I originally learned of the Yutyrannus's exsistance through ark, and it has quickly become one of my favorite Dinosaurs ever. I had to scroll pretty far to find a decent lengthed video breaking down thr Yutyrannus, and this video did it perfectly for me. Thank you for covering our boi Feathers
@@PanthersGamingSessionYT I can imagine a season in chaos theory be about the main characters in Russia and a Yutyrannus be the main dinosaur villain of that season
Now, I don’t know a whole lot about Yutyrannus, so take this with a grain of salt. Yutyrannus was one of the few tyrannosaurids in the world with feathers and three clawed fingers on its hands instead of two. It was slender and agile, and quite a fast runner while chasing down prey. It weighed about half a ton and measured up to 9 metres in length. The two horn-like crests above each eye were probably used for display if not as weapons. It lived in Central Asia in Liaoning, China during the Early Cetaceous about 125 million years ago. As a predatory carnivore, it most likely would’ve preyed on sauropods, as well as the early ceratopsian relative, Psittacosaurus. It’s thought likely that, like most predatory dinosaurs, Yutyrannus might’ve hunted in small family packs. From my experience, it is known from Ancient Earth, as many types of families, the first being a female with two juveniles, The Land Before Time: Journey of the Brave, as a mated pair, and videos games, such as Ark: Survival Evolved, and many of the Jurassic Movies’ video games, including, most recently, Jurassic World: Evolution 2, as a species member of the Feathered Species Pack, alongside Sinosauropteryx and Deinocheirus, and is said to appear soon in Prehistoric Kingdom. Anyways, as always, it’s great to hear from you again, Logan. Keep up the good work.
Scientist: “Dinosaurs have feathers!” What they mean: “only in certain areas.” What Normal people who aren’t dinosaur enthusiasts think this is what they mean:
Can you talk about the Torosaurus? I just recently learned about the controversy, with it maybe it being a triceratops. But i would love to hear about it
Thank you! I'll probably tackle them further down the line, I'm still polishing my writing and editing style, so when I do cover those big boys, I want to show them the attention and quality they deserve.
@@DinoBasics On the topic of Trike, I’m not certain how common it is known that the specimen at the Houston Museum of Natural Science named Lane, had skin impressions preserved with holes where follicles could have grown from- so it’s scientifically plausible that Triceratops had quills on its back. (Which could be an ancestral trait based on similar structures found for the much earlier Psittacosaurus) Just wanted to make sure you knew that tidbit before you made a video on it! : )