I love deinocheirus because of the hilarious way it was discovered. They found its arms first. Its huge, beefy, arms with giant, deadly looking claws. They thought they belonged to some sort of Ultraraptor that could hunt T-rexes or something, and they named it "Deinocheirus," or "Terrible hand." Later they found out it was a big, silly-looking, duck-billed, camel humped wacko thing and I LOVE IT.
This dinosaur, looks almost like a spinosaurus and a bird. I love this look on this creature, so cool. Nice idea that dinosaurs have different sizes and colors. I love this🦕🦖🦅
Fun fact: Deinochirus belongs to the same group as gallimimus. They look nothing alike! A sign of evolving into a 'niche' and ending up looking like a barionyx/hadrosaur hybrid with feathers.😊
she gave all her maternal love for her chicks, like Littlefoot's mother to save Littlefoot and Cera from the "sharptooth" (Tyrannosaurus) in the movie: The Land Before Time of 1988
pretty good as it would have been an action movie but in reality a 7-tones Deinocheirus would absolutelly destroy 4-5-tones Tarbosaurus, it was just too big
There is no such thing as strict herbivore or strict carnivore, herbivore sometimes eat meat like cows eating rabbit, or giraffe eating bone and dead rats, or horse eating fish for extra protein, while carnivore something eat plants like cat eating grass, or Polar Bear eating flowers (i know most Bear are omnivores, but Polar Bear are an exception, they are hypercarnivore, with meat making up 90 percent of it's diet)
@@curious5887 Cows mainly eat plants. They only eat snakes and other animals when short on phosphorus, which most herbivores often do, but they’re still herbivores. Deinocheirus is an omnivore.
@@LauderIXThen why call it a herbivore? Call it what it is. It’s chasing prey in the beginning, then called a herbivore and eating plants, then hunting for fish, it’s an omnivore. They shouldn’t call it a herbivore. Because they also call it an omnivore too, it’s just weird.
That animation is stunning. I don’t think I’ve heard of this show before. Also ~ isn’t this narrator the same guy who used to narrate some of the old 2000s episodes of National Geographic Explorer?
to me the Deinocheirus reminds me a lot of a possible ancestor of "Big Bird" of sesame street😄😃 she is almost identical to him, including the "tuft" of feathers that she has.
With the sail on the back and the lack of shoulder musculature... it seems as though this creature was made for water. It has a duck-like head, claws for pulling in prey and a hump for temperature regulation/stability in water.
In America and India are such creations, reasons why the Americans needs arrows to hunt. I love those gigant birdmixes, but hey I still alive after🐣, wipbasic Peitsche helps.
I don’t like how they’re describing DeinoC in this, because here’s the thing they’re known for only eating things that can fit in their mouth Anzu most definitely cannot fit in their mouth and considering they most likely can’t run like that in IRL considering they 7 tons so I don’t understand why they’re moving almost as fast as them or why they even have that much stamina and why do they think it would be like a flamingo in color they don’t eat crawfish or krill, which is the only reason flamingos are that color DeinoC wouldn’t eat them because they can’t see them because they’re basically like a frog and eat anything that fits in their mouth fish don’t relieve and have bones. Technically it’s something else that’s a bit different but still kind of like bones.
Good doc, only thing I hated was the fact that the tarbosaurus not only walked off getting its eye gouged out, getting its neck slashed, but got freakin suplexed and somehow didnt die… like thats a 6-7 ton animal, that hard of a fall would shatter its ribs easily, but oh well
This is an interesting documentary and well done! However, I was given to believe that Cretaceous Mongolia and northern China were arid, dry and desert like.