Aqrium Me too man..I would kill to go back and see what a Brachiosaur and a Tyrannosaurus REALLY looked like. Dinos really were the most beautiful creatures in Earth's history in my opinion.
I would love to download those sounds from "what it sounded", everytime I hear them is just fantastic, I get transported to millions of years into the past
such a strange sound but sadly it would probably be uncomfortable to be near one when it was making such a sound cause they probably would have employed alot of infrasound into there vocalization
When I first heard his sound-effects, for some reason, a few of them made me think of Cthulhu sitting along a cliffside, with waves crashing against him during a thunderstorm, as he starts to wake up and telepathically call out in his own alien language.
Thank you for making this. My daughter kept making up the sound they made and I tried explaining how they would actually sound and was able to show her this as an example.
i love this "what they really looked/sounded like" videos--it's a great resource for me in particular since i've long been working on a book with "natural" dinosaurs (as in they aren't genetically-engineered or what have you) and am striving for as much accuracy as i possibly can, and the sounds make up a good part of that
@@oshronosaurus Saurian can give you a good speculative analysis of dinosaurs, but the truth is we know little of what they looked like and what they sounded like. The mighty T-rex, for example, could have sounded like in the movie for all we know, or it could have sounded like a louder crocodile, or it could have sounded like this modern theropod; ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-noF-CLNSUZU.html Modern theropods have such a variety in noises, due to extinct cretaceous theropod size differences, i can't help but think they likely had an even larger array and variety in noise making. Some of the big animals may have made noise in a pitch which we barely hear, like ostriches do today. We can only imagine how sauropods sounded with that long neck. The only extinct dinosaur noise which i would say we accurately have is of an ornithopod dinosaur; ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ap9zo4WUc6A.html
@oshronosaurus I know your post was over a year ago but I would absolutely love to check out your book! Please let me know purchase details if you are that far along in the process. Thanks!
Wow the sounds you created actually give the impression of a giant animal and I almost could imagine a herd of these beasts communicating across a wast jurassic landscape.
I literally needed to calm myself down before clicking on this one. I was so blown away by your previous videos and the amount of research you put into these to try to get as close as you can get to what could be true, and you guys really don't disappoint. Thanks for being a blessing to dino fans!!
Fascinating to understand this, to get closer to them bit by bit. We can just imagine that if they were still alive, we could've been interacting with them. Maybe one day, in the future, we will find new mysteries about each one.
Its crazy you do this amount of research for these kinds of videos and I'm to lazy to look up one question for homework :p But great video as always and keep it up!
KT 123 Well, they where actually cousins. They shared many traits, like the huge sail but where not the same animal. Dimetrodon is a furoisius predator. Which are relatives to us and other mammals. Edaphosaurus where a herbivore.
Hi Dangerville, please make a video on what these creatures would have REALLY sounded like. Thank you 😊 - Ankylosaurus - Stegosaurus - Pachycephalosaurus - Gallimimus - Therizinosaurus - Quetzalcoatlus - Pteranodon - Giganotosaurus - Dilophosaurus - Allosaurus - Utahraptor - Carnotaurus
I'm actually not disappointed at all hearing that recreation, I like it maybe even more that the jurassic park version. Keep the great work. (Also, brachiosaurus and giraffatitian are my favorite dinos, so I really liked this video, if you cared to know I guess.)
Dude, that's beautiful. If I was there back then, not worried about getting eaten, I would so love to be there, hearing these graceful giants singing in the distance, hearing the hymns of these animals echoing throughout the region, reminding me, that something terrifying can make a primordial symphony, so beautiful, it brings a tear to my eye.
and there's still an *awful lot* of blood in that animal that needs oxygenated, so equivalently it's true that they needed an efficient lung system, like a bird's, to keep air low constant to avoid just not having any new oxygen in between the time it would take to clear the lungs on the exhale and bring it all back in on the inhale.
DangerVille Even being oversimplified doesn't excuse bad science and laziness. Could still be oversimplified while being scientifically accurate. "More efficient lungs means more oxygen in the blood to be pumped up to the brains at the end of those long necks" See how easy that was without being overly complicated and remaining scientifically accurate, while still retaining the same idea?
@@dirnova6930 nope brachiosaurs didnt evolve into giraffe get your fact right, brachiosaurus has no descendants, and also all dinosaur except avian theropods get wiped in extinction and brachiosaurs isnt a theropod
@@dirnova6930 dude,, how the fuck could you think brachiosaurus could ever evolve into a giraffe, I just cannot Belive anyone it could ever think like that
I wonder if they communicated with low-frequency sounds the way elephants do...and also, if they might have had, on top of their heads, a flap of skin forming a resonance chamber, similar to an elephant seal, that would have amplified their mating sounds.
Although that skeleton you show at the 3:50 mark is actually the Giraffatitan brancai displayed at the Berlin's Natural History Museum. It was excavated from the fossil-rich Tendaguru beds of Tanzania (then German East Africa) between 1909 and 1913. That exact specimen was what sparked my interest for paleontology.
I'm impressed by your pronunciation of CH. English speaking people almost always pronounce it as K (in words where it's supposed to be german CH/greek X/spanish J)
Given that so many dinosaur species weren't capable of such vocalizations, but brachiosaurus so clearly was, implies that it was able to "sing" for a reason. Could be something as simple as attracting a mate, but it could have been as complex as social language. Maybe not as sophisticated as how whale pods develop their own family language, but they could have been communicating about more than just "let's mate" and "there's a predator nearby".
I love these videos, so amazing to hear what dinosaurs could've really sounded like. It's strange that you included bird song though as Brachiosaurus was alive about 150 million years ago and the first birds didn't appear until 60 million years ago!
The dinosaur would've definitely not chirped. If anyone thinks it woukd've chirped just because it was like a bird, big birds don't chirp, and they have more in common with small birds than the dinosaurs do.
They sounded like trombones in need of a tune up. They were like big singing cows. A favorite dinosaur.😍😍😍😍😍 but just a sneeze from one of those could probably tip over a little boat. Would take a blanket just to wipe his big nose ! 😍😍😄
So what I'm learning from these videos is that most of if not all the dinosaurs mostly made low pitched humming and vibrating and rumbling noises instead of the louder reverberating sounds we hear in movies. That's pretty cool
Thought about the brachio from JW FK and i am absolutely traumatized by it. Especially the final pose it does through the smoke, so heartbreaking and devastating.
Actually found on a hill in my town called Grand Junction in Colorado. There's a hill here called Riggs hill, he also found an Apatosaurus here as well. Loads of cool dino stuff here.