Can you please close your channel? You'll do the world a favor if you just deleted this awful channel. People can actually watch something more valuable or learn something important. What on earth do you mean by an alternate future and why should we care? Get your head out of hollywood son. It's not like we're going to see it. Secondly what do you mean by "so advanced in technology"? How do you know how advanced in technology we will be? And third what's with all the birds? The dinobird just like everything else about dinosaurs is only a theory.
We once had a super aggressive rooster that would beat the crap out of anyone who came too close to the hens. Picturing this beast with teeth and claws scares me...
@@briansanchez9899 Can confirm. I was about six when a rooster leapt onto my back, pecking at the back of my neck, and sent me face-first into the mud :')
@@Neogeddon Now imagine that but instead of pecking you it had a tail no peak but instead a mouth full of sharp little teeth and instead of peaking you it had been biting you.
All birds are dinosaurs. The thing with turning birds into dinosaurs is that it's basically irrelevant. One would just turn a dinosaur into a dinosaur.
Might be best not to. A eagle we could train. A casowary reborn as a dinosaur would likely end up looking like very pissed off Dilophasour that's the height of a human with the behavior of a casowary. Except now with hands and teeth, potentially faster. Yeah to dangerous
@@nuke2099 They wanna dial back their evolution, like going to a previous restore point on Windows. Simply for our amusement, these animals will only exist as long as we decide they will, that's cruel. Birds to a previous .."non-avian" stage.
The idea of turning Geese into novosaurs had me laughing. "Yeah, let's take a big mean bird, make it bigger, meaner, as well as adding claws and teeth." I feel that Geese novosaurs would be made illegal to own, too aggressive and hostile. On a more serious note, I love the idea of using genetic modification to try and get dinosaurs back. Well, ancient dinosaurs back, as Birds are already dinosaurs, you know what I mean.
2031: Scientists reengineer the first dinosaur 2062: Dinosaurs wipe out humans 65 million years later: Dinosaurs try to bring humans back by reengineering their DNA
Ian Malcolm: "God creates dinosaurs. God destroys dinosaurs. God creates man. Man destroys God. Man creates dinosaurs." Ellie Sattler: "Dinosaurs eat man. Woman inherits the Earth."
I know this is largely about the novosaurs, but his spec evo project with the extant anurognathid pterosaurs looks INCREDIBLE! Those designs are top tier.
the chicken hybrid will be basically the same size as a chicken or a medium dog well I’m guessing that it would just follow its instinct and protect the flock. Of course it knows it’s bigger so think a alpha fighting rooster you know?
@Codieneshark unless it decided it didn't like the others because they were different. I had a hen who hated any chicken with a fluffy crest. She would actively pluck their head feathers out. Chickens are also notorious for targeting and bullying the weakest member of the flock.
@@ksoundkaiju9256 yeah such is the tragedy of the naming of a lethal worldwide disease. I say the name of my favorite bird genus and people think I'm talking about a virus
Okay so One time I found a mama goose stressed, I didn’t know why until I saw one of her babies stuck in a wire fence, I asked some people for help (I’m a child so it’s not like I could do it myself) and we eventually got out the gosling with no injuries! My mama goose was named Bertha by our local area and she likes to come into people backyardssometimes and we have names for their babies too! There’s lucky (the baby we helped) stormy (a temperamental gal) baby (the smallest) and finally Robby and turbo (the males they are very nice and we like to feed them from Time to time, so I don’t get why people think all geese are horrible, yes they can be aggressive at times but it’s not their fault!
Man how cool would it be to have a Novasaurus Borealis, or one based on an African grey? You'd never be lonely anymore and if paired with a dog, have great hunting partners too
@@tristintaylor7999 I could also make the case that engineering Mosasaurs from Monitor Lizards isn’t much of a stretch. Even if it might be the worst idea in the world.
I love how the designs of novasaurs are so clearly linked to the base species that you can recognize even what species of bird (such as harpy eagle or American crow) were used to make which novasaur.
some german scientists tried to bring back the auroch via "reverse engineering", i read that some geneticists managed to reactivate some of those dormant genes in a chicken and it developed teeth of sorts
That scientist was a Nazi. Like, in the literal historical sense a Nazi. So his thougts about race and genes were unimaginable dumb and the project is considered a failure today.
@@viktorbimmel4007 There are several Auroch projects still going on today. The idea is to bring back biodiversity to the European forests. Not so bad, if you ask me.
I remember having to fight one back when I was a kid. I shit you not, I caught it by the neck, slammed it against a tree, stomped on it with hiking boots, and that only made it madder. Now I'm getting visions of a 10 foot tall version with big claws, 5 inch teeth, it thinks I'm lunch, and mag dumping my rifle only just made it madder.
I really like the thought process of this Spec Evo project. As I was reading the comments, I noticed that no one mentioned how useful the Hoatzin would be if a project like that discussed in the video. It's a modern bird species where the chicks have actual fingers and claws that they use for climbing trees, that the lose once the become adults. I'd imagine studying the genome of such a species would be immensely beneficial for any project focused on reactivating ancient saurian genes.
Here in my country we have "sabong" which just means rooster fight. Roosters are dispatch to fight with one another and there's bidding on which rooster will win. If these novasaurus crow breeds that are loyal and intelligent fought each other while following their masters order will be the closest thing we'll get to a Pokemon battle. Of course it'll probably be illegal.
They should be kept as pets. I would make a huge aviary for them, I would feed them feeder mice and other responsibly bred feeder animals like live bearing fish(mollies, guppies, platies), insects like dubia roaches, and night crawlers.
It seems dinosaurs grew quite quickly as young adults. If their meat tastes good (chicken), they might replace cows as a better alternative, maybe less carbon dioxide as well. The bigger the better right? The American ideal.
Human death?… Sorry but unlike how media show them the dinosaurs are only the animals not monsters. Today lions doesnt eat humans isnt it? And even then ı am pretty sure dinosaurs arent bulletproof or able to destroy the concrete walls, actualy most giant carnivorous dinosaur probally prefered eating carcass and only become active for find food. Today lions only hunt once in week and sleep 20 hours in day :/
I doubt human death is really all that likely. Cinema makes dinosaurs out to be deadly killing machines that live to devour humans but most animals don't behave that way. The real danger is the potential of the animals escaping into ecosystems and damaging delicate ecological balance like pythons in the Everglades.
Yah but if they were to become feral they could possibly fuck up whatever ecosystem they get loose in (if they were able to breed) also I think the idea of a company owning any kind of animal is just wrong.
They say rare things are valuable and having a hen with teeth would be unique! I wonder what a hen's tooth would cost as a trinket. Perhaps embedded in epoxy as jewelry.
Whatever we think of the accuracy of Jurassic Park, I think it did a lot for capturing the imagination of people about what might be possible when it comes to bringing back extinct species from long ago.
I've been going through a bearded vulture phase lately for this EXACT reason. It's astonishing how much they look like and behave like dromaeosaurs. I saw a picture of one eating once and initially thought it was some really well made paleoart because I had automatically assumed it was an illustration of a dromaeosaurid (it's beak was partially obscured) rather than a photo of a vulture.
Thing is people would freak seeing large animals like them become similar to dinosaurs. Thinking they would be aggressive. Thing is both the shoe bill and bone vulture would be pretty chill animals that are reasonably friendly with humans and look awesome. Its birds like the casowary, the ostriches that we would best avoid changing
Love the fact that corvin family was not only considered for the novosaur project but also that the resulting novosaurs are sought after due to their intelligence, the corvin family is extremely intelligent and if you live in an area with a local population of one of its members(funny thing is my Tia last night was saying how she wished she lived in an area with them because it would be so cool, which it would be) and are nice to that local population then they’ll be allies to you for generations to come(always a good idea to befriend the local corvin population, if you make one particular member your enemy then word will spread to those you never even meet and then you got an entire smart bird population out to get you cause you hurt one of their own). It’s nice to see that reflected on a hypothetical future with them
Oh Lord. I don't wanna know what might happen if they tried this on a Cassowary. Then we'd have _REAL_ terror birds and it would be just like Jurassic Park. These are all so cool though.
"acted like a chicken" If it acted like one of those pet chickens that's cute If it acted like the average chicken I see in rural areas I'm horrified of it
The Terror Bird has living relatives that actually have functional "raptor claws". They are about thigh high and are used in South America for chicken herd protection. Red legged Sereima and black legged Sereima I think. Terror bird was a 10 ft tall apex predator.
I wonder if the person who wrote this knew about the fox breeding program that basically proved that certain behavioral patterns are linked to physical traits. As they selectively bred foxes to be friendlier, they're tails got curled and their snouts shorter. I feel like this is a biological fact a lot of people have a lot of trouble wrapping their head around because it might imply somethings that some people might find unsavory-- like that some dog breeds are just naturally more aggressive than others for biological reasons, not how they were raised per-say. Its a whole can of worms I don't want to get into, but the science is young but sound. But I wonder if that concept could apply to something altered in the fetus stage to have different traits. I feel like animals adopt locomotion based on what they're given, ie a cat or dog born with a weird foot might walk differently than others. So I think assuming that a chicken with these traits of a dinosaur would just act like a chicken isn't very biologically sound. Unless its implied they learned the behavior from other chickens, in which that's entirely possible. I'm over thinking this, I'm not all that smart in this regard, but I do think implying that it would just act like a chicken does show some kind of deep miss understanding for how the physical traits of an animal can actually alter its behavior.
Their behavior would most likely change drastically so long as they're raised in captivity without the influence of other birds. My emu, for example, is very predatory. He'll routinely kill and eat lizards, snakes, and mice on our property. He loves bugs as well. This is a stark difference to wild emus, who, while omnivores, are primarily grazing animals. My emu however was raised by me from an egg without ever meeting another emu, and so he hasn't been influenced by typical "emu" behavior. He plays with my dogs and acts more like what you'd expect out of a theropod than a giant, grazing chicken-like bird. Some behaviors however are also just instinctual --- he dances like an emu despite never having seen another emu dance. He hisses without ever hearing another emu hiss. He grunts even though he doesn't know what it's for or why he's doing it (sometimes he acts like he doesn't even realize the noise is coming from him). I think the behaviors are largely dependent on not just the animal, but also the individual.
Meanwhile a penguin breed: feed me fish human! I demand fish! Scientists: it can talk perfect English... we don't know how... and somehow speak in a British accent
I am very against reviving the mammoth since us humans are turning our climate *into a hot fuckup of a planet!!!* Why is it ok to bring mammoths back which they are essentially giant walking carpet rugs into a world that is beyond the climate they the mammoths existed in the first place?!!!!
@@PedroRPFerraz Your third paragraph needs a bit of correction. An elephant can't be "reverse-engineered" into a mammoth because a mammoth is not the atavistic stage of a modern elephant, unlike in the case of birds where their atavistic stage actually would be a "raptor" (theropod). The mammoth project wants to graft mammoth DNA (which we actually have from Siberian permafrost mummies) into the genome of an elephant modified first to an atavistic stage close to the ancestral species of both elephants and mammoths. So they reverse the elephant first then add the mammoth in.
Since they're genetic mutants, assuming they're able to breed with other mutants, they likely wouldn't have mutant offspring (as their default genes would win over.) Novosaurs would likely just breed normal birds.
I really want this to happen in real life, as long as the animals are healthy and are humanely cared for, unlike in Jurassic Park. The small ones are so cute! :)
Awww we used to have a small flock of chickens when I lived with my parents. I would love having ameraucana based novaraptors. One of the hens was a bit feral acting, but since we raised them from chicks and interacted with them every day, we were able to hold and hugs most of the hens. Chickens are the only birds I can trust to not peck out my eyes when they're perched on my arm.
Cassowary novasaurs would be terrifying, possibly bred for display in zoos. Imagine looking outside to see a 10-16 foot fucking beast staring you down outside your house
Coutornix Quail, like the one you pictured, are actually a very passive, quiet bird. You can literally walk up to them and pick them up. As the personalities of all the other breeds seem to be based on the temperment of the base bird, the temperment of the quali based one doesn't fit the theme.
Get an emu first and THEN decide if you REALLY want an actual dinosaur. Yoshi enjoys growling like a tiger ( at the volume of an old car engine ) at 7 am, charging at you to see if he can have a bite of the red, plastic bucket that you are carrying to the cows, and occasionally stretching up to his 7 foot height so that he can get up in your face and hiss at you all because he thinks you’re here to karate kick him in the face as you climb over one of the gates. With that being said, I love my emu. He’s a sweet guy.
Despite that, let's not forget the lessons that film tried to convey: life finds away and We should stop and think before doing something and think on whether we SHOULD
This is an awesome video about Andy's amazing work! Thank you for this! It is wonderful to see his work featured like this. And thank you for the extra background information. It is very interesting ❤😀 I love your look into Novosaurs future 😁😁
Imagine the mexican chicken fight ring: Trex edition. Ay caramba! And yes, I want a gooseraptor pack for security. Imagine Trump riding atop of a bald eagle saurus rex! The freedom bird is all grown up!
I can't tell if you're mad at the fact the pronouns are he/him or the fact he's even clarifying it in his bio. Either way your comment on it comes off as more cringe
Andy Frazer
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I remember this project from years ago, no one has ever covered it before. You did a great job!
Bird are a part a Dinosaur family. So birds are dinosaurs
Then we can have our flesh chewed on by dinosaurs! 😃
Yay!
Yes we can in 2025 or 2050 😀😍
Can you please close your channel?
You'll do the world a favor if you just deleted this awful channel. People can actually watch something more valuable or learn something important.
What on earth do you mean by an alternate future and why should we care? Get your head out of hollywood son.
It's not like we're going to see it.
Secondly what do you mean by "so advanced in technology"? How do you know how advanced in technology we will be?
And third what's with all the birds? The dinobird just like everything else about dinosaurs is only a theory.
"they acted just like a chicken."
if you know what a natural countryside chicken is like, this statement terryfies you.
They would eat their other flock mate’s corpse, such cannibals!
I was frequently attacked by chickens when I was younger
And even if a chicken doesn't scare you, think of geese. Imagine a 500lb goose with claws and teeth
@@GumaroRVillamil yeah that goose could probably eat a small child
My little brother got scratched in the face by a chicken, add a raptor claw and we would've taken him to the hospital
We once had a super aggressive rooster that would beat the crap out of anyone who came too close to the hens.
Picturing this beast with teeth and claws scares me...
Yeah, imagine a giant RED HEN!
As a rooster attack survivor let me tell you that being attacked by a dinosaur is a very traumatic event.
(I was 4 years old when it happened)
@@briansanchez9899 Can confirm. I was about six when a rooster leapt onto my back, pecking at the back of my neck, and sent me face-first into the mud :')
Carry a bat. Solved.
@@Neogeddon Now imagine that but instead of pecking you it had a tail no peak but instead a mouth full of sharp little teeth and instead of peaking you it had been biting you.
I’m disappointed they didn’t make a cassowary one. Thing is practically already a dinosaur
I think that's why, imagine the monster it could become if the eagle nova is the biggest
All birds are dinosaurs. The thing with turning birds into dinosaurs is that it's basically irrelevant. One would just turn a dinosaur into a dinosaur.
that would be the scaries of the bunch
Might be best not to. A eagle we could train. A casowary reborn as a dinosaur would likely end up looking like very pissed off Dilophasour that's the height of a human with the behavior of a casowary. Except now with hands and teeth, potentially faster. Yeah to dangerous
@@nuke2099 They wanna dial back their evolution, like going to a previous restore point on Windows. Simply for our amusement, these animals will only exist as long as we decide they will, that's cruel. Birds to a previous .."non-avian" stage.
It'll be all fun and games until the Aussie branch tries to Novosaurify an Emu.
What would be worse would be a cassowary 😳
And then they'll lose a war to them.
How about an ostrich?
@@nobudgetmemes6202 That's what I was about to say
@@nobudgetmemes6202 imagine kicked by a dino cassowari, stomped by a dino secretary bird and pecked to death by dino magpie
The idea of turning Geese into novosaurs had me laughing. "Yeah, let's take a big mean bird, make it bigger, meaner, as well as adding claws and teeth." I feel that Geese novosaurs would be made illegal to own, too aggressive and hostile.
On a more serious note, I love the idea of using genetic modification to try and get dinosaurs back. Well, ancient dinosaurs back, as Birds are already dinosaurs, you know what I mean.
The eagles, hawks, falcons, and owls would be even more aggressive, probably...
Non avian dinos
@@edwinreveron870 I see you don’t live in canada
Novosaur swans Imagine them
and what could possiby go wrong
As loud as parrots are, imagine the racket a novasaur would make. And geese? Geese are mean, that sounds horrible. 😆 Beautiful art work!
Shit gets real when geese have longer legs and real teeth.
Shit gets real when you give the Cassowary this treatment
The cape Barren goose can grunt like a pig, so imagine the noise they would make.
"Bobby, get the chainsaw: this chicken has rabies."
It's a highly mutated strain of rabies.
What about the better one the swan
2031: Scientists reengineer the first dinosaur
2062: Dinosaurs wipe out humans
65 million years later: Dinosaurs try to bring humans back by reengineering their DNA
Ian Malcolm: "God creates dinosaurs. God destroys dinosaurs. God creates man. Man destroys God. Man creates dinosaurs."
Ellie Sattler: "Dinosaurs eat man. Woman inherits the Earth."
Loop.
So we come back full circle to the dinosauroids
We shouldnt bring humans back, doesnt we learn anyting from quaternary park movies?
hey, we love each other
65 million, Dinosaurs uses Chimps as the bases for humans
I know this is largely about the novosaurs, but his spec evo project with the extant anurognathid pterosaurs looks INCREDIBLE! Those designs are top tier.
Love your spec evo project as well!
@@nacho2000 Thank you! It’s really nice to read that ❤️
@Skinker time Life has slowed things down a bit but production is chugging along! Thank you for your patience btw.
Wow didnt expect You here gray
@@urielgonzalez2882 Haha, hey, I like watching spec evo recaps almost as much as I like creating spec evo cartoon shorts.
Imagine the poor fox that snuck into thát particular coop
“You picked the coop foo”
That would actually be an extremely useful reason to have a few of those. Be great for protecting the flock
@@namrylth432 And I wonder, how would that dino chicken treat other chickens and how would other chicken treat it.
the chicken hybrid will be basically the same size as a chicken or a medium dog well I’m guessing that it would just follow its instinct and protect the flock. Of course it knows it’s bigger so think a alpha fighting rooster you know?
@Codieneshark unless it decided it didn't like the others because they were different. I had a hen who hated any chicken with a fluffy crest. She would actively pluck their head feathers out.
Chickens are also notorious for targeting and bullying the weakest member of the flock.
The corvid based novasaurs are exactly what I'd want.
I misread that as COVID Based
@@ksoundkaiju9256 yeah such is the tragedy of the naming of a lethal worldwide disease. I say the name of my favorite bird genus and people think I'm talking about a virus
I would absolutely love a raven based one. Stunning.
@@ksoundkaiju9256 when I saw a notification, I thought I had typed that, too.
It’s all fun and games until the raven-derived novosaur learns how to handle tools like its true corvid brethren
*turning GEESE into DINOSAURS* thats some nightmare fuel right there
My thoughts exactly!
"T rex is the most dangerous dinosaur"
Me, an intellectual:
Birds are already dinosaurs so really it's just turning dino's into dino's.
I wish their was a cassowary novosaur.
Okay so One time I found a mama goose stressed, I didn’t know why until I saw one of her babies stuck in a wire fence, I asked some people for help (I’m a child so it’s not like I could do it myself) and we eventually got out the gosling with no injuries! My mama goose was named Bertha by our local area and she likes to come into people backyardssometimes and we have names for their babies too! There’s lucky (the baby we helped) stormy (a temperamental gal) baby (the smallest) and finally Robby and turbo (the males they are very nice and we like to feed them from Time to time, so I don’t get why people think all geese are horrible, yes they can be aggressive at times but it’s not their fault!
"crushed into burrito paste" is definitely a euphemism I'm going to have to use
Burrito paste is deffo my favorite flavor of vaginal paste
"Goose raptors" I have never been so afraid in my life until I heard this combination of words
Humans:(brings dinos back)
Humans:(goes extinct)
Dinos:(become sapient)
Dinosapiens from future:we shouldnt bring humans back, doesnt we learn anyting from quaternary park movies?
But they will do anyways. Humans take over again and dinos go instinct until humans bread them again? Well history repeats itselfs I guess
@@chomp5558 nah, humans without anyone to teach them would either die to darwinism or diseass
@@chomp5558 until the sun supernovas or the big asteroid hits. Then it's the age of worms.
@@ewokwarrior2656 worms: we shouldnt bring humans and dinosaur back, doesnt we learn anything from quarternary and mesozoic park movies?
DINOSAURS CAN SPEAK!?
THIS VIDEO:
GOATS: *Sweating profusely*
I understood that reference
THIS VIDEO
ME: Sweating profusely ,
looking online for Dino shotgun pellets.
Poor goat is jurassic world movie
Rest in peace goat
"Eaten by tyrannosaurus rex"
Man how cool would it be to have a Novasaurus Borealis, or one based on an African grey? You'd never be lonely anymore and if paired with a dog, have great hunting partners too
Until it convinced the dog that they didn't need you anymore.
I feel like the easiest novosaur irl would be an ornithomimosaur (derived from an Emu, Rhea, Ostrich or Cassowary.
or just get a Cassowary. Those things don't mess around.
It would definitely be the easiest to do but also the largest most aggressive and the right size for us to be in the menu
Then we'd be in a war with ornithomimosaurs, and lose like Australia did
@@tristintaylor7999 True enough.
@@tristintaylor7999 I could also make the case that engineering Mosasaurs from Monitor Lizards isn’t much of a stretch. Even if it might be the worst idea in the world.
I love how the designs of novasaurs are so clearly linked to the base species that you can recognize even what species of bird (such as harpy eagle or American crow) were used to make which novasaur.
Very useful for birdwatcher notes right before they are eaten.
some german scientists tried to bring back the auroch via "reverse engineering", i read that some geneticists managed to reactivate some of those dormant genes in a chicken and it developed teeth of sorts
That scientist was a Nazi. Like, in the literal historical sense a Nazi. So his thougts about race and genes were unimaginable dumb and the project is considered a failure today.
@@viktorbimmel4007 : Regardless of politics it had some success. But generally yes, Nazi race theory was psudoscience.
Heck cattle didn't really work tho
@@viktorbimmel4007 There are several Auroch projects still going on today. The idea is to bring back biodiversity to the European forests. Not so bad, if you ask me.
@@sendmorerum8241 For all the faults of the Nazis, at least they seemed pretty big on conservation and forestry.🤷♂️
I shudder to imagine what a cassowary would turn out like
It would give the Jurassic Park Velociraptors a run for their money.
raptors from Jurassic Park would tell them to chill
basically what the Dromaesaurs wanted to be.
I remember having to fight one back when I was a kid. I shit you not, I caught it by the neck, slammed it against a tree, stomped on it with hiking boots, and that only made it madder. Now I'm getting visions of a 10 foot tall version with big claws, 5 inch teeth, it thinks I'm lunch, and mag dumping my rifle only just made it madder.
I wonder about shoebill stork.
I'm literally playing Spore as I'm watching the video and when the music from Spore started playing I was confused if it's the game or the video lmao
I really like the thought process of this Spec Evo project. As I was reading the comments, I noticed that no one mentioned how useful the Hoatzin would be if a project like that discussed in the video. It's a modern bird species where the chicks have actual fingers and claws that they use for climbing trees, that the lose once the become adults. I'd imagine studying the genome of such a species would be immensely beneficial for any project focused on reactivating ancient saurian genes.
Emus too, except emus keep their wing fingers and claws through their entire lives!
Here in my country we have "sabong" which just means rooster fight. Roosters are dispatch to fight with one another and there's bidding on which rooster will win. If these novasaurus crow breeds that are loyal and intelligent fought each other while following their masters order will be the closest thing we'll get to a Pokemon battle. Of course it'll probably be illegal.
Yeah, it's called cockfighting in English, and is illegal for being cruel.
@@teaz3139 i feel like real life pokemon battling would be illegal too
That’s animal abuse
@@vulturedrawz it is thats why i said it will be illegal
@@L0rdOfThePies Isn't it already illegal in some places in the Pokémon world
"Crow Raptors-"
(Slams money on table)
I'LL TAKE YOUR ENTIRE STOCK
*slams bag of 1 billion dollars*
GIVE ME A MILLION
Wish I lived in this alternate dimension
Imagine domesticating a Tyrannosaurus Rex just so we can fry them.
Mmmmm tasty
Southern-fried Brontosaurus, anyone? Properly frozen, one beast could last a family of four over quite a stretch! 😋🥩🥩🥩🥩🥩🥩🥩🥩🥩🥩🥩🥩🥩🤢
Me who just became jadesaurus rex: 💦💧🌊💦🌊🌊💧🌊💦💧💧💧🌊💦💦🌊💦🌊💧🌊💦🌊💧
"Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should."
"Boring shallow comment"
@@maxpulido4268 Quote from Jurassic Park actually...
@@ExtremeMadnessX thanks this is the first I've heard it
Jurassic park reference number 4543224577788875433 anytime any extinct creature is mentioned
Related to how we can get dinosaur-alikes from genetically modifying birds, can we possibly create a Temnospondyl out of a Salamander or a frog?
They should be kept as pets. I would make a huge aviary for them, I would feed them feeder mice and other responsibly bred feeder animals like live bearing fish(mollies, guppies, platies), insects like dubia roaches, and night crawlers.
It seems dinosaurs grew quite quickly as young adults. If their meat tastes good (chicken), they might replace cows as a better alternative, maybe less carbon dioxide as well. The bigger the better right? The American ideal.
@Skinker time for sure. I would go as far as breeding my own colony if I became that invested in them
@@garywheeler7039 Couldn't we do the same with austriches now? Otherwise nice idea to utilize.
That would be so cute fierce birds / avian dinosaurs in an aviary.
Nice. Until they got loose in the Florida everglades like pythons.
"Your scientists were so preoccupied that they could, that they didn't stop to think if they should."
"Goose raptor"
Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should
10:51 They just gave a crow HANDS. Be prepared for Planet of the Crows.
See the Hitchcock movie, " The Birds".
We need to stop thinking about the ethics of bringing back dinosaurs. Any amount of human death is worth the risk.
Human death?…
Sorry but unlike how media show them the dinosaurs are only the animals not monsters. Today lions doesnt eat humans isnt it? And even then ı am pretty sure dinosaurs arent bulletproof or able to destroy the concrete walls, actualy most giant carnivorous dinosaur probally prefered eating carcass and only become active for find food. Today lions only hunt once in week and sleep 20 hours in day :/
@@lordgrunwalder1607 Yeah, sure. You just wait until the Emusaurs come for you.
I doubt human death is really all that likely. Cinema makes dinosaurs out to be deadly killing machines that live to devour humans but most animals don't behave that way. The real danger is the potential of the animals escaping into ecosystems and damaging delicate ecological balance like pythons in the Everglades.
@@andrewsuryali8540 as someone said above, dinosaurs aren't bulletproof so I'm pretty sure the threat could be ended pretty quickly.
Yah but if they were to become feral they could possibly fuck up whatever ecosystem they get loose in (if they were able to breed) also I think the idea of a company owning any kind of animal is just wrong.
Yo you are one of my fave content creators on YT, I just like your vids and narration style a lot. that's all I got to say lol, have a good one
8:29 wuewuewuewuewue bird is evolving
Congratulations your wuewuewuewuewue bird has evolved into wuewuewuewue raptor
Lmao
They say rare things are valuable and having a hen with teeth would be unique! I wonder what a hen's tooth would cost as a trinket. Perhaps embedded in epoxy as jewelry.
What if it got embedded in a body part?
Whatever we think of the accuracy of Jurassic Park, I think it did a lot for capturing the imagination of people about what might be possible when it comes to bringing back extinct species from long ago.
Red Parrot Raptor: "Squak! Polly wants to EAT you" Human:" Noooooooooooooo!"
Life...finds a way.
Welcome to Jurassic Park
Corny
@@Chad_Darwin *welcome
The quote Alan Grant "that's a very very bad idea"
By 2037 I plan on already having my Ph.D., it'd be fun if I could study these hypothetical vertebrates.
Why not a Bearded Vulture as a base species? They already look like dromaesaurids.
Or Shoebill Storks.
I've been going through a bearded vulture phase lately for this EXACT reason. It's astonishing how much they look like and behave like dromaeosaurs. I saw a picture of one eating once and initially thought it was some really well made paleoart because I had automatically assumed it was an illustration of a dromaeosaurid (it's beak was partially obscured) rather than a photo of a vulture.
Or aseel roosters
Thing is people would freak seeing large animals like them become similar to dinosaurs. Thinking they would be aggressive. Thing is both the shoe bill and bone vulture would be pretty chill animals that are reasonably friendly with humans and look awesome. Its birds like the casowary, the ostriches that we would best avoid changing
@@Quetzalcoatl_Feathered_Serpent That’s why I suggested Shoebills. You have a theropod dinosaur that’s friendly! They would be so cool to own.
I'm actually obsessed with the idea of having a little crow dog raptor running around my apartment
DOG!?
*slams money on table*
I'll take your entire stock..
We already have 5 movies telling us exactly why this is a bad idea.
I'd like to see a kookaburra raptor, that would be gnarly. Along with the racket they are a chunky and game little bird.
What about chickenosaurus rex?
I wouldn't want to live next to the rooster.
A goose raptor is truly the stuff of nightmares :)
Oh there's just this giant raptor that could rip you apart and eat you but all you need to do is keep an eye on it and you should be fine 🤣
Imagine how frightening a Cassowary version would be, and those guys are practically dinosaurs already.
Love the fact that corvin family was not only considered for the novosaur project but also that the resulting novosaurs are sought after due to their intelligence, the corvin family is extremely intelligent and if you live in an area with a local population of one of its members(funny thing is my Tia last night was saying how she wished she lived in an area with them because it would be so cool, which it would be) and are nice to that local population then they’ll be allies to you for generations to come(always a good idea to befriend the local corvin population, if you make one particular member your enemy then word will spread to those you never even meet and then you got an entire smart bird population out to get you cause you hurt one of their own). It’s nice to see that reflected on a hypothetical future with them
The dinosaurs surviving extinction feels like King Kong 2005
They're so fluffy! 😍
FLUFFEYYY
Oh Lord. I don't wanna know what might happen if they tried this on a Cassowary. Then we'd have _REAL_ terror birds and it would be just like Jurassic Park.
These are all so cool though.
It would be kinda cool to be honest!!!!
“Oh, yeah. Oooh, ahhh, that’s how it always starts. Then later there’s running and screaming.”
"acted like a chicken"
If it acted like one of those pet chickens that's cute
If it acted like the average chicken I see in rural areas I'm horrified of it
Yeah those things are utter dicks. I'm a hen attack survivor
@@PineappleOnPizza69 i was ganged on by 3 hens at 7 and fought them off with a stick, most horrifying experience of my life.
Creating a goose raptor is just bringing satan up from hell
I adore geese, but if that thing's aggressive then *you're dead*
You should totally do Dragons of Wales!
“They after just like chicken!”
So I’ll be running the other way as fast as my legs can take me then.
You ever own chickens or geese? Yeah they can be assholes now imagine it has teeth and claws.
Teeth and *more* claws. Rooster spurs are gnarly already.
I'm picturing fried novasaurs being marketed as chicken burgers at an alternate version of the chicken eatery KFC
The Terror Bird has living relatives that actually have functional "raptor claws". They are about thigh high and are used in South America for chicken herd protection. Red legged Sereima and black legged Sereima I think. Terror bird was a 10 ft tall apex predator.
imagine if the terror bird still existed and they novosaur it
Terror birbs!
Let me get an order of your 6-piece Novasauar wings.
I wonder if the person who wrote this knew about the fox breeding program that basically proved that certain behavioral patterns are linked to physical traits.
As they selectively bred foxes to be friendlier, they're tails got curled and their snouts shorter.
I feel like this is a biological fact a lot of people have a lot of trouble wrapping their head around because it might imply somethings that some people might find unsavory-- like that some dog breeds are just naturally more aggressive than others for biological reasons, not how they were raised per-say. Its a whole can of worms I don't want to get into, but the science is young but sound.
But I wonder if that concept could apply to something altered in the fetus stage to have different traits.
I feel like animals adopt locomotion based on what they're given, ie a cat or dog born with a weird foot might walk differently than others. So I think assuming that a chicken with these traits of a dinosaur would just act like a chicken isn't very biologically sound. Unless its implied they learned the behavior from other chickens, in which that's entirely possible.
I'm over thinking this, I'm not all that smart in this regard, but I do think implying that it would just act like a chicken does show some kind of deep miss understanding for how the physical traits of an animal can actually alter its behavior.
Their behavior would most likely change drastically so long as they're raised in captivity without the influence of other birds.
My emu, for example, is very predatory. He'll routinely kill and eat lizards, snakes, and mice on our property. He loves bugs as well. This is a stark difference to wild emus, who, while omnivores, are primarily grazing animals. My emu however was raised by me from an egg without ever meeting another emu, and so he hasn't been influenced by typical "emu" behavior. He plays with my dogs and acts more like what you'd expect out of a theropod than a giant, grazing chicken-like bird.
Some behaviors however are also just instinctual --- he dances like an emu despite never having seen another emu dance. He hisses without ever hearing another emu hiss. He grunts even though he doesn't know what it's for or why he's doing it (sometimes he acts like he doesn't even realize the noise is coming from him). I think the behaviors are largely dependent on not just the animal, but also the individual.
Meanwhile a penguin breed: feed me fish human! I demand fish!
Scientists: it can talk perfect English... we don't know how... and somehow speak in a British accent
If we can revive mammoths, in the far future this can also happen. Well, a very long time after we revive mammoths.
I am very against reviving the mammoth since us humans are turning our climate *into a hot fuckup of a planet!!!* Why is it ok to bring mammoths back which they are essentially giant walking carpet rugs into a world that is beyond the climate they the mammoths existed in the first place?!!!!
If the dna isnt there still as in a frozen mammoth it just isnt going to happen
@@BHuang92 actually, by releasing mamoths back into their original habitats, we can slow down th eeffects of global warming. go look it up
@@PedroRPFerraz Your third paragraph needs a bit of correction. An elephant can't be "reverse-engineered" into a mammoth because a mammoth is not the atavistic stage of a modern elephant, unlike in the case of birds where their atavistic stage actually would be a "raptor" (theropod). The mammoth project wants to graft mammoth DNA (which we actually have from Siberian permafrost mummies) into the genome of an elephant modified first to an atavistic stage close to the ancestral species of both elephants and mammoths. So they reverse the elephant first then add the mammoth in.
@@PedroRPFerraz i agree with you, just didnt feel like typing a long comment lol
The goososaurus has a tendency to run south for the winter...
"If parrots aren't your speed, then perhaps you'd like a goose-raptor"
NOPE NOPE NOPE GET IT AWAY KILL IT WITH FIRE
*pulls out a fricking charizard*
GOOSOSAURUS GONE!
Clearly we haven't learned from Jurassic Park.
Gimmie my T.rex
Imagine if they tried to reverse-engineer a cassowary......
Or Shoebill Stork.
Hell noooo...
I would rather take the lead pill before I live to see that
A swanosaurus. Imagine a spinosaurus, BUT ANGIER.
They are pretty awesome but I am curious, what if they release in the wild and what is that impact to the environment?
Since they're genetic mutants, assuming they're able to breed with other mutants, they likely wouldn't have mutant offspring (as their default genes would win over.) Novosaurs would likely just breed normal birds.
I want a Pet Crow Raptor SO BAD
Emu/Ostrich Novasaurs would be litteral Utharaptors, Change my mind
I was waiting for an ostrich or shoebill novosaur during the video. I imagine those would look cool, especially the shoebill.
"they acted just like a chicken" yes yes, but did they /taste/ like a chicken? thats the important question that must be answered.
Yes bc they are a chicken
Now this makes me think how will they taste like
Mix a harpy eagle, giant condor and dinosaur dna to make the thunderbird.
I really want this to happen in real life, as long as the animals are healthy and are humanely cared for, unlike in Jurassic Park. The small ones are so cute! :)
Same🥲
I'll quote one of my favorite star trek characters. . Goddamned irresponsible, playing games with life.
I think one of the main issues would be that any evolved instincts and behaviors would not carry over.
Actually that wouldnt be an issue
Atleast we wouldnt keep on getting bitten/scratched
Awww we used to have a small flock of chickens when I lived with my parents. I would love having ameraucana based novaraptors. One of the hens was a bit feral acting, but since we raised them from chicks and interacted with them every day, we were able to hold and hugs most of the hens. Chickens are the only birds I can trust to not peck out my eyes when they're perched on my arm.
I don't care if they're still just chickens, I want one. Or twelve. Multiple colors.
Maybe a parakeet one.
Humans: Loses war against emus in Australia
Also humans: *YOU KNOW WHAT JIMMY HOW 'BOUT WE BRING BACK THE T-REX*
No Ratite novosaurs? Wasted potential.
Ikr
Cassowary novasaurs would be terrifying, possibly bred for display in zoos. Imagine looking outside to see a 10-16 foot fucking beast staring you down outside your house
Imagine what would come out if a novosaurus were to be made from a cloned terror bird
CASSWOARY
A legit predatory theropod
Coutornix Quail, like the one you pictured, are actually a very passive, quiet bird. You can literally walk up to them and pick them up. As the personalities of all the other breeds seem to be based on the temperment of the base bird, the temperment of the quali based one doesn't fit the theme.
Imagine a novosaur ostrich, emu or cassowary.
That would mean the devil is real.
But they would look beautiful...lets do it 😈
Get an emu first and THEN decide if you REALLY want an actual dinosaur. Yoshi enjoys growling like a tiger ( at the volume of an old car engine ) at 7 am, charging at you to see if he can have a bite of the red, plastic bucket that you are carrying to the cows, and occasionally stretching up to his 7 foot height so that he can get up in your face and hiss at you all because he thinks you’re here to karate kick him in the face as you climb over one of the gates. With that being said, I love my emu. He’s a sweet guy.
"what if we bring dinosaurs back to life"
Me remember jurassic park: (softly) Don't
Fuck Jurassic park. dinosaurs were not monsters
Despite that, let's not forget the lessons that film tried to convey: life finds away and
We should stop and think before doing something and think on whether we SHOULD
This whole concept feels like something that would happen in a future Jurassic story.
I'd be interested if they made a novasaur out of a penguin base
Sea Lions will need to step up their game or become the hunted.
Ostriches, cassowarys, emus and secretaries would be scary as fuck
Ethics be damned, I want my pet mini T-Rex.
This is an awesome video about Andy's amazing work! Thank you for this! It is wonderful to see his work featured like this.
And thank you for the extra background information. It is very interesting ❤😀
I love your look into Novosaurs future 😁😁
You know, there’s about 5 movies on why that’s a bad idea.
No there are none only movies as to why we shouldn't make dinos not novos
Sacred D, they never learn...☹
Everybody gangsta until a chicken becomes dinosaurs. The foodchain just got flipped
Imagine the mexican chicken fight ring: Trex edition. Ay caramba!
And yes, I want a gooseraptor pack for security.
Imagine Trump riding atop of a bald eagle saurus rex! The freedom bird is all grown up!
Then imagine that same bird eating Trump or dropping him into her nest of hungry chicks.
This is a most interesting and intriguing subject I like the re-imagined birds into dino-birds
14:14 He/Him? It’s good art and the project is interesting, but that’s fucking cringe dude.
Being male is cringe?
@@diabelskiananas8679 No, but pronouns are.
@@theatheistbear3117 what's wrong with you
I can't tell if you're mad at the fact the pronouns are he/him or the fact he's even clarifying it in his bio. Either way your comment on it comes off as more cringe
@@theatheistbear3117 Or are you a gender abolitionist? Really it's hard to tell.