@@MrDodo19 let's be real... he was pretty bad... Swimming across dangerous water with his chicks so he can chomp on some dead turtles, losing one in the process, then not sharing it is really bad parenting.
Oh yeah, the upcoming Dinosaur Documentary Film by Giant Screen Films who brought us Dinosaurs Alive & Waking The T.Rex: The Story Of SUE. I look forward to seeing the real deal “T.Rex” soon.
I have a feeling the new t.rex documentary that’s coming out soon is probably going to be bad because the designs are literally just ripped from prehistoric planet
Bonus comment: Seeing those clips of Prehistoric Planet 1 & 2 got me thinking that The Dinosaurs, the Quetzalcoatlus & the dead Mosasaurus look a little like the same models that were used for Prehistoric Planet 1 & 2 but with some minor changes. Especially the Crocodile like reptile Champsosaurus looks a little like the ones from the online game called Saurian.
Oh, that would be an interesting story a life and death story of hank the tyrannosaurus and honestly in this documentary film that’s coming out. I am not impressed with the Tyrannosaurus design. Obviously the prehistoric planet rex is more superior.
1. Phylogenetic braketing. Many well preserved theropod dinosaurs ARE fossilised with feathers, including some larger ones like Yutyrannus - a close relative of T. rex. Feathers are soft tissue, so they arn't as likely to fossilize as bone. So while certain fossil species may lack feathers (such as T. rex), it's likely that many of these still sported them in life - given that they are closely related to many that we KNOW did. 2. We also know from chemical signatures in the bones that dinosaurs were warm-blooded like birds (which are dinosaurs) and mammals. An animal that needs to maintain a contant body temprature has to be insulated to prevent losing heat. That's why mammals evolved hair, and dinosaurs feathers. Just as with mammals, it's likely that many of the largest dinosaurs had a much lighter / shorter coat of feathers (or non at all) to prevent overheating, just like the light hairs on an elephant.
There have been numerous fossils of dinosaurs with direct evidence of feathers preserved. There’s even a piece of a dinosaur tail stuck in amber that still has feathers attached.