For those wondering, the velociraptors in Jurassic Park were actually based on deinonychus. The names were swapped because "You bred raptors?" sounded better than "You bred deinonychuses?" or worse, "deinonychi?"
It would have been fascinating to hear what the world sounded like back then. Birds of today make quite a bit of sound, it must have been unbelievable back then with the size of some of the creatures.
What's even more astonishing to think about is that if some birds can mimic human speech, then maybe some prehistoric dinosaurs could of also had that potential (if we were around to reach them words back then)? What's there to say a giant Tyrannosaurus couldn't say "hello" like Parrot? Or a Stegosaurus being capable of doing a close imitation of a car burglar alarm like the Lyer bird?
It would've been even more fascinating to choke on the excrement stench released by the huge herbivore dinosaurs, who were constantly eating and excreting huge quantities of shit and gas, all accompanied by the ear-splitting shrieks of the raptors and their prey.
@@tusharjhakra8347 even non-dinosaurs like pterosaurs had some sort of fur or primitive feathering. so this must have been a trait that preceded both of them.
Dinosaurs are mentioned in the Bible. "Leviathan," in the book of Job, he mentions that "his tail is as big as a cedar tree." Elephants' tails aren't big at all. Just an FYI -
And so many new sizes compared to then and now, if you believe the scientists ^^ Even the Argentinosaurus in the video was earlier about 30m and now up to 40m, while the Patagotitan got reduced from 37m to 31m...
0:30 I was kind of expecting the Velociraptor to be around the same as the human because that’s what I noticed in the movie, since the creator of this video also did the movie version of the Spinosaurus being a little bigger than the Tyrannosaurus Rex.
Yeah the only danger from the sauropods would be environmental. Poor guys probably just starved to death in the post-Chixculub-impactor world. However, their huge carcasses probably provided food and shelter for generations of our tiny rodentlike ancestors. So, big thanks to the Sauro-bois.
What I learned through this video is that dinosaurs come in like 5 basic shapes, only the size varies 😅. Nature was like "okay, this type works, now let's see how big we can get it!"
8:02 From the next Jurassic Park movie: "WHAT THE HELL WAS THAT? IT JUST BIT THAT GUY'S HEAD OFF!" "That was an Irritator." "Well then, we better get outta here before the Aggravators and Exasperators show up!"
It is named after the city of Chongqing, in China. Chongqing has between 10 and 35 million people, depending on how you count. The name basically means "double celebration"
Out of all the questions I have about dinosaurs, the ones that baffle me the most is the giant sauropods and their food requirements. Did they eat non-stop? Was the plants they ate supercharged with nutrients? Assuming a family of them could clean out a forest in short order, were they nomadic and in constant search for new food sources?
they probably were nomadic. the t-rex had to eat around 300-500 kg of meat per day so i imagine big sauropods had to eat damn near an entire forest. and when they pooped, it probably fertilized the ground which resulted in forests being repopulated as they moved on
Usually with giant sauropod species there were far more juveniles than adults at any given time, like tortoises. Mature adults would’ve been a rare and likely solitary sight.
They aren't that much bigger than elephants, maybe 10x the mass.. and elephants do fine in dry parts of africa and asia. I lived in the tropics and it is amazing how fast things like papaya, banana and bamboo grow. Id be curious to know how many of them were alive at the same time..
@@tiffanypersaud3518 Actually studies figured out that from the Triassic to Cretaceous, it never exceeded the present. In fact, some points in time had noticeably less oxygen than today. The Triassic in particular. It’s why dinosaurs, including birds, even mutated air sacs to begin with. To take in as much oxygen per breath in a world a bit low on it.
This was cleverly done with a human walking by dinosaurs who mercifully were not hungry. The shadow work was fantastic and enhanced the size differences. Some of the large and long necked four-legged dinosaurs were incredible. I wonder how they managed to walk when they looked so top heavy, but they were able to walk well, it seems. I also loved the variety of colors and coat patterns depicted on various dinosaurs.
I think the modern thinking now is that these extremely large dinos had air sacks all throughout their necks, and weren't as heavy as we used to think.
As far as I’m aware we’ve discovered over 1000 different types of dinosaur and we believe there were probably about ten times as many species than the ones we’ve found
List of non-dinosaurs featured in this film: -Lystrosaurus @0:15 -Dimetrodon @2:05 -Prestosuchus @3:00 Also, some dinosaurs featured in this video are not valid genera (nomen dubium): -Troodon @1:07 -Stygimoloch @1:28 -Dracorex @1:51 -Monoclonius @3:29 -Nanotyrannus @4:10 -Seismosaurus @12:55 -Ultrasaurus @13:10 Also, I think you meant to say "Titanosaurus," because "Titanosaur" is a broad group of dinosaurs and not a specific genus (examples: Puertasaurus and Argentinosaurus are types of titanosaurs).
@@calonyoutuber1399, original 1993-2001 Jurassic Park trilogy contained Brachiosaurus (actually based on Giraffatitan like in most media in general) and largest Mamenchisaurus species M. sinocanadorum. Jurassic World trilogy added Apatosaurus and Dreadnoughtus.
I'm deeply impressed by the sheer number of dinosaurs (and other prehistoric animals) represented here. I know you probably didn't model them all individually, but it's still very impressive.
The sheer number of species (as I guess these are), meaning each species must have had a huge supporting population. Thank you, earth and time, for bending my brain...
We know that only a very small fraction of individuals are ever fossilized. So what we see illustrated here is but an infinitesimal part of the actual species numbers.
Well, I'm calling B.S. on this whole charade, cause I've personally walked down this same beach, and I've only spotted 11 or 12 of these dinosaur species hanging out there! 😊
Wish it would have stayed "zoomed" at a consistent level. The shifting distorted the video a bit. The last several were all approximately the same size give or take a meter or two but were made to appear radically different. Also, date ranges would have been an interesting addition. Several of these dinosaurs existed MILLIONS of years apart and never co-existed (let that sink in for time scale). Still loved the video. Amazing work! Thank YOU!
No I think it was done correctly. If it had been zoomed in from the beginning and stayed that way you wouldn't have seen how large the dinosaurs were at the end. And if it was zoomed out you wouldn't see the small dinosaurs at the beginning.
Crocodile still exist. Raptor dinosaurs are now birds or ostriches and so on 😃 try searching featherless birds or smith like that. Elephants exist, giraffes, zebras. Evolution buddy
FYI, the Lystrosaurus, the Dimetrodon and the Prestosuchus are not dinosaurs. The first two are stem mammals (the predecessors of mammals) and the last one is a reptile. Without getting too technical, basically all land-vertebrates used to kinda look like reptiles so paleonthologists classify them based on the shape of their bones (mainly their skulls and hips). You have to keep in mind that the classification of fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals only applies to modern animals. Stem mammals evolved into what we now know as mammals and dinosaurs evolved into what we now know as birds, which means that technically speaking, birds are still dinosaurs, which means that dinosaurs never went completely extinct. Also, in case you were wondering why aquatic or flying animals like the mesosaur, ichthyosaur or pterodactyl are not in here, is because they were not dinosaurs, they were reptiles. So this video was right not to include them.
The prestosuchus wasn’t terrible. They were genuinely kinda weird looking because we’re used to seeing therapods. I wish the creator had just included more synapsids and crocs and called it something other than “dinosaurs”. The dinocephalians and gorganopsids would have been neat to see, as well as the temnospondylids.
@@remigamer9920 Nope. The palaeontologists named it _Irritator challengeri_ because of the attempt to doctor the fossil that amateur fossil poachers had attempted to pass off as a fancier specimen. They had used a lot of plaster of Paris to fudge fake elements of the specimen, and it took a very long time for them to get rid of the fake parts and literally excavate the real fossil material from a mess of plaster. They had done that to it to make it more profitable to sell. The generic name (the genus name) 'Irritator' directly refers to the complicated and lengthy process of returning the fossil to a natural state. The fact that it was quickly established as a Spinosaur, was quite easy for the main palaeontologist involved, in question. It was less about trouble identifying the fossil specimen, more about the irritating mess literally plastered over the real fossil to make it sell better, that took a lot of time and effort to remove. The skull of Irritator is one of the most complete Spinosaurid skulls known. It was quickly apparently it was a Spinosaur, from the characteristics of Spinosaurs seen in Irritator (albeit with a more 'boxy' rostrum aka snout compared to a few other Spinosaurs) The specific (species) name, 'challengeri', refers to Professor Challenger, from Sir Arthur Conan-Doyle's, 'The Lost World'. _Irritator challengeri_ is from the Romualdo Formation, part of the Santana Group of several important Early Cretaceous formations in the region of North East Brazil it is found in. It is of the Albian Age, over 108 Ma. There are strata of Aptian Age (the age previous to the Albian) in the Santana Group as well, going over 115 Ma (the boundary between the Albian and the Aptian ages is currently observed at 113 Ma) Around this sort of time in the Early Cretaceous generally, Spinosaurids were doing very well for themselves and had already been thriving, evidently, since the first ages of the Cretaceous Period, the Berriasian and the Valanginian. They really got into their stride by the Hauterivian and especially the Barremian and then were already well-established over a very broad range, by the Aptian and Albian. _Baryonyx walkeri_ for example, lived during the late Hauterivian-late Barremian. The most famous (and perhaps largest) of them all, _Spinosaurus aegyptiacus_ itself, lived during the Cenomanian, after the Albian, for comparison (though it also lived into the Turonian, following the Cenomanian)
Greetings from Germany! I am really impressed by your presentation, I have to say! 😅 15 minutes of dinosaurs. I am a 40 year old working dude. But I grew up with Jurassic Park and my father was a biologist. So I thought I would already know many names of prehistoric species. But I was wrong. You have created some kind of virtual encyclopedia, I think! Really well done, and I enjoyed watching it!
I second that. On top of that I'm also 40, a dude, with work, from Germany. I think you found your demographic. My dad is not a biologist but let's not get nitpicky here.
There are more than 5000 species of mammal alive today; if you take all the dinosaur species that existed across the whole of their time it must have been many, many times more than 5000.
My favorite has always been triceratops. When I was younger, we went to the science center in St. Louis and I thought I touched a real fossil but as an adult, I’m sure it was a replica. But thinking that I touched a fossil really made me more interested in dinosaurs. In this video I got to see (I assume) the prototypes to the triceratops and that was super cool! I took screen shots so I can look them up! Great video!
В детстве у меня была книга с динозаврами. Я хорошо помню, что самым большим был диплодок. А самым красивым был саблезубый тигр, но это уже не динозавр. Чем динозавры отличаются от рептилий я так и не понял. Возможно тем что рептилии откладывают яйца, а динозавры живородящие.
This was almost spellbinding! Beautiful, straightforward presentation! I never imagined there were so many different ones!! How in the world do they figure out shapes and sizes from excavating bones? Thank you for this presentation!
I'm no scientist, but I wonder if some dinosaurs are mistakenly put together by archaeologists? Maybe a juvenile bone is mistakenly thought of as a new species? Or, sometimes only a bone or two is found, yet they construct a whole dinosaur is created? We now think of T.Rex as mostly horizontal, yet for a hundred years we thought they were mostly vertical. I'm just a bit skeptical how accurate presentations are when entire skeletons aren't found intact.
Don't forget that all these dinosaurers didn't live at the same time. Some evolved from others. This is a quote from American Museum of National History: "Estimates vary, but in terms of extinct non-avian dinosaurs, about 300 valid genera and roughly 700 valid species have been discovered and named. However, given that the fossil record is incomplete, in the sense that scientists have yet to discover fossils of other kinds of dinosaurs that no doubt existed, these numbers do not reflect the true diversity of extinct dinosaurs." Just think about how many different genres of cows lives today. It all adds up!
There's until now over a thousand dinosaur species known and named - some are known from only a tooth, or another bone fragment - *lots* of material is so fragmented, it never recieve a name at all, and are simply registered and stored. More and more are found each year, as more people are interested, more become paleontologists, and many poorer countries finally catch up, and little by little begin to contribute to the overall fossil record (often in poorer countries, educational partnerships are made with more wealthy nations, to find and describe fossils) To an expert, it truly takes only a passing glance at a fossil, to determine a rough size, because they know the typical proportions - and it terms of identification, you can come a long way with a couple of hip bones, some vertebrae - and if you got 20% of a skeleton, that's plenty to work with! A full skeleton or a skull warrants celebration!
This was extremely well done, but I have to think that a lot of those dinosaurs are sub species of one another. Too many look too much alike. Also, I didn't see any pterosaurs or underwater dinos like pleisiosaurs. And I thought the brontosaurus never existed! Still very well done!
11:15 spino was a semi-aquatic dinosaur that was very topheavy due to her sail, huge arms, and long head. she would have walked more akin to a duck walk with her long, paddle-like tail used to counterbalance! her sail could have been used for any number of things but my fave ideas are: more surface area to warm up in the morning sun; a canvas for BEAUTIFUL displays of color for sexual selection (!!!); simply to make them look bigger and less like a snack for other carnivores! like suchomimus and baryonyx, her beautiful long neck and jaws would have been perfectly suited for hunting in the shallows of rivers, swamps, tide pools, and even might have been able to snatch up small to medium sized terrestrial animals! my all time favorite fact about Spinosaurus is that we have never found a complete skeleton and, the fragments we have are pieced together from multiple specimens from various stages in their development. How big did spino truly get? How did her sail bones actually sit? Are we correct in thinking her bipedal, or did she walk similar to a gorilla on the backs of her hands? It is a massive shame that we got such a short amount of Spino time from JP!! The roars they gave her were haunting!!! ps: although hugely inaccurate, jp3 spino is my fave rendition of any dinosaur 🥰
@@wiman3332 because its annoying seeing people say things like "oOOhh!!1 tHis sPiNosAuruS mOdEl FrOm 2001 ISNT aCcuratE bEcAuSe iTz BiPedaL aNd HiS TaIL iSnt 82735 MeTerS tAlL!!!!1" for example and getting offended at dinosaurs with no feathers when they cant even know how a creature thats over 65+ million years old looked like
I love some of the sauropods at the end like "yeah, I might not be as tall as some of these guys, but I got a loooongggg ass tail , so I'm still technically bigger "
This video uses very outdated depictions though. We now know that dinosaur wrists would have faced inwards like when clapping, most of the dromeosaurs (popularily known as the raptors) would have a bird-like covering of feathers, ceratopsians should have quills on their tails, many of the "dinosaurs" shown are not actually dinosaurs, instead being synapsids, or close mammal relatives (like dimetrodon and lystrosaurus) as well as pseudosuchians, or close crocodile relatives (like prestosuchus and postosuchus), spinosaurus would have been more of a giant crocodile-stork hybrid instead of just a generic giant theropod with a sail, and most importantly argentinosaurus was not the longest dinosaur, but the heaviest (in science big mean heavy), the longest dinosaurs would be amphicelias
I loved this and watched till the very end which is unusual for me.I am quite obsessed with dinosaurs but never knew there are so many different types ! Of course in many cases the difference between some of them is very subtle. I was surprised that T Rex was not the largest .I also liked the music which I thought matched the images very well. All in all I enjoyed it very much so thank you for posting.
These kind must have had some advantages over other to survive. It looks like it's tail was used in water maybe the scary dinos couldn't catch it easily.
I'm here because I love Dinosaur, I know a lot about Dinosaur but now I know more, and In 11:17 the Soundtrack will really cool and epic. Thanks for this really, really beautiful video!
For a dinosaur comparison this december, i’d consider it 70% inaccurate. Most of the dinosaurs are basically based off of jurassic world (which is never accurate). They also have inaccurate postures like pronated wrists that dinosaurs can’t do, some small dinosaurs id call it featherless which is a HUGE minus. It makes me feel weirded out. Its still accurate for some.
El propósito de este video es mostrar el TAMAÑO de estos animales, por eso aunque se usen modelos de jurasic park, tienen su tamaño correspondiente Que tengan plumas, manos pronadas y demás es un error de apariencia no de tamaño
I think that's partly because of the arbitrary way that clades/groups of animals are categorised. Dinosaurs mostly have similar shapes because "being shaped like a dinosaur" is part of the job description. Reptiles that evolved wings were reclassified as pterosaurs or birds, and if they grew legs that came sideways out of their torsos and had long snouts with sharp teeth they were told to join the crocodilians. If you think five basic shapes is a bit limiting for a whole class of animals, spare a thought for rodents... or snakes.
Weirdly, I don't think I've ever been more intimidated by dinosaurs than I am watching this! The size comparison is incredible 😱They were big lads and lasses, weren't they??!!!
Yes, and amazingly you can see an animal bigger than any of these with your own eyes today. In fact, the largest blue whales weigh almost TWICE as much as the largest dinosaur here.
@@thealexanderbond Not really, I just looked it up, seemingly the excess weight of Argentinosaurus is 80-100 tons and for the blue whale 100-110 tons.
I was kind of expecting the Velociraptor to be around the same as the human because that’s what I noticed in the movie, since the creator of this video also did the movie version of the Spinosaurus being a little bigger than the Tyrannosaurus Rex.
Don't take this video as "accurate" please, this is trash. Most of the models are from jurrasic world like the velociraptor blue but downsized, some of the animals in this video weren't even dinosaurs and some of the sizes are redicilous.. I can go on a ramp abt how terrible this video is, for example: Nanotyrannus (4:12) is most likely not a valid species and actualy just being a juvenile t-rex / Even tho im happy that they showed dilophosaurus as accurately sized, its sad they kept the frill that is NOT accurate and just something jurrasic park put on the dilopho for not reason
Books only mention a few, so you don't get to know all of them. The Civil War has kind of the same problem. There were some smaller battles that were vital and more important to the outcome, but are never mentioned in books because they were not big. I saw dino names in this video I never saw before.
Its amazing to think that these creatures once roamed this planet. Btw, on a side note, I recently watched the trailer for the film “65” starring Adam Driver. A film about a pilot who finds himself transported back in time to the cretaceous period, 65 millions year ago. When I thought about the title, it came to mind that that signaled the end of the dinosaurs as a result of the comet hitting the earth. Now I’m interested in watching it.
@@javiergerula5645 like what? surface to air missles? lol thats what it would take. tanks?? they could literally crush a tank by stepping on it. you would hae to dig a huge hole for ithe dinosaur to fall into and that would be a biblical effort. and there wre dinosaurs all over. multiple copies running around looking for food (you). na.. I cant see how people culd have lived among them. but smaller dinosaurs prospered as well and Im sure they were on the menu.. so who knows.
@@ScreamingEagleFTW How exaggerated are you, as if dinosaurs were indestructible and made of steel... Tell me, have you seen too much Jurassic Park? You don't need missiles or tanks... In fact, do you know how many Joules an M 50 caliber has? At approximately 500 meters more than 18,000 joules. That would just make a dinosaur explode more if it hits it in the head, not to mention that there are different ammunitions like armor-piercing ammunition... They can go through even concrete walls and still hit the target. So don't exaggerate with tanks and missiles, this is not MARVEL.
Brilliant way to get an idea of these wondrous creatures in size compared to miniscule man. What always lurks in the back of my mind is that we have found so many different kinds. I am sure it was just a pinch of what really roamed the earth all those Eons ago. No wonder mamals had no chance until their demise. Excellent concept. Thank you.
Now, do another video with them in the time they lived. This is awesome! Gierlinski (1996, 1997, 1998) and Kundrát (2004) have interpreted traces between two footprints in this fossil as feather impressions from the belly of a squatting dilophosaurid.
A alguien más le dió ansiedad esperando que lleguen los dinos gigantes y cuando llegaron casi no nos dimos cuenta? Bien ahí el argentinosaurus para el final!!!🇦🇷
OK, why do people persist in calling such creatures as Dimetrodon and Lystrosaurus 'dinosaurs'? Both these animals are synapsids, not diapsids, let alone archosaurs. They're actually more closely related to us than they are any dinosaur! Someone either needs to change the title of this video to 'Prehistoric Creatures', or remove the anomalous entries!
@@mralberto5992 Tell that to people who don't know/care much about dinosaurs. Anything vaguely scaly or multi-millions of years into the past? Dinosaur.
Tuve la maravillosa oportunidad de observar el argentinosaurio en el museo de historia natural de Manhattan, no pude evitar que salieran lágrimas de mis ojos al imaginar dicho ser estando vivo…
shows you how heavy the blue whale can get when most blue whales are only 90 -111 feet in length but can get up to 190 tons, but most blue whales are around 100 tons , Argentinosaurus was only 80 tons but maybe Bruhathkayosaurus which is possibly the biggest and heaviest land animal ever got to around 90 tons not shown in the video
@@OttoMatieque As long as you do not disturb the animals (by getting too close for instance) you should be fine. Anyway, I doubt you will be suing me if I'm wrong.
Incredible to think about the amount of plant life that must have existed to feed these massive behemoths, the earth was truly paradise for dinosaurs for over 100 million years.
Estimates of the titanosaur's length and weight vary: length estimates range from 25 to 30.5 meters (82 to 100 feet), and weight estimates range from 60 to 75 metric tons (about 66 to 83 tons). It seems like a lot of the other dinosaurs as well, are not properly described, especially when the human is at the shoulder of the titanosaur at 10:56
I'd never heard of 80% of them. Have they actually found skeletons of all these creatures and how did they separate all of them. I would think a lot of those skeletons would look the same. I guess I should have said, "similar". Fantastic video.
A lot of these are found as partial skeletons (fossils). and reconstructions are largely based on close relatives. That being said, a lot of the models used for the video are outdated/and or simply wrong
Sadly is very speculative, you can do yourself a research of any dinosaur species you want in the web and I’m sure lot of different representations will show up, there’s just no way of knowing how exactly dinosaurs looked when they were alive.
Reconstructions are generally science-based. The actual research on individual fossils includes extremely detailed data collection, which is compared to fossils and other traces we already have. When placing a fossil organism into a phylogeny (family tree), they consider what period it came from, distinguishing morphologies, and how “derived” or “basal” its features are. Individual fossil specimens can be “articulated” using the same techniques that detectives use today to identify bodies that have been dead for many years. Missing pieces can be filled in to complete a skeleton if there’s a minimum number of bits available. That’s because vertebrates are “bilateral.” If you have a piece from one side, you can mirror it on the other. We know how skulls work in vertebrates, and need very few pieces to show a complete morphology. Ditto with pelvis systems. Speciation is kind of a wild west, to be sure. But paleontologists can easily tell if they’re looking at a synapsid (not a dino), a crocodilian (not a dino), a temnospondylid (not a dino), or a dinosaur. The dinosaurs lived in the longest stretch of largely uninterrupted evolutionary opportunity since terrestrial life emerged. So it’s not really surprising that there’s a huge variety within their various families.
I enjoyed the perhaps rather fanciful colorations on many, but was mostly struck by how SMALL the heads ( and mouths) were on the herbivores in relation to their size! How in the world did they ever manage to funnel enough nutrition into themselves to get that big and survive? They must have been eating constantly, & sleeping very little. And the vegetation must have been really nutrient packed, plus very efficiently digested! Makes you wonder just what sort of gut microbes they had. And just what benefit was derived from what seems to be abnormally long tails on some of them? How did they keep blood pressure high enough to raise and lower their heads on such very long necks without becoming unconscious? I have seen videos of male giraffes sparring with tremendously forceful sideways swings of the head; did some of these do that? Also, it's such a pity that aquatic specimens were not pictured - naturally, they'd have to appear to be floating in air, but it would have been wonderful! I may be an old lady now, but I am still as fascinated as when I was a dinosaur- crazy child... 😄
You can google "sauropods air bags" and find explanations on how they breath with such long necks. The only marine dinosaurs we know we know are birds. If you are thinking Marine reptiles, those are not even close cousins to dinosaurs, pterodactyls (flying ones) were kind close though
The creator included stem mammals, amphibians, stem squamates, and crocodilians, so they weren’t excluding non-terrestrials because of their not being any in the non-avian dinosaurs.
you mean its bullshit lol the fact that almost every one of these couldnt even walk is hilarious to me the are to front heavy to even be able to stand up tails should be wayyyyyyyyyyy bigger if this is even close to accurate. not to mention long neck dinos couldn not have existed with necks in the air they wouldn have kept them low to the ground as a counter balance to the giant tails its literally the only dino that really makes sense being able t move around just not how they have them configured they would have necks stretched out infront of them not up in the air
long neck dinos kept there heads to the ground bro its simple it couldnt work any other way long neck counters the long tail its the only way that works.also all big biped dinos likely had WAYYYYYYYYY larger tails as its needed to counter balance the wieght infront of the feet like a trex the way they have it looking is not possible for it to move it would land face first in the ground.
Actually, herbivore dinosaurs aren't deuterostoma like carnivore dinosaurs and like us. So while we eat with our mouths which are, biologically, our anuses, they can also eat with their anuses, which are really their anuses. Particularly Ouranosaurus.
if that park uses out of date models of the dinosaurs like if the velociraptor is the same size as the utahraptor, in not considering it as accurate one bit.
Interesting to see that most of them were not bigger than animals we have now,. The big size in metres just comes from a extremly long tail, and sometimes also long neck. The torso however is not bigger than a cow, elk, rhino and up to a elephant. Its only the last 10 or so when things get really crazy.
I never knew there were so many kinds of dinosaurs. Growing up all I ever heard of were Tyrannosaurus Rex, Brontosaurus, and Triceratops. Occasionally there were a few others in those bags of "100 Dinosaurs" that you didn't know the names of.
Over the hundreds of millions of years, there have been tens of thousands of species of dinosaur. There are about 10000 described bird species living today, all of which are dinosaurs.
Hatts off to the man who risked his life by walking across the dinosaurs just to show us the comparison!
Shut up, you’re only doing that for likes🤡
The most hilarious comment in every dino comparison
These are not real
@@hassaanahmad7453 the most original too
You do realize dinosaurs are not real dont you ?
0:02 Mei Long
0:05 Microceratops
0:09 Archaeoceratops
0:14 Lystrosaurus
0:17 Compsognathus
0:23 Sinosauropteryx
0:26 Oviraptor
0:31 Velociraptor
0:35 Protoceratops
0:39 Homalocephale
0:43 Lesothosaurus
0:47 Atrociraptor
0:50 Chirostenotes
0:55 Minmi
0:59 Hypsilophodon
1:03 Pyroraptor
1:06 Troodon
1:11 Coelurus
1:15 Unaysaurus
1:20 Zalmoxes
1:23 Herrerasaurus
1:28 Stygimoloch
1:32 Dryosaurus
1:36 Guanlong
1:41 Crichtonsaurus
1:45 Archaeornithomimus
1:51 Dracorex
1:55 Zuniceratops
1:59 Deinonychus
2:04 Dimetrodon
2:10 Ornithomimus
2:15 Struthiomimus
2:20 Fukuiraptor
2:26 Gigantspinosaurus
2:33 Einiosaurus
2:40 Huayangosaurus
2:48 Diabloceratops
2:54 Nasutoceratops
3:00 Prestosuchus
3:06 Aucasaurus
3:14 Chungkingosaurus
3:21 Polacanthus
3:29 Monoclonius
3:38 Pachycephalosaurus
3:48 Kentrosaurus
3:56 Chasmosaurus
4:03 Regaliceratops
4:10 Nanotyrannus
4:18 Sauropelta
4:29 Monolophosaurus
4:39 Styracosaurus
4:50 Scolosaurus
4:58 Gallimimus
5:06 Centrosaurus
5:16 Euoplocephalus
5:25 Austroraptor
5:34 Dilophosaurus
5:42 Ceratosaurus
5:49 Alioramus
6:00 Australovenator
6:08 Qianzhousaurus
6:16 Cryolophosaurus
6:24 Ankylosaurus
6:33 Wuerhosaurus
6:41 Torosaurus
6:50 Muttaburrasaurus
6:57 Tuojiangosaurus
7:07 Abelisaurus
7:12 Sinraptor
7:21 Pentaceratops
7:28 Majungasaurus
7:38 Metriacanthosaurus
7:47 Tenontosaurus
7:55 Carnotaurus
8:03 Irritator
8:09 Pachyrhinosaurus
8:14 Ouranosaurus
8:19 Allosaurus
8:24 Triceratops
8:29 Megalosaurus
8:35 Stegosaurus
8:41 Gorgosaurus
8:49 Baryonyx
8:52 Maiasuara
8:56 Nigersaurus
9:02 Daspletosaurus
9:06 Albertosaurus
9:11 Lambeosaurus
9:17 Parasaurolophus
9:22 Shunosaurus
9:26 Corythosaurus
9:32 Amargasaurus
9:37 Riojasaurus
9:41 Therizinosaurus
9:47 Iguanodon
9:56 Tsintaosaurus
10:02 Suchomimus
10:09 Yangchuanosaurus
10:17 Deinocheirus
10:22 Acrocanthosaurus
10:28 Olorotitan
10:35 Saurolophus
10:43 Edmontosauras
10:50 Tarbosaurus
10:56 Titanosaur
11:00 Giganotosaurus
11:05 Tyrannosaurus
11:11 Carcharodontosaurus
11:15 Spinosaurus
11:23 Shantungosaurus
11:33 Mamenchisaurus
11:44 Brontosaurus
11:54 Camarasaurus
12:05 Apatosaurus
12:16 Diplodocus
12:29 Brachiosaurus
12:43 Alamosaurus
12:56 Seismosaurus
13:10 Ultrasaurus
13:28 Supersaurus
13:45 Sauroposeidon
14:06 Puertasaurus
14:34 Argentinosaurus
I was wondering if someone had typed this 😂
therizinosaurus mentioned
got a life, my man?
Bruhthkayosaurus: 😢
woah man you have a lot of time I guess
For those wondering, the velociraptors in Jurassic Park were actually based on deinonychus. The names were swapped because "You bred raptors?" sounded better than "You bred deinonychuses?" or worse, "deinonychi?"
My whole childhood has been a scam. In fact considering I’m 30 and only just finding this out…my whole life has been a scam 😂
I think those velociraptors were utharaptors which were not shown in this video
That plural is brutal
@@sudiptadey8070Utahraptors were actually much larger than humans
@Ponanoix Yes but so are the "velociraptors" in Jurassic Park. They are closer to Utaraptor size
As a 5’7” man, this is a documentary of walking in public
Depends where you live bud, I'm also a 5'7" man and when I visit Rivera Maya in Mexico I feel like I'm a 6'2" tall man
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Honestly it's the true middle height where you can go to one country and be tiny and another and feel tall.
@@Jim-Mc The average Hispanic height is even slightly below that.
Okhey 🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡
It would have been fascinating to hear what the world sounded like back then. Birds of today make quite a bit of sound, it must have been unbelievable back then with the size of some of the creatures.
What's even more astonishing to think about is that if some birds can mimic human speech, then maybe some prehistoric dinosaurs could of also had that potential (if we were around to reach them words back then)?
What's there to say a giant Tyrannosaurus couldn't say "hello" like Parrot? Or a Stegosaurus being capable of doing a close imitation of a car burglar alarm like the Lyer bird?
It would've been even more fascinating to choke on the excrement stench released by the huge herbivore dinosaurs, who were constantly eating and excreting huge quantities of shit and gas, all accompanied by the ear-splitting shrieks of the raptors and their prey.
They all sounded like squeaky toys. A small few sounded like tricycle squeeze horns.
@@rayfabian9488 Obviously a Comedy Writing degree grad from Trump University.
The Spinosaurus looked like something out of a horror movie. I'm glad I wasn't around back then. 😮😵
I bet the dinosaurs were way more colorful than we thought. Imagine only knowing about a peacock by discovering its skeleton.
Most of them were bird-like creatures having wings and feathers. It was proved a few years back, but still many people fail to acknowledge that
My thoughts exactly.
So real I want my bright green and blue dinosaurs please😭🙏🙏
@@tusharjhakra8347 even non-dinosaurs like pterosaurs had some sort of fur or primitive feathering. so this must have been a trait that preceded both of them.
@@tusharjhakra8347 I was just gonna add most sauropods were probably not that far off jp depictions. theropods otoh...
It's remarkable that some dinosaurs existed closer to the time of humans than to earlier dinosaurs!
Like stegosaurus to rex
Dinosaurs are fake...they NEVER existed!
It's remarkable that Cleopatra is closer to our time than to the time of the pyramids.
What dinosaurs?
Dinosaurs are mentioned in the Bible. "Leviathan," in the book of Job, he mentions that "his tail is as big as a cedar tree." Elephants' tails aren't big at all. Just an FYI -
This video is just making me realize how much I need to brush up on my dino knowledge. So many new ones discovered since I was a kid
Same here ! As a kid, I thought I was already an expert lol
And so many new sizes compared to then and now, if you believe the scientists ^^
Even the Argentinosaurus in the video was earlier about 30m and now up to 40m, while the Patagotitan got reduced from 37m to 31m...
This film is filled with false information and outdated images of dinosaurs. Literally most of the models are from 15 and sometimes over 20 years ago.
So many new rocks were discovered and exposed at the natural history museum 😢
8:24 triceratops, 8:34 estegosaurio, 11:05 t-rex, 11:41 brontosaurio 12:14 diplodocus 14:43 argentino saurio
I liked how as he started walking toward the larger dinosaurs, the music got more sinister.
0:30 I was kind of expecting the Velociraptor to be around the same as the human because that’s what I noticed in the movie, since the creator of this video also did the movie version of the Spinosaurus being a little bigger than the Tyrannosaurus Rex.
😂
Yeah but the larger they are they were simple vegetarian..
@@justforfun6376 True, but they could still squash us like a bug.
Yeah the only danger from the sauropods would be environmental. Poor guys probably just starved to death in the post-Chixculub-impactor world.
However, their huge carcasses probably provided food and shelter for generations of our tiny rodentlike ancestors. So, big thanks to the Sauro-bois.
What I learned through this video is that dinosaurs come in like 5 basic shapes, only the size varies 😅. Nature was like "okay, this type works, now let's see how big we can get it!"
And that's how you know the whole thing is hogwash
what did you expect? Creatures with 5 legs and 2 heads?
except for that the theory of evolution is fake
@@malawigwConsidering the strange and unique creatures we have today, yes
@@malawigw calm down bro
8:02 From the next Jurassic Park movie:
"WHAT THE HELL WAS THAT? IT JUST BIT THAT GUY'S HEAD OFF!"
"That was an Irritator."
"Well then, we better get outta here before the Aggravators and Exasperators show up!"
Underrated comment! Love it 😂😂😂
Lmao
2024?!
3:16 Whoever named this dinosaur the Chungkingosaurus is a legend.
Its diet consisted mainly of prehistoric Chop Suey.
Prolly eat noodles
It is named after the city of Chongqing, in China.
Chongqing has between 10 and 35 million people, depending on how you count. The name basically means "double celebration"
same with 8:56
They called it that because it went well in a stir-fry.
Out of all the questions I have about dinosaurs, the ones that baffle me the most is the giant sauropods and their food requirements. Did they eat non-stop? Was the plants they ate supercharged with nutrients? Assuming a family of them could clean out a forest in short order, were they nomadic and in constant search for new food sources?
they probably were nomadic. the t-rex had to eat around 300-500 kg of meat per day so i imagine big sauropods had to eat damn near an entire forest. and when they pooped, it probably fertilized the ground which resulted in forests being repopulated as they moved on
Usually with giant sauropod species there were far more juveniles than adults at any given time, like tortoises. Mature adults would’ve been a rare and likely solitary sight.
They lived in a time when the earth’s atmosphere was supercharged with Oxygen. So the forests were far lusher.
They aren't that much bigger than elephants, maybe 10x the mass.. and elephants do fine in dry parts of africa and asia. I lived in the tropics and it is amazing how fast things like papaya, banana and bamboo grow. Id be curious to know how many of them were alive at the same time..
@@tiffanypersaud3518 Actually studies figured out that from the Triassic to Cretaceous, it never exceeded the present. In fact, some points in time had noticeably less oxygen than today. The Triassic in particular. It’s why dinosaurs, including birds, even mutated air sacs to begin with. To take in as much oxygen per breath in a world a bit low on it.
This was cleverly done with a human walking by dinosaurs who mercifully were not hungry. The shadow work was fantastic and enhanced the size differences. Some of the large and long necked four-legged dinosaurs were incredible. I wonder how they managed to walk when they looked so top heavy, but they were able to walk well, it seems. I also loved the variety of colors and coat patterns depicted on various dinosaurs.
I think the modern thinking now is that these extremely large dinos had air sacks all throughout their necks, and weren't as heavy as we used to think.
@@CobrettiKai That is fascinating! Thanks for sharing the info.
probably spent most of their time in the water
@@twasbrillig33 no that is what they used to think but its proven wrong
But he forgot to list the gay dinosaur, Saurassus.
Honestly I never knew there were so many different dinosaurs 🦕. Fascinating.
As far as I’m aware we’ve discovered over 1000 different types of dinosaur and we believe there were probably about ten times as many species than the ones we’ve found
@@SSRDezmondia We've discovered about 700 but there's been 4 new genera named in the last 2 months so that goes to show how quick the roster grows.
List of non-dinosaurs featured in this film:
-Lystrosaurus @0:15
-Dimetrodon @2:05
-Prestosuchus @3:00
Also, some dinosaurs featured in this video are not valid genera (nomen dubium):
-Troodon @1:07
-Stygimoloch @1:28
-Dracorex @1:51
-Monoclonius @3:29
-Nanotyrannus @4:10
-Seismosaurus @12:55
-Ultrasaurus @13:10
Also, I think you meant to say "Titanosaurus," because "Titanosaur" is a broad group of dinosaurs and not a specific genus (examples: Puertasaurus and Argentinosaurus are types of titanosaurs).
Whats the name of long neck dino we saw at the latest jurrasic movies ?
@@calonyoutuber1399 Diplodocus I think
@@JA3dwards not likely, because i will remembered
@@calonyoutuber1399, original 1993-2001 Jurassic Park trilogy contained Brachiosaurus (actually based on Giraffatitan like in most media in general) and largest Mamenchisaurus species M. sinocanadorum. Jurassic World trilogy added Apatosaurus and Dreadnoughtus.
@@godzee0362 ah yes dreadnoughtus .. yes sir.
These size comparisons vids NEVER cease to amaze me!
Im shock that some of them are smaller than I expected, thought the VRaptor was way bigger
This is my first one
0:04 I love how the first dinosaur on the list is called Mei Long. Like he's trying to over compensate for something.
I think it means "beautiful dragon" ("long" being the Chinese equivalent of the Greek "sauros" or "lizard")
@@jaimel88 ever heard of jokes?
@@insanecuckooman8342 jokes are supposed to be funny
"Long" means "dragon" in Chinese
I got that the other night from 'China Delight', the take-away restaurant near my house. It came with rice.
I'm glad to see that you showed the real size of velociraptor, in movies they're show as big as a human but in reality they were pretty small
The jp and jw Raptors are based of of utahraptors
@@anchorking7621 Make it a deinoychus
@@samienrayleighdesuyo7668 Utah Raptors are 6 feet tall
I'm deeply impressed by the sheer number of dinosaurs (and other prehistoric animals) represented here. I know you probably didn't model them all individually, but it's still very impressive.
The sheer number of species (as I guess these are), meaning each species must have had a huge supporting population. Thank you, earth and time, for bending my brain...
considering a lot of the models were ripped from the jp/jw franchise i highly doubt they did their own modeling
We know that only a very small fraction of individuals are ever fossilized. So what we see illustrated here is but an infinitesimal part of the actual species numbers.
Well, I'm calling B.S. on this whole charade, cause I've personally walked down this same beach, and I've only spotted 11 or 12 of these dinosaur species hanging out there! 😊
@@HighlanderNorth1 They are all on that freaking dinosaur train my granddaughter is always watching...
Wish it would have stayed "zoomed" at a consistent level. The shifting distorted the video a bit. The last several were all approximately the same size give or take a meter or two but were made to appear radically different. Also, date ranges would have been an interesting addition. Several of these dinosaurs existed MILLIONS of years apart and never co-existed (let that sink in for time scale). Still loved the video. Amazing work! Thank YOU!
No I think it was done correctly. If it had been zoomed in from the beginning and stayed that way you wouldn't have seen how large the dinosaurs were at the end. And if it was zoomed out you wouldn't see the small dinosaurs at the beginning.
yep. that was done by design to illustrate full scale in comparison to the size of our fellow there..
No that had to be done to show the dinosaurs... that's precisley the point
Props to that human casually walking past every dinosaur as each one freezes up in fear!
Difficult to believe such creatures ever existed when you see todays animals
Crocodile still exist. Raptor dinosaurs are now birds or ostriches and so on 😃 try searching featherless birds or smith like that.
Elephants exist, giraffes, zebras. Evolution buddy
@@magistermilitum1206
The biggest earth creature we have is the elephant, then it was argentinosaurus, can't compared.
FYI, the Lystrosaurus, the Dimetrodon and the Prestosuchus are not dinosaurs. The first two are stem mammals (the predecessors of mammals) and the last one is a reptile. Without getting too technical, basically all land-vertebrates used to kinda look like reptiles so paleonthologists classify them based on the shape of their bones (mainly their skulls and hips). You have to keep in mind that the classification of fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals only applies to modern animals. Stem mammals evolved into what we now know as mammals and dinosaurs evolved into what we now know as birds, which means that technically speaking, birds are still dinosaurs, which means that dinosaurs never went completely extinct.
Also, in case you were wondering why aquatic or flying animals like the mesosaur, ichthyosaur or pterodactyl are not in here, is because they were not dinosaurs, they were reptiles. So this video was right not to include them.
Also, the Prestosuchus in the video looks like someting a child would draw when urged to draw a dinosaur.
The prestosuchus wasn’t terrible. They were genuinely kinda weird looking because we’re used to seeing therapods.
I wish the creator had just included more synapsids and crocs and called it something other than “dinosaurs”. The dinocephalians and gorganopsids would have been neat to see, as well as the temnospondylids.
Hererrasaurus also was not a true dinosaur, it evolved from a side branch of the family tree.
Dinosaurs are reptiles too.
I hate a know it all 🤢
Imagine a dinosaur so annoying they named him "Irritator"😂.
The scientists named it irritator because it was so frustrating trying to figure out what kind of dinosaur it was 😂
@@remigamer9920 Nope. The palaeontologists named it _Irritator challengeri_ because of the attempt to doctor the fossil that amateur fossil poachers had attempted to pass off as a fancier specimen. They had used a lot of plaster of Paris to fudge fake elements of the specimen, and it took a very long time for them to get rid of the fake parts and literally excavate the real fossil material from a mess of plaster. They had done that to it to make it more profitable to sell.
The generic name (the genus name) 'Irritator' directly refers to the complicated and lengthy process of returning the fossil to a natural state. The fact that it was quickly established as a Spinosaur, was quite easy for the main palaeontologist involved, in question. It was less about trouble identifying the fossil specimen, more about the irritating mess literally plastered over the real fossil to make it sell better, that took a lot of time and effort to remove. The skull of Irritator is one of the most complete Spinosaurid skulls known. It was quickly apparently it was a Spinosaur, from the characteristics of Spinosaurs seen in Irritator (albeit with a more 'boxy' rostrum aka snout compared to a few other Spinosaurs)
The specific (species) name, 'challengeri', refers to Professor Challenger, from Sir Arthur Conan-Doyle's, 'The Lost World'. _Irritator challengeri_ is from the Romualdo Formation, part of the Santana Group of several important Early Cretaceous formations in the region of North East Brazil it is found in. It is of the Albian Age, over 108 Ma. There are strata of Aptian Age (the age previous to the Albian) in the Santana Group as well, going over 115 Ma (the boundary between the Albian and the Aptian ages is currently observed at 113 Ma)
Around this sort of time in the Early Cretaceous generally, Spinosaurids were doing very well for themselves and had already been thriving, evidently, since the first ages of the Cretaceous Period, the Berriasian and the Valanginian. They really got into their stride by the Hauterivian and especially the Barremian and then were already well-established over a very broad range, by the Aptian and Albian. _Baryonyx walkeri_ for example, lived during the late Hauterivian-late Barremian. The most famous (and perhaps largest) of them all, _Spinosaurus aegyptiacus_ itself, lived during the Cenomanian, after the Albian, for comparison (though it also lived into the Turonian, following the Cenomanian)
@@remigamer9920
And the fossils they found of it were so fragmented that it was difficult putting the puzzle back together properly.
It gets better, the second part of it’s scientific name is “challengeri”
Actually the woopigoldbergaurus was originally named the irritator until she came along.
Greetings from Germany! I am really impressed by your presentation, I have to say! 😅 15 minutes of dinosaurs. I am a 40 year old working dude. But I grew up with Jurassic Park and my father was a biologist. So I thought I would already know many names of prehistoric species. But I was wrong. You have created some kind of virtual encyclopedia, I think! Really well done, and I enjoyed watching it!
Wow, thank you.
I second that. On top of that I'm also 40, a dude, with work, from Germany. I think you found your demographic. My dad is not a biologist but let's not get nitpicky here.
Man: "Dinosaurs are all gone. People number in the billions!"
Dinosaurs: "Yeah, that's why we decided to go extinct!"
Awesome video! Loved the detail plus the “shadow effect”. I didn’t know there was so many types!
... ditto same here.
There are more than 5000 species of mammal alive today; if you take all the dinosaur species that existed across the whole of their time it must have been many, many times more than 5000.
My favorite has always been triceratops. When I was younger, we went to the science center in St. Louis and I thought I touched a real fossil but as an adult, I’m sure it was a replica. But thinking that I touched a fossil really made me more interested in dinosaurs. In this video I got to see (I assume) the prototypes to the triceratops and that was super cool! I took screen shots so I can look them up! Great video!
When I was a kid there were two kinds of people: Triceratops fans and T-Rex fans. I was Team Triceratops! 🤣
В детстве у меня была книга с динозаврами. Я хорошо помню, что самым большим был диплодок. А самым красивым был саблезубый тигр, но это уже не динозавр.
Чем динозавры отличаются от рептилий я так и не понял. Возможно тем что рептилии откладывают яйца, а динозавры живородящие.
@@LeeBrasher I was a Stegosaurus fan myself.
@@ОльгаЯркеева-у4т I see what you mean....
@@kenb2671 Thagomizer for the win!
This was almost spellbinding! Beautiful, straightforward presentation! I never imagined there were so many different ones!! How in the world do they figure out shapes and sizes from excavating bones? Thank you for this presentation!
I'm no scientist, but I wonder if some dinosaurs are mistakenly put together by archaeologists? Maybe a juvenile bone is mistakenly thought of as a new species? Or, sometimes only a bone or two is found, yet they construct a whole dinosaur is created? We now think of T.Rex as mostly horizontal, yet for a hundred years we thought they were mostly vertical. I'm just a bit skeptical how accurate presentations are when entire skeletons aren't found intact.
Don't forget that all these dinosaurers didn't live at the same time. Some evolved from others.
This is a quote from American Museum of National History:
"Estimates vary, but in terms of extinct non-avian dinosaurs, about 300 valid genera and roughly 700 valid species have been discovered and named. However, given that the fossil record is incomplete, in the sense that scientists have yet to discover fossils of other kinds of dinosaurs that no doubt existed, these numbers do not reflect the true diversity of extinct dinosaurs."
Just think about how many different genres of cows lives today. It all adds up!
You do know that dinosaurs are a hoax created by Hollywood?
@@akyhne I can't believe people are dumb enough to believe in dinosaurs. How would they even fit in Noah's ark?
There's until now over a thousand dinosaur species known and named - some are known from only a tooth, or another bone fragment - *lots* of material is so fragmented, it never recieve a name at all, and are simply registered and stored.
More and more are found each year, as more people are interested, more become paleontologists, and many poorer countries finally catch up, and little by little begin to contribute to the overall fossil record (often in poorer countries, educational partnerships are made with more wealthy nations, to find and describe fossils)
To an expert, it truly takes only a passing glance at a fossil, to determine a rough size, because they know the typical proportions - and it terms of identification, you can come a long way with a couple of hip bones, some vertebrae - and if you got 20% of a skeleton, that's plenty to work with! A full skeleton or a skull warrants celebration!
This was extremely well done, but I have to think that a lot of those dinosaurs are sub species of one another. Too many look too much alike.
Also, I didn't see any pterosaurs or underwater dinos like pleisiosaurs.
And I thought the brontosaurus never existed!
Still very well done!
11:15 spino was a semi-aquatic dinosaur that was very topheavy due to her sail, huge arms, and long head. she would have walked more akin to a duck walk with her long, paddle-like tail used to counterbalance! her sail could have been used for any number of things but my fave ideas are: more surface area to warm up in the morning sun; a canvas for BEAUTIFUL displays of color for sexual selection (!!!); simply to make them look bigger and less like a snack for other carnivores! like suchomimus and baryonyx, her beautiful long neck and jaws would have been perfectly suited for hunting in the shallows of rivers, swamps, tide pools, and even might have been able to snatch up small to medium sized terrestrial animals! my all time favorite fact about Spinosaurus is that we have never found a complete skeleton and, the fragments we have are pieced together from multiple specimens from various stages in their development. How big did spino truly get? How did her sail bones actually sit? Are we correct in thinking her bipedal, or did she walk similar to a gorilla on the backs of her hands? It is a massive shame that we got such a short amount of Spino time from JP!! The roars they gave her were haunting!!!
ps: although hugely inaccurate, jp3 spino is my fave rendition of any dinosaur 🥰
Hey wanna know something? All dinosaurs arent girls you brainless idiot.
the "inaccurate" versions look cooler
@@elman02 why did you quote inaccurate?
@@wiman3332 because its annoying seeing people say things like "oOOhh!!1 tHis sPiNosAuruS mOdEl FrOm 2001 ISNT aCcuratE bEcAuSe iTz BiPedaL aNd HiS TaIL iSnt 82735 MeTerS tAlL!!!!1" for example and getting offended at dinosaurs with no feathers when they cant even know how a creature thats over 65+ million years old looked like
@@elman02wrong we know what a lot of dinosaurs look like and spinosaurus is bipedal so n o
6:01 when you let Doofenshmirtz name a dinosaur.
0:14 Leonard
0:30 Blue
0:47 Ghost
0:29 Stiggy
3:40 Friar Tuck
3:50 Pierce
4:40 Eema
6:25 Bumpy
7:55 Demon
8:10 Patchi
8:25 Trixie
8:35 Claire
8:50 D-27
9:17 Elvis
9:47 Aladar
11:00 Zeb
11:05 Rexy
11:15 Asset 87
12:05 Henry
12:30 Baylene
Aree elvish bhai ke aage koi bol sakta hai kya.....😂😂😂
@mikecollon100 I've never seen this dino.
@@sonirasiklal What?
7:55 is toro
Forgot 69:42 vnjkfnfv
Wow cool dinosaurs 🦖🦕
14:47 el dinosaurio "heeee cuánta copa tenés" 😂
😂😂😂 este bro 😂
@@JulioHs27 ajajaja un argentino hizo el video xDDDD. argentinosaurus campeon xD
@@michaelgalvez8668 PENAAAAL PARA ARGENTINOSAURUUUUS XDXD
I love some of the sauropods at the end like "yeah, I might not be as tall as some of these guys, but I got a loooongggg ass tail , so I'm still technically bigger "
Actually, bigger means heavier in science, so no, they are not bigger
Hmm. A lot of the sizes of Jurassic World dinos are bloated than what the real sizes are in life. This was quite educational.
This video uses very outdated depictions though. We now know that dinosaur wrists would have faced inwards like when clapping, most of the dromeosaurs (popularily known as the raptors) would have a bird-like covering of feathers, ceratopsians should have quills on their tails, many of the "dinosaurs" shown are not actually dinosaurs, instead being synapsids, or close mammal relatives (like dimetrodon and lystrosaurus) as well as pseudosuchians, or close crocodile relatives (like prestosuchus and postosuchus), spinosaurus would have been more of a giant crocodile-stork hybrid instead of just a generic giant theropod with a sail, and most importantly argentinosaurus was not the longest dinosaur, but the heaviest (in science big mean heavy), the longest dinosaurs would be amphicelias
Can you take me along on your next time machine ride so i can see the actual size too?
A fact : the dimetrodon is not a dinosaur
This is an Awesome documentary about Dinosaurs! 🦕 I think Dinosaurs 🦕 are very interesting! I really enjoyed this video about Dinosaurs 🦕
Imagine being remembered as the "Irritator".😅
Jokes apart..
Really cool video!!!!😮
I loved this and watched till the very end which is unusual for me.I am quite obsessed with dinosaurs but never knew there are so many different types ! Of course in many cases the difference between some of them is very subtle. I was surprised that T Rex was not the largest .I also liked the music which I thought matched the images very well. All in all I enjoyed it very much so thank you for posting.
8:55 Ah yes, my favorite dinosaur 👴
Niger 🤣🤣🤣
Hahaha
That dino had such a hard life with all the systemic racism it experienced from the other dinos. Luckily it got equality at the end!
One of the first dinosaurs to be cancelled by the Wokeratops
These kind must have had some advantages over other to survive. It looks like it's tail was used in water maybe the scary dinos couldn't catch it easily.
I'm here because I love Dinosaur, I know a lot about Dinosaur but now I know more, and In 11:17 the Soundtrack will really cool and epic. Thanks for this really, really beautiful video!
Thank you for showing sizes in both US customary and metrics! After all, this is a global forum!
Excelente video, muy descriptivo y didáctico. 😉👏🇦🇷
For a dinosaur comparison this december, i’d consider it 70% inaccurate. Most of the dinosaurs are basically based off of jurassic world (which is never accurate). They also have inaccurate postures like pronated wrists that dinosaurs can’t do, some small dinosaurs id call it featherless which is a HUGE minus. It makes me feel weirded out. Its still accurate for some.
FR FR
…and the Riojasaurus - a relative to the Plateosaurus - looks like an Iguanodon 🤔
Not to mention that the video included non-dinosaurs, such as Lystrosaurus.
I don’t blame you, a lot of dinosaur designs are really inaccurate
El propósito de este video es mostrar el TAMAÑO de estos animales, por eso aunque se usen modelos de jurasic park, tienen su tamaño correspondiente
Que tengan plumas, manos pronadas y demás es un error de apariencia no de tamaño
Its cool to see how big dinosaurs actually were and that the biggest creatures to ever exist are still around now. Just amazing to think about.
Recent studies have talked about a Titanosaur that was somewhere around 90-130 tons - so potentially even more massive than a Blue Whale
@@DakotaofRaptorsthe whake is the biggest ever. Facts with evidence.
It’s interesting to see how the dinos only seem to come in 5 or 6 different shapes and just scaled from small to gigantic.
I noticed the same thing. Makes me wonder how many of these are distinct species as opposed to different specimens.
Exactly what I was thinking. Maybe these shapes is what peak performance looks like given the prehistoric context?
I think that's partly because of the arbitrary way that clades/groups of animals are categorised. Dinosaurs mostly have similar shapes because "being shaped like a dinosaur" is part of the job description. Reptiles that evolved wings were reclassified as pterosaurs or birds, and if they grew legs that came sideways out of their torsos and had long snouts with sharp teeth they were told to join the crocodilians.
If you think five basic shapes is a bit limiting for a whole class of animals, spare a thought for rodents... or snakes.
And only a few colours as well
@@AutPen38 Super well presented, bud. 👍
I was about to answer this comment, but you removed the need.
Good on ya for helping out!
Weirdly, I don't think I've ever been more intimidated by dinosaurs than I am watching this! The size comparison is incredible 😱They were big lads and lasses, weren't they??!!!
Yes, and amazingly you can see an animal bigger than any of these with your own eyes today.
In fact, the largest blue whales weigh almost TWICE as much as the largest dinosaur here.
@@thealexanderbond Not really, I just looked it up, seemingly the excess weight of Argentinosaurus is 80-100 tons and for the blue whale 100-110 tons.
My favorites:
(0:18): Compsognathus
(0:30): Velociraptor
(1:28): Stygimoloch
(4:57): Gallimimus
(5:32): Dilophosaurus
(6:23): Ankylosaurus
(7:54): Carnotaurus
(8:08): Pachyrhinosaurus
(8:23): Triceratops
(8:33): Stegosaurus
(9:15): Parasaurolophus
(10:59): Giganotosaurus
(11:04): Tyrannosaurus
(11:13): Spinosaurus
(12:27): Brachiosaurus
(13:06): Ultrasaurus
I was kind of expecting the Velociraptor to be around the same as the human because that’s what I noticed in the movie, since the creator of this video also did the movie version of the Spinosaurus being a little bigger than the Tyrannosaurus Rex.
Bahh
@@arcticangel1628 the real Velociraptor was actually 4 feet tall about 11 feet long and feathered
and is anyone going to acknowledge how bad the proto looks?
Thanks
Great video. This had to have taken a lot of work. Much appreciated!
Наконец-то хоть до кого то дошло сравнить их с человеком 👍😁
14:27 MUCHAAAAACHOOOOOS 🇦🇷❤
Yes, I know that a few non-dinos slipped through here, but overall a fascinating and beautifully produced video.
They're all fictional
Pretty sure a lot of these dinosaurs have their sizes exaggerated. Still cool to see the variety and comparisons.
Sauroposeidon is the coolest name I've ever heard 😭 Also Irritator is a badass name. Ultra and Supersaurus too.
The music is everything !!!
Loved the video
Fascinating to see exactly how various the many species were and how something the size of a human would appear amidst them. Thank you for the video!
Don't take this video as "accurate" please, this is trash. Most of the models are from jurrasic world like the velociraptor blue but downsized, some of the animals in this video weren't even dinosaurs and some of the sizes are redicilous.. I can go on a ramp abt how terrible this video is, for example: Nanotyrannus (4:12) is most likely not a valid species and actualy just being a juvenile t-rex / Even tho im happy that they showed dilophosaurus as accurately sized, its sad they kept the frill that is NOT accurate and just something jurrasic park put on the dilopho for not reason
Am i the only one who loves dinosaurs but knows only 1 % of them
yeah because there are more than 700 dinosaur species found till date
Me too❤ lol
There's no need knowing all of them
🙋🏻♀️
Books only mention a few, so you don't get to know all of them. The Civil War has kind of the same problem. There were some smaller battles that were vital and more important to the outcome, but are never mentioned in books because they were not big. I saw dino names in this video I never saw before.
Its amazing to think that these creatures once roamed this planet. Btw, on a side note, I recently watched the trailer for the film “65” starring Adam Driver. A film about a pilot who finds himself transported back in time to the cretaceous period, 65 millions year ago. When I thought about the title, it came to mind that that signaled the end of the dinosaurs as a result of the comet hitting the earth. Now I’m interested in watching it.
Technically, they still do. But these days they're very small and we call them birds. :)
"65" is cheesy.
@@scouncil2028 Yeah, It left me disappointed.
Excellent presentation! Absolutely stunning to see just how massive some of these were. Humans would have been a mcnugget to a a T-Rex!
lmao nahh.. knowing us they’d probably be extinct by now after we kill them all for food, clothing & oil
Yeah... But I think with the weapons we have now, they'd be a cake for us too.
@@javiergerula5645 humans wouldn't survive long enough to make weapons to kill t-rex and It would be to big to just carry around.
@@javiergerula5645 like what? surface to air missles? lol thats what it would take. tanks?? they could literally crush a tank by stepping on it. you would hae to dig a huge hole for ithe dinosaur to fall into and that would be a biblical effort. and there wre dinosaurs all over. multiple copies running around looking for food (you). na.. I cant see how people culd have lived among them. but smaller dinosaurs prospered as well and Im sure they were on the menu.. so who knows.
@@ScreamingEagleFTW How exaggerated are you, as if dinosaurs were indestructible and made of steel... Tell me, have you seen too much Jurassic Park? You don't need missiles or tanks... In fact, do you know how many Joules an M 50 caliber has? At approximately 500 meters more than 18,000 joules. That would just make a dinosaur explode more if it hits it in the head, not to mention that there are different ammunitions like armor-piercing ammunition... They can go through even concrete walls and still hit the target. So don't exaggerate with tanks and missiles, this is not MARVEL.
Great presentation! It took a minute before I realized the man was getting smaller. I never imagined the variety but also the similarities.
Came here for Triceratops and stayed for the music. Fantastic work, putting this together! Thanks a lot!
how terrifying walking for 15mins can be:
Gran animacion Fabuloso, muy buen video. Encima enceñandonos todas las especies de dinosaurios que existieron. Gracias, Sigan asi!
Seeing the size differences is awesome! I never could quite imagine it.
Brilliant way to get an idea of these wondrous creatures in size compared to miniscule man. What always lurks in the back of my mind is that we have found so many different kinds. I am sure it was just a pinch of what really roamed the earth all those Eons ago. No wonder mamals had no chance until their demise. Excellent concept. Thank you.
Who was waiting patiently for the T-REX?
Me..
Me.
I am. The King Of Dinosaurs
♥️
Not me. I wasn't patient! lol
Now, do another video with them in the time they lived. This is awesome! Gierlinski (1996, 1997, 1998) and Kundrát (2004) have interpreted traces between two footprints in this fossil as feather impressions from the belly of a squatting dilophosaurid.
You forgot to mention the invisible dinosaur - Doyouthinkhesaurus.😂
El mejor video que he visto para comparar los tamaños de los dinosaurios 🦕
That Irritator gets on my nerves
This man is so brave, he walked through every terrifying dinosaurs just to show how big they are
* walked past every dinosaur
it's okay, these dinosaurs are trained
There was no men at the time. It is computer animation.
@@bessamemucho dude you are so immatured 😂😂😂 that was the joke
@@manwithmonstervoice1100 If you think I was serious posting my previous comment then check your senseofhumer meter :)))
A alguien más le dió ansiedad esperando que lleguen los dinos gigantes y cuando llegaron casi no nos dimos cuenta? Bien ahí el argentinosaurus para el final!!!🇦🇷
y el titanosaurio??
OK, why do people persist in calling such creatures as Dimetrodon and Lystrosaurus 'dinosaurs'? Both these animals are synapsids, not diapsids, let alone archosaurs. They're actually more closely related to us than they are any dinosaur! Someone either needs to change the title of this video to 'Prehistoric Creatures', or remove the anomalous entries!
Because “Dinosaur” encompasses all large reptile-like creatures in the past.
@@maryudomah4387 no en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinosaur
@@maryudomah4387 Not true at all
I also noticed something ending in -suchus, Crocodylomorphs are not dinosaurs either.
@@mralberto5992 Tell that to people who don't know/care much about dinosaurs. Anything vaguely scaly or multi-millions of years into the past? Dinosaur.
I like how they added shadows and other details 😊
El Argentinosaurio es el orgullo argentino, lo más grande que hay
Literalmente lo más grande que hay
Como todos los argentinos, lo más grande que hay, jajaja
No es el más grande....
@@claudio5103 está es más grande 😎
@@mateodominguez7971 Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahah ...he perdido compañero..."the best comments ever"
And my 7 year old daughter Olivia loves to show her friends this video..
I loved the way of his walk across the dinosaurs so relaxing!!! 😌😌
Greetings from the present day!!!! ❤️🤗❤️🤗
Tuve la maravillosa oportunidad de observar el argentinosaurio en el museo de historia natural de Manhattan, no pude evitar que salieran lágrimas de mis ojos al imaginar dicho ser estando vivo…
Y le faltó poner al Patagotitan
Más grande que el argentinosaurus
Jaja argentina la tiene más grande hasta en tiranosaurios
@@royfoker1973 si y el cometa que los extinguio salió de argentina también
@@royfoker1973 aguante Robotech papá!!!!
Ahora con ⭐⭐⭐...imaginate...
@@diegoblancolobelcho4620shhhh....a dormir
@@Elestepariopatagonico jaja si señor, aguante Argentina campeón mundial, y Messi también, saludos
This vid is the weirdest mix of scientifically accurate models + outdated models + straight up Jurassic Park
Dont forget ARK: Survival Evolved!
And non-dinosaurs (dimetrodon etc)
Some were from The Isle.
also Ark and ARBS
Big thanks to that work! A really interesting source for all dino lovers! ❤
Tremendo animal el argentinosaurio. Felicitaciones por el vídeo.
Y fue argentino aquel reptil gigante 😎🇦🇷
at 2.05, Dimetrodon is NOT a dinosaur , it was a synapsid , ancestor of mammalians and much closer to mammalians than reptiles
More likely a cousin of mammal ancestors but definitely no dinosaur. Same with lystrosaurus. There was also a croc relative at one point
@@peterdrieen6852 Yes, Prestosuchus. Also there was lystrosaurus which is even more closely related to mammals
not to mention Permian :-)
Also lystrosaurus
You must be a hoot at parties
I noticed that their seems to be a relative few body types but a massive variation in sizes. What an awesome sight they would have been.
You wouldn't enjoy that sight for long.
Even in today's animal there are only a few body types. 4 legs and a tail.
@@TentaclePentacle Nope.. crabs, octopus, squid.
@@lesp315 we are talking about land animals, if you go into the sea then sure all types exist.
@@TentaclePentacle OK. Spiders, flys, scorpions, snakes. No see sea here. 🙂
shows you how heavy the blue whale can get when most blue whales are only 90 -111 feet in length but can get up to 190 tons, but most blue whales are around 100 tons , Argentinosaurus was only 80 tons but maybe Bruhathkayosaurus which is possibly the biggest and heaviest land animal ever got to around 90 tons not shown in the video
that dude has some guts to walk by all those dangerous animals - props!
I kept waiting for one of them to turn around and bite him!
Some of these are herbivores though. Human flesh is not on their menu.
@@flitsertheo I will keep that in mind the next time I am out for a walk and stumble across a herd of bison
@@OttoMatieque As long as you do not disturb the animals (by getting too close for instance) you should be fine.
Anyway, I doubt you will be suing me if I'm wrong.
I love that here is a dinosaur called irritator 😂
Incredible to think about the amount of plant life that must have existed to feed these massive behemoths, the earth was truly paradise for dinosaurs for over 100 million years.
We can have that much plants again. We just need more co2
@@TentaclePentacle the global elites will do anything to stop that, unfortunately
Triceratops probably had quills! Lane, the mummy, shows that likelihood 😁
Estimates of the titanosaur's length and weight vary: length estimates range from 25 to 30.5 meters (82 to 100 feet), and weight estimates range from 60 to 75 metric tons (about 66 to 83 tons). It seems like a lot of the other dinosaurs as well, are not properly described, especially when the human is at the shoulder of the titanosaur at 10:56
Saurapods cheat with their necks and tails anyway. 😂
I'd never heard of 80% of them. Have they actually found skeletons of all these creatures and how did they separate all of them. I would think a lot of those skeletons would look the same. I guess I should have said, "similar". Fantastic video.
A lot of these are found as partial skeletons (fossils). and reconstructions are largely based on close relatives. That being said, a lot of the models used for the video are outdated/and or simply wrong
Sadly is very speculative, you can do yourself a research of any dinosaur species you want in the web and I’m sure lot of different representations will show up, there’s just no way of knowing how exactly dinosaurs looked when they were alive.
@@rolloxra670Actually, there IS a way.
@@darkonyx6995 How?
Reconstructions are generally science-based. The actual research on individual fossils includes extremely detailed data collection, which is compared to fossils and other traces we already have.
When placing a fossil organism into a phylogeny (family tree), they consider what period it came from, distinguishing morphologies, and how “derived” or “basal” its features are.
Individual fossil specimens can be “articulated” using the same techniques that detectives use today to identify bodies that have been dead for many years.
Missing pieces can be filled in to complete a skeleton if there’s a minimum number of bits available. That’s because vertebrates are “bilateral.” If you have a piece from one side, you can mirror it on the other.
We know how skulls work in vertebrates, and need very few pieces to show a complete morphology. Ditto with pelvis systems.
Speciation is kind of a wild west, to be sure. But paleontologists can easily tell if they’re looking at a synapsid (not a dino), a crocodilian (not a dino), a temnospondylid (not a dino), or a dinosaur.
The dinosaurs lived in the longest stretch of largely uninterrupted evolutionary opportunity since terrestrial life emerged. So it’s not really surprising that there’s a huge variety within their various families.
I enjoyed the perhaps rather fanciful colorations on many, but was mostly struck by how SMALL the heads ( and mouths) were on the herbivores in relation to their size! How in the world did they ever manage to funnel enough nutrition into themselves to get that big and survive? They must have been eating constantly, & sleeping very little. And the vegetation must have been really nutrient packed, plus very efficiently digested! Makes you wonder just what sort of gut microbes they had. And just what benefit was derived from what seems to be abnormally long tails on some of them? How did they keep blood pressure high enough to raise and lower their heads on such very long necks without becoming unconscious? I have seen videos of male giraffes sparring with tremendously forceful sideways swings of the head; did some of these do that?
Also, it's such a pity that aquatic specimens were not pictured - naturally, they'd have to appear to be floating in air, but it would have been wonderful!
I may be an old lady now, but I am still as fascinated as when I was a dinosaur- crazy child... 😄
You can google "sauropods air bags" and find explanations on how they breath with such long necks.
The only marine dinosaurs we know we know are birds. If you are thinking Marine reptiles, those are not even close cousins to dinosaurs, pterodactyls (flying ones) were kind close though
The creator included stem mammals, amphibians, stem squamates, and crocodilians, so they weren’t excluding non-terrestrials because of their not being any in the non-avian dinosaurs.
you mean its bullshit lol the fact that almost every one of these couldnt even walk is hilarious to me the are to front heavy to even be able to stand up tails should be wayyyyyyyyyyy bigger if this is even close to accurate. not to mention long neck dinos couldn not have existed with necks in the air they wouldn have kept them low to the ground as a counter balance to the giant tails its literally the only dino that really makes sense being able t move around just not how they have them configured they would have necks stretched out infront of them not up in the air
long neck dinos kept there heads to the ground bro its simple it couldnt work any other way long neck counters the long tail its the only way that works.also all big biped dinos likely had WAYYYYYYYYY larger tails as its needed to counter balance the wieght infront of the feet like a trex the way they have it looking is not possible for it to move it would land face first in the ground.
Actually, herbivore dinosaurs aren't deuterostoma like carnivore dinosaurs and like us. So while we eat with our mouths which are, biologically, our anuses, they can also eat with their anuses, which are really their anuses. Particularly Ouranosaurus.
I miss those days when i used to ride my Argentinosaurus 😔☝🏼
Ótimo Vídeo!
Deu pra entender e conhecer os dinossauros que nem sabia que existia. Parabéns, aqui do Brasil 🇧🇷
There is a dinosaur park at Sudwala caves South Africa. It is a very good representation of how extremely large they were
if that park uses out of date models of the dinosaurs like if the velociraptor is the same size as the utahraptor, in not considering it as accurate one bit.
Interesting to see that most of them were not bigger than animals we have now,. The big size in metres just comes from a extremly long tail, and sometimes also long neck. The torso however is not bigger than a cow, elk, rhino and up to a elephant. Its only the last 10 or so when things get really crazy.
Indeed. The largest animal to ever exist EVER is the blue whale and it’s alive today
I think dinosaurs was just the normal animals we currently have except they were too big in the past.
I never knew there were so many kinds of dinosaurs. Growing up all I ever heard of were Tyrannosaurus Rex, Brontosaurus, and Triceratops. Occasionally there were a few others in those bags of "100 Dinosaurs" that you didn't know the names of.
Play ark, or beasts of bermuda
If you like games of course :>
Over the hundreds of millions of years, there have been tens of thousands of species of dinosaur. There are about 10000 described bird species living today, all of which are dinosaurs.