PBS The Dinosaurs! 1992 | All Animated Segments
Вставка
- Опубліковано 9 лют 2025
- The Dinosaurs!, American television miniseries produced by WHYY-TV for PBS in 1992, featuring some of the then-modern theories about dinosaurs and how they lived. It aired four episodes from November 22 to November 25, 1992.
These animations had a huge impact on my imagination as a child, extremely nostalgic
Likewise, here in Poland the series aired probably a little later, probably mid 90's. I still remember how impatiently I had awaited each new episode. Fond memories.
Never saw this as a kid, but God do I adore the 90s animation style. Beautifully animated whilst being very accurate for the time.
@flightlesslord2688 I would've been a toddler at the time and didn't really get interested in paleontology until high school
First time I saw these animated segments was from the Microsoft Dinosaurs CD-ROM back in 1993. I had no idea they were originally from this.
same
I had these documentaries on bootleg vhs that my mom recorded because I was a huge dinosaur kid. All 4 parts are on UA-cam, and I watch them occasionally, they never fail to fill me with nostalgia
Good times
Holy fuck I've been trying to find this forever
Me too I saw it from that magic school bus dino game
i like how the Rex isn't roaring he just gurgles like a croc, the animals act like animals its cool to see from the 90s
Sadly this came before a certain movie took the world by storm...
@@gojizard704rugir n’à rien avoir avec le fait qu’ont soit un animal ou pas de plus rexy ne fait que rugir un peu ce nourris d’humains puis partir car elle malheureusement mal nourrir c’est pour sa qu'elle attaques tous se qu'elle peut manger m’importe te qu'elle prédateurs de sa taille ferais la même chose si il était mal nourrir donc arrête de dire que rexy est un monstre
@@laseriedeladilophosaure9246 I used a translator and I'm not saying rexy is a monster. I love Jurassic Park but the fact that most people thought of dinosaurs as blood thirsty roaring monsters was mostly their cloudy vision Jurassic park. I never thought this. I always knew they were animals caught in a bad situation. (Cept the raptors...Those were indeed science fiction.)
Which is probably more scientifically accurate than the Jurassic Park/World film series... at least as far as paleontologists say.
No, people thought of dinosaurs as monsters long before Jurassic Park. If anything Jurassic Park (and the following Walking with Dinosaurs and so on) helped mainstream the idea of dinosaurs just being animals and not just monsters of a lost era. When Megalosaurus was found it was thought of some biblical monster only existing to clean up rotten flesh.
Watching this again after 30 years really brought back joyful tears. We really need to give the animation team their due credit for their amazing work!
Speaking to that segment with the allosaurus fighting the stegosaurus, we tend to focus on how deadly the carnivores were and overlook the fact that the reason for all that power and those massive jaws full of teeth was because in many instances the herbivores were even worse.
Ceratosaurus
True
I stand corrected.
@@necrofuryan5899 No
Yeah, keep in mind while crocodiles are vicious killers... hippos are worse.
Very humble on saying, "We got it right for the moment".
1:30
Thanks for posting this! The level of detail in this animation was astonishing.
Before Jurassic Park, this was the best we had! I grew up on this!
I look just before JPVI it's great
Not to mention the sounds the dinosaurs make. They seem pretty accurate to what they might've sounded like in real life.
@@Mac14329 yeah, the T. rex in this documentary makes grunting noises instead of roars.
@@paleoph6168 I mean, technically it does roar. Just not like in say Jurassic Park.
that opossum in the last 20 seconds is just as bewildered by what it's doing as anyone else would be.
From a scientific point of view, this documentary has obvious outdated information. But from an art and animation POV, it looks superb. Rarely do we see realistic dinosaurs made using traditional animation. Many others and I like to see more of this. This is like peak traditional animation for dinosaurs, while Prehistoric Planet is peak 3D CGI.
Edit: Did I miss something here? What's with a sudden influx of more people replying in the comment section?
And Walking with Dinosaurs is peak storytelling (when it comes to dinosaur documentaries).
Oye güey The current reconstructions of dinosaurs are horrific and without scientific foundation and have been criticized by paleontologists themselves 🤮
I honestly miss this documentary style
for the time it was made, its actually not bad scientifically, but the animation is spectacular, better than most shown on tv today. dude, the action sequences, they were cooking.
From a scientific point of view we really dont know but from a modern point of view yeah
20:49 Man, that's brutal. Seeing a Trex that skinny and finally succumb to starvation. Accurate or not, that's excellent animation conveying an utmost tragedy.
The flying tooth at 11:53, one of the best details.
OMG ! I watched this documentary (in french, i'm from belgium, it was dubbed) SO_MANY_FREAKING_TIMES when i was a kid. It honestly brings tears to my eyes. Thank you for this upload.
pareil !
Thanks for getting all of these in one video. Still some of my favorite dinosaur animation of all time, aesthetically it's all amazing but a pretty good amount of it has held up remarkably well scientifically.
The whole Ichigualasto segment is just perfection...
Thanks for this complication!
I know other people have commented similarly but wow, parts of these have aged pretty well. Sure a lot of the dinosaurs are a little shrink wrapped (some more than others) but they’re still depicted as animals just living their lives. Also pretty cool to see that the theropods have lips.
It’s also worth mentioning how great these animations are on an artistic level. The atmosphere is very ominous- the synth score really contributes to that as well.
There is also a new documentary on Netflix coming out, after scientists believe that large theropods have lips also somewhat like that of sqaumates, such as komodo dragons.
Since 2022.
We need to make an animated dino doc like this again!
WHAT??
YOU CAN'T BE TALKING...
YOU DON'T POST ANYTHING AT ALL
WHAT'S SO BAD ABOUT THIS VIDEO??
I absolutely agree! With how much we've improved and better understand these prehistoric animals, I'd love to see a animated updated version!
This is gold
The third best dino animation from the 90s ❤
What in your opinion are the best and second best?
@@milesjolly6173 its not my opinion. Its the truth
@@DSMyOpinionCountsooookay...
If PBS The Dinosaurs is the third best Dino animation from the 90's, what are the second and first?
This 4 part Documentary has been on VHSES for years. This has yet to be released on DVD in America. Plus, I discovered that this isn’t the only Documentary that has the animated segment sequences of the Dinosaurs. If any of you remember that Really Wild Animals episode “Dinos & other Creature Features”, I found the identity of the Documentary those other animated segments & the Dinamation of the Dinosaurs in the Stock Footage came from. It is & was called “Dinosaurs on Earth: Then…& Now”, All along from the National Geographic Society. Like “The Dinosaurs!” From PBS, “Dinosaurs on Earth: Then…& Now” From National Geographic also has yet to be released on DVD in America. Along with 16 other National Geographic Documentaries on Modern & Prehistoric that have yet to be released on DVD in America after all these years. If anyone likes to know the names of the other National Geographic Documentaries, please leave a comment.
Interesting
@@myotherchannel2469 I'm going to take that "Interesting" word as a yes. Here are the names of the other National Geographic Documentaries that have yet to be released on DVD in America. "As much as one of the PBS Documentaries including one of the NATURE Programs too, for the moment."
"Australia's Improbable Animals"
"Foxes of the Kalahari"
"The Thunder Dragons"
"Dinosaurs On Earth: Then...And Now” (The other Documentary I mentioned before that has its very own animated segments of the Dinosaurs like it's 1992 PBS Predecessor, but a little bit different.)
"The Last Feast of the Crocodiles"
"The Crocodiles of the Orinoco" Including "Croc Chronicles: Orinoco Loco" as a Bonus Program
"The Croc Chronicles Series” Seasons 1 through 5
Dinosaur Double Feature "Dino Death Match" & "T.Rex Ultimate Survivor"
"T.Rex Autopsy"
"Top 10 Largest Beasts"
"Earth: The making of our Planet" AKA The History Of Earth or The Story Of Earth
Finally "Kangaroo Comeback"
Bonus: "Rhythms of Life" (Doubtful) ua-cam.com/video/2lhHBPrCa6U/v-deo.html
"Hidden Congo - The Forest Primeval" AKA "Forest Primeval: Heart of Africa" ua-cam.com/video/jUXyAPiyl1A/v-deo.html
"Serengeti Diary" ua-cam.com/video/onpGXOeB-EM/v-deo.html
"Prehistoric Predators: Razor Jaws" ua-cam.com/video/4DVcDB7olgE/v-deo.html
& possibly "African Safari"
I'm here a year later cause there was another animated special(?)/documentary that focused on dinosaurs. I can't remember the name for the life of me but it was about two boys just going about their day and wondering what life would be like with dinos still present.
One scene that particularly stuck out to me as a kid was they were sitting on a random park bench and one of them imagined a pteranadon flying towards them, causing him to flip the whole bench backward. I can't remember the name of it for the life of me.
One of the best best dinosaur animations I've ever seen
Nice to finally find the source of the animated segments used in “The Magic School Bus Explored in the Age of Dinosaurs” CD-ROM! Loved that game during my childhood!
Also see this was also the source of some music tracks from Hoops&DinoMan’s “A Dinosaur Story”
I had this on VHS. Loved the animations, those were the best parts IMO
The early 90s gave us the Dinosaur Renaissance. I had no idea this series was made a year before the release of Jurassic Park. I've loved these creatures since I was little, most especially T-rex. I know science has given us more accurate depictions of what dinosaurs really look like today, but I am very impressed with how the dinosaurs are brought to life through animation and CGI. These were what I grew up with, and the fact that these guys existed long before humans is astonishing.
To this day, dinosaurs are the ultimate legends even when millions of years ago, their rule came to an end.
We can probably thank Jurassic Park for that dino renaissance.
I hate to break it to you, but while the 90's cemented the fruits of the Dinosaur Renaissance to the general public, said period in began in the late 60s, with studies that proposed that dinosaurs were warm-blooded instead of cold-blooded.
I still have the VHS tapes, and these were always my favorite part of the mini series. My compliments to the animators.
22:23 when I get my lasagna out of the microwave
Considering it was out a year prior to Jurassic Park, those are incredible graphics.
animation
Wow so cool!
I had never seen this documentary but I already knew Peter Melnick's soundtrack.
Well, generally speaking it is outdated, but it still holds up pretty well today, and the hand-drawn animations (as featured here) are wonderful. Recommended for those who want nostalgia and a quality made documentary from a special time when we loved dinosaurs - the Dinosaur Renaissance.
this feels nostalgic despite never watching this as a kid
Omg nostalgia just hit me like a truck on a high way
i still have the vhs on my parents house. i was obsesed with this vhs and beautifull draws. i was a dino kid and drawing them pausing this movie was one of many joys of that era.
PBS was my jam growing up. I remember the stegasaurus segment being used in their channel promotion ads
The angles and points of view in these animations is just beautiful, because they were hand drawn and tremendous effort was put into them.
still to this day love that Stego/Cerato fight scene.
core memory unlocked
this was the dinosaur renascence in full swing for pop culture, the 90s where the masses started to get they were fast active waarm blooded smart animals
and that opossum at the end, cheff kiss
Oh wow, thanks. So many good rememberings from my childhood (as a French i had the French dubbing on a vhs from a tv recording).
Wonderful! Thank you for making this compilation.
You're welcome! Thank you for watching!
I know extinction and meteors and starvation happen a lot in the wild,
But that starved dino at 20:45 breaks my heart
The animation and art in this documentary are beautiful. There are many inaccurate reconstructions, but still, the animations are superb.
Les reconstitution sont précis dans les années 90s
Hoy en día, las reconstrucciones no los hacen ver como dinosaurios, sino como monstruos. Y si no fíjate en el Spinosaurus, lleno de imprecisiones. El montaje de este film los hace ver como animales. Los actuales los hacen ver como salidos de un videojuego de monstruos.
Wow! I watched this documentary so much as a child. Such nostalgia. Thank you so much!
This was a year before the movie Jurassic Park. This was the first time most of us had seen dinosaurs depicted as more bird-like.
Again, youtube just now decides to recommend this to us
It's kinda cool to imagine how the dinosaurs in these animated segments were seen as radical and scientifically accurate 30 years ago. Now of course they're incredibly outdated. I especially notice how much the artists use shrink wrapping. It's just a reminder to how our own modern view of dinosaurs will probably be seen as outdated in 30 more years. And yet, we can still appreciate the amount of work put into these dinosaur designs.
And to add to your comment, I love how despite all the outdated stuff shown the dinosaurs in the animated segment are still depicted as ANIMALS, not movie monsters. That cannot be overlooked. :)
I remember this mini-series when it first aired.
This is really nostalgic for me. Thanks for posting!
Best dinosaur animation I've ever seen
Taped this miniseries as a kid, back when it first aired. Wore out the tapes from rewatching it.
i remember this, i was in elementary at the time, i had a fascination for dinosaurs at the time, and i still do as well as other pre historic animals
Thanks for posting this, it really brings back memories 😊🥰
Thanks for watching!
Returning back to this video three years later, I say that this is one of the few times we can get to what I term as "Dinosaur Sakuga".
1:37
“…after all, Dinah-saw-ers…”
I haven’t heard that pronunciation since the first Jurassic Park movie. I wonder if they got it from here! 🤩
6:33 - did they do the same thing as Amazing Dinoworld, and gave Pachyrhinosaurus a giant keratinous horn?
Yeah, unfortunately back then we didn't have the information to know better, or if there was knowledge, it wasn't widespread enough.
It was much cooler when it had a big horn. Anyways thats what they thought it had back then
Bro that's not Pachyrhinosaurus that's Stupidoceratops magnicornis ☠️
We've come a long way in are understanding of these lifeforms.
True.
The theme song goes so hard
I really cried back then when the Trike died. Both Rex and Trike are my personal favourites though.
The triked to attack the trex's hatchling
@@Supersenior870 The mother Rex was stalking the herd. Then again, it was foolish for the Trike to defend its herd alone.
@@Supersenior870 It was defending its herd!
@@joeguevara1145The Trike would have won if it didn’t suddenly run away for no reason.
@@joeguevara1145a herd has a "leader" that has to prove it's strength unless it wouldn't have the power to lead anyone that why most of the time only one fights the predator
I had the entire set on VHS man, thank you this brings back so many memories
I saw this documentary in an Amusement park way back in 1999 india...it was like bits and pieces and it was converted into 3D
Sounds interesting!
I always wanted to watch all the anime from that series. Thanks for uploading them.
Thanks for posting this. I loved these as a child. The anatomy and animation was very good for its time.
Oh god i remember this one. Oh sweet dino nostalgia
4:21 t-rex merp face 😹 ❤
I remember recording this when it aired on PBS in 92 when I was 6. Just barley smart enough to hit record on ye Ole VHS....have no idea what I recorded over. I just know it was totally worth it.
Ohhhh wow I never thought I’d see this again! My grandmother recorded the whole series for me on VHS (my family did not have a VCR) and I would watch it just about every time I went over there. I didn’t even remember what it was called to search for it online!
Can't believe this was 3 DECADES ago!
wow this brings me back...
I remember watching these on a 20 ton box computer
Может графика и относительно старенькая и некоторая информация устарела, но это так классно нарисовано.
Захотелось увидеть полноценный анимированный сериал или полнометражку в такой стилистике.
BRUH
Peter: "Why did the dinosaurs go extinct?"
Teacher: "Because you touch yourself at night >:( "
Peter: B'(
Anyone else notice that the designs for the dinosaurs are identical to those that could be found in the dinosaur section on the Encyclopedia Britannica disc?
That's because the animations were done by Encyclopaedia Britannica, directed by David Alexovich.
One of the animators (I assume), John Griffin, posted a video of his works here on UA-cam:
m.ua-cam.com/video/VugnhKLqgDs/v-deo.html
@@paleoph6168 Very cool!
It's a very unique look I was very young when I saw these specials on PBS and these designs still stick with me even though I know they aren't very accurate today. For example T-Rex is holding his arms wrong for a theropod. They still look very nice detailed but also stylish.
2:27 - 2:52
That clip, I remember seeing it at the cincinnati zoo in the bird house before they changed it.
If only they thought about getting this PBS classic on DVD....that would be quite neat!
Does anyone else mostly remember these from that one Magic School Bus game and 3D Dinosaur Adventure?
Yes those games were my childhood
These animations were also used in Microsoft Dinosaurs.
A lot of these animations were featured with different narration/sound on the Magic Schoolbus Dinosaur CD-ROM. Definitely unlocking memories!
I had fragments of those animations in my Polish Dinosaurs Virtual Encyclopedia on CD :D And now I discover these came from 1992 mini animation series on PBS :D Good old times
I remember seeing this documentary in school when I was a kid. This brings back memories.
I saw these for the first time in the Magic School Bus dinosaur computer game! I always wondered where they came from!
Oh! That gorgeous animation! Oh Lala!
It's so smooth that it almost looks 3D at times.
It's like seeing artworks come to life.
@@paleoph6168 it's Great, innit?
This is my childhood film when I was a kid
superior to most of the cgi stuff we have today
i still have this video taped
Probably my favorite early 90s dinosaur documentary and I remember watching it on VHS that I got from the library many years ago. Luckily I have a VHS collection of it. I highly recommend it the music on the dinosaurs look very awesome and accurate for their time.
I remember these, what a great show.
loved this as a kid, all my class mates were watching me cause i hardly blinked while watching it 😂
This animated segment is very awesome, my 3 most favorite dinosaurs of the whole dinosaur media are Stegosaurus, Triceratops and Tyrannosaurus Rex🦖
Those laughing bird-like calls that the Herrerasaurus makes are really creepy and sort of more plausible than the usual growling and snarling.
Shout out to Magic School Bus Dinosaurs!
Oh yeah that program also used clips from this documentary.
This series was shown on the Discovery Channel in the UK in the early-mid 90s. The UK version was voiced by a British female narrator, though there is no mention of this person on IMDB for this series, no idea why. I always thought that the UK voiceover was the original voice over for the series and that the series dated from the 80s.
The series was screened as "Dinosaur Footprints" here, and the narrator was the late Jill Dando; as you say, there seems to be zero record of the show on IMDB or elsewhere online under that name, and the show is not listed under Dando's credits.
@@davidhowlett7567 So the woman doing the voice over for the UK/British narrated version of this series was Jill Dando? I never knew that, are you sure it's her as it doesn't sound Jill Dando to me, and rather strange she would be doing a voice over for a dinosaur TV series when she would've been busy working for the BBC at the time (probably pre Crimewatch), I think she presented an holiday series, but that was later on I think. If it is her then, like you say, it's strange there's no mention of her under name associated with this series, but I have noticed this with other presenters and TV personalities where they have done other work but there's no mention of it on IMDB, for instance, Chris Packham presented a short children's series on CITV called the Great Dinosaur Trail, but there's no mention of it on his IMDB page. Also I remember a Loch Ness doc in the mid 90s where Mark Halliley narrated it, but there's no mention of this Loch Ness documentary on his IMDB page or even on his own website under the work he's done.
Very sure - I still have it recorded on a deteriorating VHS tape somewhere in my attic, which until I realised the show had a different title in the USA and found recordings on UA-cam was my only means of re-watching it, and she was listed in the credits. When I originally watched and recorded the series, it was shown on Channel 4 (as opposed to Discovery Channel, which I never had access to) and aired immediately after the coverage of the 1994 Tour de France, so it must have been screened twice in the UK. I doubt they'd have dubbed it twice for satellite and terrestrial TV, but you never know.
@@davidhowlett7567 I came across another dinosaur documentary series from an old listing I found from Sept 1991 on ITV in the UK called "Dinosaur!". I initially thought it was this series but it didn't have the "The" in the title so it may've been something else and it ran for about an hour including adverts. The episode mentioned the discovery 100 years ago of a dinosaur found in a German quarry that was found with a fossilised feather.
Ah one of the main reasons for my lifelong obsession with dinosaurs.
Ahh yes, the 90's charm.
Anyone else remember The Magic Schoolbus Dinosaurs game? That's how I recognize these animations
List of other media that used clips from PBS' The Dinosaurs! (including the Prehistoric Beast and Dinosaur! (1985) stock footages):
Microsoft's Dinosaurs
Eyewitness - "Dinosaur" (Prehistoric Beast and Dinosaur! stock footages only)
Really Wild Animals - "Dinosaurs and Other Creature Features" (Prehistoric Beast and Dinosaur! stock footages only)
Bonehead: Detectives of the Paleoworld
Public computers for visitors at the Swedish Museum of Natural History
I'd choose dino week over shark week any time, I just hate how it is given more priority when dinosaurs are much cooler.
It's so interesting to watch this in recent times, where we have more information on dinosaurs than ever, and are still discovering more...
Though we're still debating if spino could swim or not lmao
Some of those down motion scenes from the PBS the dinosaurs are from Phili Tippett prehistoric beasts and dinosaur! if you like to call it
So nostalgic. The opossum at the end was the icing on the cake
i don't think i ever saw this video (series?) when i was a kid, but i remember these clips from some other things--i particularly remember the point-and-click _Magic School Bus_ dinosaur game on PC :)
I remember this.
But I was born way after that.
WOW THANK YOU
PBS was probably so proud of this until a year later when Jurassic Park completely ate its lunch.
10:56
This the scene that is part of my childhood