size of a herd would probably be more than capable of defending themselves against 2 tarbos or would have at least made an attempt

    @dumbitc11@dumbitc118 ай бұрын
    • This is how extant herding herbivores act when being hunted by wolves or bears. You see it in bison, elk, deer, cattle, sheep, horses, etc. Sure, they **could** work together and kill the predators, but more often than not they don't because that is not how their brains work. If they did, then the predators would die out, the herbivores would grow too numerous, and the local ecosystem would be fucked. So yes, in order for nature to remain in balance, large, group-oriented herbivores tend to be dumb and panicky. If you're sick of nature, don't watch nature documentaries dude.

      @saratavington5435@saratavington54358 ай бұрын
    • @@saratavington5435 huh? you can’t compare sauropods to any of the animals you listed. if you’re going to compare them to any living animal use something like an elephant for comparison. it would be much more realistic for them to actually put up a fight because that’s what we DO see in nature especially in larger herding animals defending their young. 2 lions wouldn’t stand a chance against a herd of elephants and they would always go after smaller, easier prey. many large herbivores like hippos, buffalos, elephants, etc. are known to fight back and even kill predators. i also never said i was “sick of nature” lol i literally work at a wildlife rehabilitation center and dedicate my life to preserving it. and i would hardly call a recreation of how we believe dinosaurs acted a "nature documentary"

      @dumbitc11@dumbitc118 ай бұрын
    • to be fair that sauropod killed himself by fliping

      @cry2368@cry23688 ай бұрын
    • ​@@dumbitc11 Comparing a Tarbosaurus and a Sauropod to Lions and Elephants is outrageous too! Do the Lions have the ability to slice the throat of an Elephant? No? Does the Tarbo have the Capability fo slice the throat of a Sauropod? *yes* Look at other Herd Animals, when they are confronted by Predators they do exactly what the Sauropods do The Elephants don't do this because they are advanced Social Creatures, they care for their families,

      @OrgulhosoPortugal@OrgulhosoPortugal8 ай бұрын
    • @@OrgulhosoPortugal a tarbo did not have the ability to slice the throat of a full grown sauropod. i don’t think they could even reach most sauropods throats, and don’t they use their jaws to hunt not their claws? i could see them trying to knock one over and then using their jaws to finish the job but i don’t know about throat slicing. and it is believed that sauropods were highly intelligent and social animals like elephants

      @dumbitc11@dumbitc118 ай бұрын
  • Please don't make them roar all the time just because it sounds cool. No modern predator "heralds their arrival" by roaring like an idiot.

    @davidjazay9248@davidjazay92482 ай бұрын
    • Hissing and growling isn't exactly "roaring". They didn't have the larynx to produce such sounds.

      @TyrannoWright@TyrannoWright7 күн бұрын
  • Those Pelosi Raptors are amazing.

    @johnwayne5620@johnwayne56205 ай бұрын
    • Nancy Pelosiraptors 😂

      @christopherherr7561@christopherherr75615 ай бұрын
  • Whos watching this in 2024 👇

    @Yourmanrighthere@Yourmanrighthere9 сағат бұрын
  • They got the tyrannosaurines (T-Rex & Tarbosaurus) totally wrong... They had huge ole factory cavities denoting them as pure scavengers like a buzzard, not predators as portrayed here... The deevolution of their forelimbs also indicates that they have lost their use for them as scavengers...

    @ShaighJosephson@ShaighJosephson4 ай бұрын
    • You kinda outdated pal💀

      @user-lk2ru3vs8c@user-lk2ru3vs8c3 ай бұрын
    • Nothing that size could sustain itself on carrion alone, it's so few and far between that above a certain size only flying animals(like the aforementioned buzzards) can cover enough ground to find enough of it to live on. Besides, there was pretty much nothing else large enough to kill giant hadrosaurs and the like in their environments, and the partially-healed(meaning they happened when the animals were alive) bite marks in suspected prey animals kind of speak for themselves. Not to mention the fact that other, smaller tyrannosaurs with clear adaptations for running down prey also have the same diminutive arms, and the fact that many modern predators have strong senses of smell as well.

      @idle_speculation@idle_speculation3 ай бұрын
    • Yeah like they found small dinosaurs in a Gorgosaurus' stomach@@idle_speculation

      @user-lk2ru3vs8c@user-lk2ru3vs8c3 ай бұрын
    • You bought into Jack Horner's unsupported conspiracy theories he made a decade ago. It's 2024 man.

      @paleopal@paleopal3 ай бұрын
    • Guys, I found Jack Horners youtube account!

      @marcustulliuscicero5443@marcustulliuscicero54432 ай бұрын
  • And I saw the dead-the great and the small-standing before the throne. The books were opened, and another book was opened-the Book of Life. And the dead were judged according to what was written in the books, according to their deeds. The sea gave up the dead that were in it, and death and Sheol gave up the dead in them. Then they were each judged, each one of them, according to their deeds. Then death and Sheol were thrown into the lake of fire. This is the second death-the lake of fire. And if anyone was not found written in the Book of Life, he was thrown into the lake of fire. Revelation 20:12-15 (Tree of Life Version) This is eternal life, that they should know you, the only true God, and him whom you sent, Jesus Christ. John 17 : 3 a For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you don't forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses. Matthew 6 : 14

    @brunosantos321@brunosantos3217 күн бұрын
  • They stole this scene from King Kong.

    @rexnemorensis8154@rexnemorensis81544 ай бұрын
  • Oxygen content in the athmosphere was 20x more back then....so all animals grew big

    @calvinsuu1949@calvinsuu19494 ай бұрын
    • Sources??? 20x is ridiculous. Also modern blue whales breathe air, and are bigger than any known dinosaur.

      @BugsandBiology@BugsandBiology4 ай бұрын
    • @@BugsandBiology underwater animals always get bigger, their body doesn't have to shoulder as much weight

      @notsamhoward@notsamhoward4 ай бұрын
    • In some parts of the Mesozoic, atmospheric oxygen levels were LESS than today; dinosaurs simply had the right set of traits to grow to larger sizes than mammals.

      @idle_speculation@idle_speculation4 ай бұрын
    • @@idle_speculation Namely hollow bones & hatching from eggs.

      @dweebteambuilderjones7627@dweebteambuilderjones76274 ай бұрын
    • 20X 💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀

      @user-lk2ru3vs8c@user-lk2ru3vs8c3 ай бұрын
  • An interesting video that's all purely based on speculation. _Bar the sizes of the dinosaurs and how fast they could run._ Which is still just speculation based on bones and where the muscles attached to those bones and how large they might have been. No one really knows if they even hunted in packs or if they could even stand the sight of another of its species. Think about how today's large cats hunt. Leopards and Tigers are lone hunters. Lions are not. We know this because we have seen them hunting and how they react to others of the same species. So who's to say how these dinosaurs acted as all we know about them are bones. The only probability is that the herbivorous dinosaurs did group together as herbivores still do today. And as for that Velociraptor doing a _kung-fu_ style kick. Well... _That's definitely the director just smoking something that's probably quite illegal in most countries!_ 8-))...

    @thezanzibarbarian5729@thezanzibarbarian57295 ай бұрын
    • Good speculation on their speculating, bro, I speculate 8/8 on this b8, no h8.

      @zerginfestorhots6132@zerginfestorhots61325 ай бұрын
    • Eagles in similar ways push goats from the cliffs.

      @ExtremeMadnessX@ExtremeMadnessX5 ай бұрын
    • @@ExtremeMadnessX Show me any video of an eagle _"pushing"_ an animal off a cliff. I've seen them grab and drop them. Never push one ;-))...

      @thezanzibarbarian5729@thezanzibarbarian57295 ай бұрын
    • Completely agree with you.

      @NightNike@NightNike4 ай бұрын
    • its pretty believable and from the reactions and looks of it, this was a accident the raptor was actually trying to ambush grab the pachycephalosaur istead of outright pushing it to the side, also it wasn't a kick more of a lunge trying to maul the head of the pachycephalosaur another thing to note is that the raptors where probably in a family unit these animals where smart and cunning aswell so a small family of raptors isn't to far fetched

      @knowncoralconsumer@knowncoralconsumer4 ай бұрын
  • Such a good looking series but I hate how it's all about telling a story as if it's a fantasy animated movie for kids. I keep waiting for the reasoning and the science explaining why they know how these animals behaved the way they did, with comparisons to modern day animals or the new scientific evidence archeologists have discovered or whatever, but apparently all that stuff is now kept online and all you get in the show is the fluff. It's a show, not a documentary. The show is pretty but just so dumb and lazy when it comes to the interesting behavioral stuff.

    @shivnz@shivnz5 ай бұрын
  • Fiction. You live in a designed Creation from God of the Christian Bible. He Created Everything about six thousand years ago during Creation week. Should get this right for Salvation issues. ✝️

    @YECBIB@YECBIB13 күн бұрын
    • Just graduated from kindertroll? Congratulations!

      @caseycat@caseycat2 күн бұрын
    • @@caseycat is this 👹😈?

      @YECBIB@YECBIB2 күн бұрын
  • Ew

    @reech4135@reech41358 күн бұрын
  • This just doesn't do it for me, didn't watch much. Real nature is so much better than humans trying to imagine it. Now that I've got 1080p the CGi doesn't impress either. Thanks for uploading though.

    @blucat4@blucat410 ай бұрын
    • Bruh

      @doomjuice.1652@doomjuice.165210 ай бұрын
    • This guy is a dinosaur lol

      @nathanielzoladkowski8175@nathanielzoladkowski817510 ай бұрын
    • @@nathanielzoladkowski8175 If you can't tell why this is pathetic compared to real life, then I suggest you go outside more .. ;-)

      @blucat4@blucat410 ай бұрын
    • They're extinct lol guessing you saw them in person right?

      @nathanielzoladkowski8175@nathanielzoladkowski817510 ай бұрын
    • @@nathanielzoladkowski8175 If I did and I had a video, are you seriously telling me you wouldn't be able to tell this from the real video? You can't tell this is CGI? I'll stick to the real nature docs, thanks.

      @blucat4@blucat410 ай бұрын
  • never got why pray didnt stand up to predators. like they are bigger they have more numbers. yea they dont have teeth but comeo n

    @mattspicer869@mattspicer86911 күн бұрын
  • 🔝

    @stefanowolf8865@stefanowolf88655 ай бұрын
  • I’m sorry what proof do you have that velociraptors feathers let alone T-Rex nope nope nope nope nope nope nope

    @Alaska-Jack@Alaska-Jack24 күн бұрын
    • There are feather attachment points preserved on Velociraptor fossils, plus closely related species have been found with actual feathers still attached.

      @BugsandBiology@BugsandBiology21 күн бұрын
  • Did team work never cross evolutions mind ? Even if just the big ones went for the predators they would fucking destroy and send them running real quick

    @onyx5953@onyx59534 ай бұрын
    • It does, this is just an inaccurate depiction. You can look at how elephants behave around lions for an idea of how creatures with that size difference would react.

      @matthewbadger8685@matthewbadger86854 ай бұрын
    • @@matthewbadger8685 well elephants are just smart sauropods aren't the sharpest tool in the shed so ofc they would run

      @knowncoralconsumer@knowncoralconsumer4 ай бұрын
    • Sauropods were not very smart.

      @dweebteambuilderjones7627@dweebteambuilderjones76274 ай бұрын
    • Sauropods were not elephants. They had a herd mentality, but nothing family focused. Yes, they were capable of defending themselves, but greater numbers meant better odds. The weakest staying behind would spare the rest, hence the young one being unfortunately trampled in the commotion.

      @TyrannoWright@TyrannoWright7 күн бұрын
KZhead