When Jurassic Park came out, i was 6 Years old and thinking:"Why are they calling the Deinonychus by a false Name?". The old Way to picture it was nearly exactly the same and from the Specimens alone, well they are related. Afterwards i never got why they didn't use the Deinonychus, as the Velociraptor is so much smaller in real Life, they just could said it is a bigger Breed: Guess Raptor just sounds cooler.
This documentary series will have bullsh*t like depicting Lystrosaurus as being the Permian equivalent to the Dodo bird and showing a single Cave Lion taking down an adolescent Mammoth twice its size, but then also show some really great scenes like this one and the Arthropleura segment.
@@Carlos-bz5oo That'd be really interesting to see. I wonder what plants grew there, because grasses weren't there to cover the ground yet. Every time a paleo documentary shows life during the Carboniferous period, it's always in a swampy forest.
They're small, fluffy, curious, and make squeaking noises. They're basically kittens mixed with baby birds, both of which are objectively some of the cutest things in nature.
These are some of the most beautiful looking dromaeosaurs I’ve ever seen in modern Dino media.. I love their one not color scheme, those beautiful cutting intelligent bird like eyes…the uniform ptotofeathers…so gorgeous…
The first dromaeosaurs weren’t discovered until the early 1920s, and Deinonychus itself wouldn’t be discovered by paleontologists until the 1960s. The closest thing to dromaeosaurs that 19th-century scientists had was Archaeopteryx, which was named for a single isolated feather, and later, full skeletons with feather impressions. They also didn’t have any entrenched pop culture depictions of dromaeosaurs to fall back on and would likely be more open-minded about the subject. Based on this, I'd say it's actually more possible that people from the 1800s would be more comfortable with this depiction than most of us are.
@@DragonHelmI think they would look back on old medieval bestiaries and notice that creatures like the Dromeasaurs look like certain mythological creatures like the Cockatrice or even smaller dragons. Since some medieval depictions of dragons have feathers. Honestly, modern dinosaurs look more like creatures that we hear about in mythology with surprising accuracy. Which makes them even more awesome compared to their typical Jurrassic Park depiction.
Every once in a while I get hit with that existential reminder that these amazing creatures once lived on the same planet I do. I could be sleeping where a nest once existed millions of years ago.
I was a bit confused as a kid when Jurassic park came out and displayed the velociraptors as these large predators capable of hunting and killing humans, since in my dinosaur books, it showed the velociraptor being a rather small dromaeosaur while the deinonychus was obviously one capable of taking on humans if they were to confront them. It was only later I heard that the name was "switched around" for the species because it "sounded cooler". Although the books by Michael already clearly showed that the genetic research they did was capable of manipulating the actual size of the animals they worked with (which is why Hammond had a little dog sized African elephant).
@@fabplays6559they were based on deinonychus ,but called velociraptors. Utahraptor was even bigger than the ones in the jp franchise,they are more with the size of achillobator or dakotaraptor, from what i know ...
@@fabplays6559 Utahraptor wasn't even officially described when the book was written, and was much larger. The JP raptors were based on an upscaled Deinonychus, because one of the books Crichton used for research clasified it as a species of Velociraptor (and yeah, possibly also because he thought the name sounds better).
Fortunately we will never bring dinosaurs back, at least, not pure ones. No matter the conditions, DNA completely breaks down after about 10,000 years and the dinosaurs have been gone for about 66 million so they are safely left in the past where we can't effect them
Sure. It's just that as a wild animal they would occasionally get toothy and talon-y on the owner, just like keepers of bears and big cats can occasionally get bad scratches.
Birds are literally dinosaurs, and dinosaurs themselves are technically reptiles, just more birdy ones, as they are archosaurs. Yes even ornithischian dinosaurs are more birdlike than what we traditionally thought, showing parental care and flocking/herding, as well as some having actual beaks and gizzards full of gastroliths used to further break down their food.
I've recently found that these babies could actually have a form of flight, though i've only found out from Wikipedia and Sanova the carno. I think this is very interesting as it shows that, like any other dinosaurs and others that the juveniles have a different role from their parents, and plus, this is really surprising. What do you think about this?
I know. It's just, well, the "Velociraptor" in Jurassic Park franchise is actually based on Deinonychus, and in fact, Deinonychus' previous name was "Velociraptor antirrhopus", which is also pointed out in the book.@@anthonybusch4407
@@anthonybusch4407 the design is outdated, they lack the feathers, the pronated wrists, etc but they were still based on the deinonychus, they just used a different name for a more dramatic effect.
Fun Fact: Scientists thought Velociraptor was smaller than Deinonychus in 2011 but an adult Deinonychus was actually smaller and adult Velociraptors are the size of an average human adult.
Well that's the reality and i don't think the real animal cares what some hairless apes are thinking about it .... Oh ,and if they're dumb,that means a whole existing group of animals called birds are also dumb by your logic ....
Deinonychus. A member of the raptor family that deserves more opportunities to shine.
They were the first dromaeosaurs I ever heard of, thanks to Dino Riders.
When Jurassic Park came out, i was 6 Years old and thinking:"Why are they calling the Deinonychus by a false Name?".
The old Way to picture it was nearly exactly the same and from the Specimens alone, well they are related.
Afterwards i never got why they didn't use the Deinonychus, as the Velociraptor is so much smaller in real Life, they just could said it is a bigger Breed:
Guess Raptor just sounds cooler.
From my experience, they were from Jurassic Fight Club, hunting in packs and attacking a Tenontosaurus.
actually it's overrated
Jurassic Park Franchise raptor is actually based on Deinonychus, but later they named it "Velociraptor antirrhopus".
My fav raptor
This documentary series will have bullsh*t like depicting Lystrosaurus as being the Permian equivalent to the Dodo bird and showing a single Cave Lion taking down an adolescent Mammoth twice its size, but then also show some really great scenes like this one and the Arthropleura segment.
Right? It's frustrating.
The Arthropleura is kinda eh too. New studies show it lived on open plains, not swamp forests
@@Carlos-bz5oo That'd be really interesting to see. I wonder what plants grew there, because grasses weren't there to cover the ground yet. Every time a paleo documentary shows life during the Carboniferous period, it's always in a swampy forest.
@@jacobcox4565 I'm assuming probably horsetails or seed ferns
@@Carlos-bz5oo I wonder if moss was just as widespread as grass is now and it covered the majority of the ground.
Why is it that baby raptors have to look so dang adorable?
Because like most baby animals today, that’s what baby dinosaurs are? Adorable?
They're small, fluffy, curious, and make squeaking noises. They're basically kittens mixed with baby birds, both of which are objectively some of the cutest things in nature.
Its not like that in reallife because we dont know what it looks like its EXTINCT
I believe that we all know that.
They're basically birds with teeth
I wanna hug it
These Baby Raptors are so cute!
Indeed.
Yeah, imagine having one in a zoo or as a pet
Yes they're cute❤
Raptores no te corrigo enrealidad el narrador digo que eran deynonichus son como raptores pero mas grandes
I agree
These are some of the most beautiful looking dromaeosaurs I’ve ever seen in modern Dino media.. I love their one not color scheme, those beautiful cutting intelligent bird like eyes…the uniform ptotofeathers…so gorgeous…
I love their eyes, very realistic and menacing looking without looking reptilian.
Prehistoric Planet make them even better.
If people back in the 1800s saw the Deinonychus like this, they would probably think it’s nonsense.
Hmmmm, ya think so?
The first dromaeosaurs weren’t discovered until the early 1920s, and Deinonychus itself wouldn’t be discovered by paleontologists until the 1960s.
The closest thing to dromaeosaurs that 19th-century scientists had was Archaeopteryx, which was named for a single isolated feather, and later, full skeletons with feather impressions. They also didn’t have any entrenched pop culture depictions of dromaeosaurs to fall back on and would likely be more open-minded about the subject.
Based on this, I'd say it's actually more possible that people from the 1800s would be more comfortable with this depiction than most of us are.
@@DragonHelmI think they would look back on old medieval bestiaries and notice that creatures like the Dromeasaurs look like certain mythological creatures like the Cockatrice or even smaller dragons. Since some medieval depictions of dragons have feathers.
Honestly, modern dinosaurs look more like creatures that we hear about in mythology with surprising accuracy. Which makes them even more awesome compared to their typical Jurrassic Park depiction.
Wasn’t even discovered
@@stare4539 Exactly, lol
Every once in a while I get hit with that existential reminder that these amazing creatures once lived on the same planet I do.
I could be sleeping where a nest once existed millions of years ago.
Combat Chicken.
Ground hawk.
teeth turkey.
Tactical Killer Ground Pigeon
Death Dove.
Such a cool animals , imagine seeing one in real life
I wouldn’t want to meet one.
@vasilijrappana2335 why not I think there 🤔 beautiful animals like chickens and turkeys
@@Husseinabbas12 Yeah, but imagine a predatory human-sized chicken with talons and teeth. Better to observe it from afar and with means of protection.
@@vasilijrappana2335well a deinonychus was the size of a turkey not many raptor species were human sized
@@D1rt_Block Deinonychus was 3m long 87cm high and weight up to 87-100kg. Ur describing fits more to Velociraptor.
Finally a super cute birdy Dino Baby 😘💕🇮🇳
Dinonychus, my favourite dinosaur.
It fills me with happines to see him portrayed so realistic.
SOOOO CUTE BABY RAPTOR!!!!❤❤❤❤
Cutie, cutie, cutie, snuggle with momma
Real life dragons!
so fluffy :0 let me cuddle
Cute little critters
ITS SO FLOOFY
They’re adorable❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
I was a bit confused as a kid when Jurassic park came out and displayed the velociraptors as these large predators capable of hunting and killing humans, since in my dinosaur books, it showed the velociraptor being a rather small dromaeosaur while the deinonychus was obviously one capable of taking on humans if they were to confront them. It was only later I heard that the name was "switched around" for the species because it "sounded cooler".
Although the books by Michael already clearly showed that the genetic research they did was capable of manipulating the actual size of the animals they worked with (which is why Hammond had a little dog sized African elephant).
It was actually Utahraptors in Jurassic Park, not Deinonychus. :)
@@fabplays6559they were based on deinonychus ,but called velociraptors. Utahraptor was even bigger than the ones in the jp franchise,they are more with the size of achillobator or dakotaraptor, from what i know ...
@@fabplays6559 Utahraptor wasn't even officially described when the book was written, and was much larger. The JP raptors were based on an upscaled Deinonychus, because one of the books Crichton used for research clasified it as a species of Velociraptor (and yeah, possibly also because he thought the name sounds better).
I hope scientists bring dinosaurs back to life. i want one of these cuties. Look at all that fluff. i want to hold one
Imagining owners dumping Dinonychus yearlings in the wild because they grew up and stopped being cute and small enough to manage..
Fortunately we will never bring dinosaurs back, at least, not pure ones. No matter the conditions, DNA completely breaks down after about 10,000 years and the dinosaurs have been gone for about 66 million so they are safely left in the past where we can't effect them
Who else is wondering if you could raise and (safely) tame one of those adorable ones? 😅
Sure. It's just that as a wild animal they would occasionally get toothy and talon-y on the owner, just like keepers of bears and big cats can occasionally get bad scratches.
@@glory2cybertron ...or devoured 😅
Beauty is pain... and cute risks mauling?
This part was a lot better than the T.rex vs Trike and Allo vs Diplo parts
Awe so cute❤
the babys beak looks like the cassowary now!
I love them I’m watching the show right now!!
This Deinonychus look cute compare to Deinonychus from JWE
Dinosaurs with feathers and wings? They look like a missing link between reptiles and birds. And their babies are adorable...!💖🐾
Birds are literally dinosaurs, and dinosaurs themselves are technically reptiles, just more birdy ones, as they are archosaurs. Yes even ornithischian dinosaurs are more birdlike than what we traditionally thought, showing parental care and flocking/herding, as well as some having actual beaks and gizzards full of gastroliths used to further break down their food.
Ти Боже, какая прелесть 😍
Fluffy baby ❤
Cute baby
I thought it was a shoebill for a moment ❤😂
Alright so- i don't know why this documentry have so much hate- it wasn't even that bad-
Looks like a shoebill 😊
I thought them l the thumbnail was depicting a shoebill stork. Then I read the title and turned up the brightness.
Not the noticeably human made sound at 1:28 💀
And fuzzy too.
Help this fluffy baby
Oh My God! Kyou and Ryou from Clannad a Child of Sheena Fujibayashi from Tales!
Much floof
So cute
Dromo fans where you at?!
Clever girl...
I've recently found that these babies could actually have a form of flight, though i've only found out from Wikipedia and Sanova the carno. I think this is very interesting as it shows that, like any other dinosaurs and others that the juveniles have a different role from their parents, and plus, this is really surprising. What do you think about this?
Prehistoric Planet Raptors looks better
It has 100x more budget so ofc
Best
Is it out?
yep
@@PalaeontologyResearchStation awesome
Know ones toes are safe😅
Awww
I want to see more 😭
Beautiful all of them❤❤❤
I want one!
Something about this feels like ai, and i can't place an exact finger on it
Im sorry for sounding accusatory, but I just have a weird worry about this
😍
The feathers on the Adult bother me for some reason :/
Little chicken dino nuggets
Would be great if not for the parental care. That's inaccurate for this particular genus
118th like by me 😎✌️
Why do they have wings?
There is alot of evidence that dromaesaurs had feathers
Most likely for enhancing balance while running and jumping. Ostriches use their wings in a similar manner.
Blue?
Not Blue, she’s a Velociraptor. This is Deinonychus, a member of the same family group, but a tad-bit smaller.
I know. It's just, well, the "Velociraptor" in Jurassic Park franchise is actually based on Deinonychus, and in fact, Deinonychus' previous name was "Velociraptor antirrhopus", which is also pointed out in the book.@@anthonybusch4407
@@anthonybusch4407you realize the velociraptor’s in JP were originally based on the deinonychus.
@@leanderreid4507, All that’s mythically outdated.
@@anthonybusch4407 the design is outdated, they lack the feathers, the pronated wrists, etc but they were still based on the deinonychus, they just used a different name for a more dramatic effect.
ммм
мне кажется, вы втираете дичь
Why in gray, red-brown is better
Dinosaurs can be any type of color you can imagine them as.
the feathers are terrible
Silly lil goofy goober
Deinonychus aka dromaeosaurus
Deinonychus and Dromaeosaurus are separate genera.
Fun Fact: Scientists thought Velociraptor was smaller than Deinonychus in 2011 but an adult Deinonychus was actually smaller and adult Velociraptors are the size of an average human adult.
no its not, velociraptor is smaller
Bro what
velociraptor is the size of a turkey
@@stare4539 he's the type of kid who thinks Jurassic world is accurate lol
@@marcopaulo_ Fr
Feathered arms look dumb.
Reality doesn't care what you think.
Well that's the reality and i don't think the real animal cares what some hairless apes are thinking about it .... Oh ,and if they're dumb,that means a whole existing group of animals called birds are also dumb by your logic ....
Serious so beautiful they were?😮😮❤