You would hear a deep sound vibrating the earth and pulsations of creepy sounds leaving as you’d hear it’s massively heavy footsteps slowly distance themselves from you. That’s when you’d know it’s time to run for the burrows... or the trees. Or some good hiding place.
It’s so scary, the sound of the t-Rex is theorised to be so low, that it would low-key rumble your chest, like thunder when you’re close to it. You would not see or hear a t-Rex when you are being hunted by it, you would feel it.
@@danielantony1882 they weren't really stealthy from what I've heard, their main strategy was just to charge at mf's and hope they weren't faster than them
It’s just the sound of a Eurasian bittern. Based on analysis of its skull, its ear system was sensitive to frequencies that are similar to the call of a Stellars Sea Eagle
For those confused by T-Rex: Recently studies have suggested that the T-Rex couldn't roar, but instead bellowed, like a crocodile or alligator. Hence the ominous sound you heard.
Not so fun fact: the low bellowing sounds of the T-Rex would be so low pitched that you would never even hear it. The noise would simply rumble through your entire body. Strange to think that you would feel noise. This also leads me to believe that T-Rex would’ve been an excellent ambush predator despite its rather large stature.
Imagine if an intelligent alien species landed on earth during this time period ... Or imagine if we visited a planet like this now. It would be crazier than any star trek episode
Ethanzm They’re scavengers the same way hyenas are scavengers. Get food for free when you can, but also get your own when you need to. And seeing how large T. rexes are, they’d need _a lot_ of food.
Imagine running through a forest hearing those veloceraptor sounds in the distance, and then, when you think you are safe, deep in the forest, you feel the deep humming sound of a T-Rex.
@@oualidbro.c6196 True. But other raptors did exist alongside Rex. Specifically Dakotaraptor, one of the largest of the group at around 18 feet long- which makes it the second-largest known predator in the Hell Creek formation after Rex.
@@ABAlphaBeta how about you make a vid about the t rex roar but we can hear it this time? but i think the vibrations might be to communicate with other t rex's
It does make sense though. Hunters need to be quite to catch their prey. Herbivores have to escape them, so it's understandable that they made noises scary enough to scare away those that could eat them
Listening to this makes me sad, as creepy as some may sound. To know these creatures once roamed the Earth, only to be wiped out by something from space. Totally out of their control. Their last few minutes alive must've been so stressful and scary. Dinosaurs fascinate me ♡
Fun fact: that low roar a Tyrannosaurus Rex has is loud enough to burst your eardrums. Honestly, which would be scarier…a roar like in the movies, or a low, humming that shakes the ground.
@@aiiiia9971 Them productions don't want nothing new, the roar has become the conventional sound for T-Rex and they won't give a low frequency humming sound for them.
A dinosaur horror movie with accurate t rex sounds and them camouflaging themselves in the trees till the last minute would scare me more than anything
@@honorarysnowbunny this video was from 2 years ago and they have realized that T. rex didn’t have feathers also it would have made a roaring cry much like how it is in jurassic Park
@@JunaidWolf3 That just isnt true. Dinosaurs and other animals of the era hadn't yet evolved vocal folds. Instead they communicated using air bubbles in the throat that they'd trap and release
RAPTOR 1:Cough cough cough COUGH! RAPTOR 2:(in HISHE Raptors voice)I told you to lay off smoking sis. RAPTOR 1: (also HISHE raptor) What!? I'm just calling others for dinner! I figured out how to unlock the Doors where all humans are hiding.
@@aquafresh3150I am SERIOUS. The vocalizations of the velociraptors in "Jurassic Park" weren't the recordings of angry animals, but in fact rather less intimidating reptiles getting it on. "It's somewhat embarrassing, but when the raptors bark at each other to communicate, it's a tortoise having sex,"
@@spacemanapeinc7202 This wouldnt be a problem as far as i know. There are oxygen cabins, that are especially made to simulate these conditions, you just get a lot of stamina when you go in such a cabin.
the brachiosaurus sound sounded the scariest to me. imagine being in the jungle and seeing a long neck followed by a low, high-pitched roar? the t-rex was quite unexpected.
Oh man....love it. I would love to see a video, presentation, or paper detailing how they developed these sounds (i.e., the scientific modeling/thought process that went into determining what they would be).
His noise is honestly so much scarier than any roar. Imagine _feeling_ it in a densely packed forest. Also, if you were close enough, it would probably be so loud that your eardrums would pop and go deaf
@Yungdaggerdick Just because you don't think it's loud, doesn't mean it's not loud, it's just out of our hearing range, a sound low enough can rupture organs and destroy eardrums
Tovarășul Lenin you wouldn’t think that way if you ACTUALLY heard the Trex. It’s only low frequency, so difficult to hear. Especially because were listening through a distorted recording. If you actually heard a Tyrannosaurus, you’d likely FEEL that noise ricochet up your spine as every fiber in your being is telling you to get out of there as soon as possible.
Its low vibrations would be enough to terrify you if the reality didnt already that it can hear your quietest footsteps & smell you wherever you go as it seeks you out as a meal.
T-rex : microwave Velociraptor : blowing on the Rim of a bottle Triceratops : what we expect dinosaurs to sound like Brachiosaurus : ....some guy humming loudly at the end of a tunnel? Pterodactly : needs some wd-40 Parasaurolophus : area 51
@@jaisonfire1 Hmm, okay, but do you have a source for this information? Preferably more than one source. When it comes to dinosaurs I like when there's stuff backing it up on not only one place, but multiple. I don't want to simply be like "oh ok!" to anything people say. There's a lot of misinformed people around the world.
Cat Yes I’m pretty sure the velociraptor sound is an actual bird call. I watched a couple videos last night about strange bird sounds. Idk if this video is that accurate 😂
I’ve never found a RU-vid channel that so accurately reflects my personal brand of weird. I’m absolutely in love with the content I’ve seen so far, the subjects range between many of my immediate and deepest interests. To think, I found this channel while listening to Dino-calls on the toilet. Would that it were a more elegant story than that, but that’s precisely what I mean by MY brand of weird. Absolutely brilliant.
I mean, that was when we thought they were closer to lizards, now we know they're birds, so we can use those and their vocals to get something more accurate.
@@user-nz2vk9rq6y The "long-neck" dinosaurs are pretty accurate. They aren't fully though and some are over done for cinematic effect. The pterosaurs are also pretty good but sound too hawk-like.
@@GustavoHernandez-wf6nf you misunderstand. It's not just that you hear the noise it makes. An animal that big has a very powerful throat, enough to make the air around it vibrate should it make such a noise. *_You'll feel it vibrating in your bones_*
@@MarcelloVT Just the size of it. Generally, the larger the animal, the lower the sound it produces. Elephants are known to communicate over large distances using infra-sound. So, I guess, T-rex could too.
Imagine in 1 million years when our species is gone and some extraterrestrial is teaching alien children about what Humans sounded like. And then you hear Mickey Mouse.
Velociraptor: bird sounds Triceratops: *herbivore screams* Para: *highish pitched screaming* Pterasaur: *Squawk* Brachi: *deep long N e c c sounds* T Rex: *Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm*
@PushandillPushback Rex has no vocal cords and could only make rumbling noises, similar to how crocodiles can rumble. It would be hard to hear for humans, but we'd be able to feel it
imagine this: youre walking through the forest, taking a nice calm stroll. Then all the sudden you hear HHHHMMMMMM. And then your hear the loud, booming foot steps of a t-rex.
Why am I even replying to you brother, I got bet They had no balance issues. They had good balance, their tails were always level with their spine instead of dragging on the ground like people used to believe, so they had really good balance
Fun fact: exposure to deep (often below human hearing) vibrations are a source of anxiety for humans. We are evolutionally geared to avoid places that have these deep humming noises for long periods of time. This is in part because unstable cave systems will often vibrate on these levels. Now we know another reason why.
Well we never encountered tyrannosaurus rex, so we can't owe that part of our evolution to them. But it's possible that other prehistoric predators made similar sounds...
@@cinnababy6331 plus, the frequencies I'm talking about are way below what human ears can hear, anyways, so this wouldn't qualify. We technically feel them through our eyeballs.
I’m pretty sure that if humans were actually sent back to dinosaur times, instead of being eaten, the dinosaurs, being unfamiliar with humans, would either fight the humans or run away like modern day animals in the wild.
Honestly, modern scientific recreations of these guys make them sound a hell of a lot cooler. A little more alien, a little less dramatic, but a lot more scary and more grounded in their modern descendents realm of sound
@Flee Gaming Damn bruh, get some education and quit being an anti-intellectual (especially towards a normal comment that’s not even remotely verbose- makes you look dumb)
@@shania9528 Just because someone doesn't know what something means, doesn't mean you have to call them an "anti-intellectual" which in this case, a dumbass. Instead of being an asshole, you could try and teach them what the fuck it meant.
@@KillerCrewmate2526 if space had air to make sound waves in that is. sound is just vibrations in the air that we pick up with a delicate bone in our ear canals
Fun Fact: The reason the Parasaurolophus sounds like that is because their head-arches are actually vibrating, its a way to alert each other of predators.
Zero hero That isn’t fur, those are feathers, because birds are modern dinosaurs and tyrannosaur chicks had fluff. And in this situation, those feathers are about to be stained red.
@@Tyrantlizardking105 you said our ears can't pick up low frequency,but low frequency sounds are mainly thunder and big sounds,it is high frequency sound that we can't pick up.i don't know about animals.i just corrected your statement
@@Nayuvaavu That's false. We have a threshold of how low and how high a sound can be for us to be able to pick it up with our ears. Animals like Elephants communicate with low frequency vocalizations, we can't hear it but we can feel the rumble.
NUTCASE71733 Lions, hyenas, chimps, and wolves are also highly social animals that live in large groups, while T. rexes are mainly solitary. They’re also all mammals, while T. rexes are reptiles.
Imagine traveling back in time to see a Tyrannosaurus. Setting up camp, and laying down to sleep, then you hear that low rumbling getting closer and closer to your tent. Scarier than the Hollywood roars in my opinion. Edit: Spelling and sentence structure issues.
Are u people fucking dum dinasors didn’t exist u idiots need to go reed the bibel and stop believing this proper ganda sientists and the anti christ spreads the world is 2000 years old learn you’re facts
Abel Gomez the bibel says the world has existed for about 2000 years u clearly haven’t red it so go and look at sum facts and get back to me as for the fossels they are cleerly made up to ad to the proper gander that the govermant and anti christ spread so re educat you’reself before u try and speeck to me about god
"Hello class, today, we are gonna learn how humans may have sounded! Let's take a look, listen closely..." "GET THE FUCK OUTTA MY ROOM I'M PLAYING MINECRAFT"
I mean, we found out what a mummified prince from Egypt could have sounded like through similar technology and tbh it sounded like a minecraft villager lol