Comments: 268
narcosaurus [2022-06-29 14:21:31 +0000 UTC]
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Redesigner3 [2020-11-30 00:36:51 +0000 UTC]
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TheJurassicChicken [2018-12-26 01:19:32 +0000 UTC]
DANNNNNGGGGG SSSSSOOOOONNNNNNNNN
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USB262 [2018-11-26 17:41:26 +0000 UTC]
carcharodontosaurids are the bestΒ
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TheUltraCube6723 [2018-08-22 09:52:51 +0000 UTC]
If only there was a nature documentary with quality CGI, and up-to-date dinosaurs like this.
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IThinkOfaNameLater In reply to IndoraptorOrionfan19 [2018-12-14 06:19:14 +0000 UTC]
Yeah it would be amazing but as if it'd even happen. Unfortunately these kinda things don't happen..
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IndoraptorOrionfan19 In reply to IThinkOfaNameLater [2018-12-21 13:03:23 +0000 UTC]
Oh dear Lord, that would be beautiful!!! But one question what do you think Carcharodontosaurus sounded like? I think that it would've produced infrasounds.
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IThinkOfaNameLater In reply to IndoraptorOrionfan19 [2018-12-23 07:41:27 +0000 UTC]
Yeah I bet they made super deep sounds. Probably half of them we couldn't hear. But no one knows and we can't possibly know.
we could base their sounds on their closest relatives, (birds and crocodilians) but they still are neither of those Things and may have sounded quite different to anything alive.Β
But I recon dromaeosaurs probably didn't make high streaking sounds, they might have made quite deep sounds like large birds idk.
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IndoraptorOrionfan19 In reply to IThinkOfaNameLater [2018-12-23 14:07:59 +0000 UTC]
1. EXACTLY!
2. Also, there's one modern bird that I think gives us a close look on what did Β dromaeosaurs sounded like: The Steller Sea Eagle, a 20 lb eagle with a wingspan of up to eight and a half feet, commonly found in Siberia, Russia.
Link for Steller Sea Eagle:Β m.youtube.com/watch?v=jhJa6kc_β¦
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IThinkOfaNameLater In reply to IndoraptorOrionfan19 [2019-01-02 09:08:52 +0000 UTC]
Man I swear there are multiple biggest eagles because in every doco I watch it's a different one. Β Get your facts straight documentariesΒ
I'll take your word for it though.
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MigaraTaurus [2018-06-15 17:00:30 +0000 UTC]
Best reconstuction ofΒ CarcharodontosaurusΒ I've seen. Nice job.
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AdimarTheFurry [2018-05-25 18:59:16 +0000 UTC]
Charcharodontosaurus actually was a pack hunter occasionally, and could kill up to 2 Tyrannosaurus with under a dozen members. When mating season started, they would turn on each other for the females, and often disband.
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Diamondshark9 In reply to AdimarTheFurry [2019-01-25 19:35:20 +0000 UTC]
I don't really get the joke, can you explain it? It sounds actually serious.
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acepredator In reply to AdimarTheFurry [2018-10-12 18:00:46 +0000 UTC]
While I get this is a joke, infighting for selfish reasons does seem to have been frequent among social theropods.
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ClassyCthulhu In reply to AdimarTheFurry [2018-06-05 19:29:38 +0000 UTC]
A time traveling ocean crossing pack of charcarodontosaurus. I seriously hope you were joking when you wrote that.
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TheWatcherofWorlds In reply to AdimarTheFurry [2018-06-03 07:48:47 +0000 UTC]
Oh sure... and these Charcharodontosaurus also travel through the ocean to hunt said Rexes, FROM AFRICA TO NORTH AMERICA
TRULY A SPECTACLE OF NATURE
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Kaijudino1235 In reply to AdimarTheFurry [2018-06-01 01:05:07 +0000 UTC]
Yiff in hell, you know nothing about paleontology, you even mispelled Carcharodontosaurus. Carcharodontosaurus never even encountered T. Rex to begin with.
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