Secrets of the Dinosaurs: The Real Jurassic Americas (Full Episode) | Drain the Oceans

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  • čas přidán 17. 05. 2024
  • From Patagonia to Canada palaeontologists uncover the Real Jurassic Americas.
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    Secrets of the Dinosaurs: The Real Jurassic Americas (Full Episode) | Drain the Oceans
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Komentáře • 218

  • @jurassicsteph
    @jurassicsteph Před 7 dny +42

    Younger me needed documentaries like this.

  • @Skye0721
    @Skye0721 Před 14 dny +53

    Dinosaur documentary from Net Geo is always amazing! Thanks for the great content

  • @Saberrex1
    @Saberrex1 Před 10 dny +32

    The tyrannosaurs they talk about in this documentary are Teratophoneus, which were native to Utah; a southern tyrannosaur living at the same time as its more famous and northernly relatives, Gorgosaurus and Daspletosaurus. The quarry where this unique find was discovered was also given a name; the Rainbows and Unicorns Quarry due to the extraordinary nature of the expedition. I read about the original discovery in an academic journal, so that's where I got the information from.

    • @seeDiersoilcrossrowds
      @seeDiersoilcrossrowds Před 6 dny

      *Well they still deny the dino bones that were found with living tissue inside them, Proving that dinos were not millions of years old but more like thousands.*

    • @corporateturtle6005
      @corporateturtle6005 Před 4 dny +1

      Source: Trust me bro. -- "Professor" Clownrex1

  • @jameswoodridge7712
    @jameswoodridge7712 Před 12 dny +28

    T-Rex wolf packs!? Yet another reason to never step foot outside your time machine.😱😲😬😨😳🦖🦖🦖🦖🦖

    • @brigidtheirish
      @brigidtheirish Před 10 dny +1

      Yep! The best part, for me, is I'd been comparing tyrannosaurs to wolves since I was *eight,* back in the early '90s, as a counter to the then-common argument that they were oversized scavengers.

  • @squawkwardscience
    @squawkwardscience Před 10 dny +9

    This is the coolest thing I've ever seen! 😎 Now someone please tell my mom I can totally handle having a pet dinosaur.

  • @ryanreedgibson
    @ryanreedgibson Před 8 dny +22

    193k views and only 3.5k likes? People must be watching on their TVs. Great video! I love the energy from the scientist AJA. Seeing all that coal being dug out in Alberta makes me think we won't be around a long as these dinosaurs were.

    • @sapphonymph8204
      @sapphonymph8204 Před 2 dny

      Coal is our friend.

    • @mikehardman7566
      @mikehardman7566 Před 11 hodinami

      the worries about coal are interesting, I just wonder why no one worries about nuclear pollution , nukes destroy everything, for centuries... while burning coal feeds plants, plants feed animals so animals can feed plants,. it's a beautiful cycle of carbon life forms existence. but the truly un-natural poisons seem to get a free blind eyed pass,. it's just really interesting to see people only complain about oil/coal and remain completely silent about nukes and lab made poisons.

    • @ryanreedgibson
      @ryanreedgibson Před 6 hodinami

      @@mikehardman7566 Nuclear power, when ran properly has no waste and is completely safe and it ads NO CARBON to the air or environment. The new models also have no risk of criticality.

    • @mikehardman7566
      @mikehardman7566 Před 5 hodinami

      @@ryanreedgibson Thank you, for proving my point.

  • @PMGans
    @PMGans Před 10 dny +8

    Interesting facts about the dinosaur era! I love how this video depicts the long journey from the beginning to the end of the age of dinosaurs. 🦕🌎

  • @johnmcnulty4425
    @johnmcnulty4425 Před 5 dny +3

    This creature inspires awe and terror even 77 million years later!

  • @1603shadow
    @1603shadow Před 13 dny +6

    That was so interesting, I visited the Royal Tyrell Dinosaur museum in Drumheller Alberta in 2023 it quite a fascinating place to visit.

  • @spenserkao2709
    @spenserkao2709 Před 10 dny +8

    In terms of making fixture to document live animal movements, BBC is second to none; but when comes to the use of CGI to render imaginary activities of huge mammals on land and shipwrecks in the ocean, National Geographic has to be the best!

  • @user-cn2ny1zz4h
    @user-cn2ny1zz4h Před 14 dny +6

    NatGeo volviendo a sus raíces,de mostrarnos los mejores documentales

  • @Gingerwalker.
    @Gingerwalker. Před 3 dny +1

    Fantastic documentary!!! So glad I stumble across it.

  • @MarkDeMuylder
    @MarkDeMuylder Před 14 dny +11

    i love your yt channel i learn so much keep going

  • @tonyman1971
    @tonyman1971 Před 9 dny +2

    Mind blowing !!! Astonishing documentary !!!

  • @brianmsahin
    @brianmsahin Před dnem +1

    Very interesting information here. Our neice who is only 6 years old absolutely loves dinosaurs, she even knows the names of many of them. She has no interest in Disney +, (which is a good think given the questionable content that kids shouldn't be exposed to at that age) and is only interested in finding Dinosaur documentaries. She's already decided to be a paleontologist!

  • @dougbrown9048
    @dougbrown9048 Před 19 hodinami +1

    Unfortunately we will never know the quirks of their behaviors. Some of them will be very normal to us but there will also be some unexpected things we will never be able to experience

  • @air4334
    @air4334 Před 14 dny +5

    Love it....Thanks NatGeo :))))

  • @DBZluvz
    @DBZluvz Před dnem +1

    let's be honest, every small kid that discovered Dinosaurs wanted to be a Paleontologist when they were young....... at least all the kids i knew did.

  • @khanghn7483
    @khanghn7483 Před dnem

    Amazing!! I love love you so much! NG

  • @chakattailswisher
    @chakattailswisher Před 7 hodinami

    Will you be posting the rest of Drain the Oceans series? I'm trying to find the elusive episodes like "Drain the Sunken Pirate City" and "The Mississippi River".

  • @idkidk8278
    @idkidk8278 Před 14 dny +3

    Awesome!!! Thank you!

  • @Pyr3x_Living
    @Pyr3x_Living Před 10 dny +2

    Amazing video, thanks

  • @QuestionsStuff
    @QuestionsStuff Před 8 dny +1

    I loved this ..really really interesting ..

  • @fuzzy3440
    @fuzzy3440 Před 11 dny

    love all your content

  • @erikaleonard2848
    @erikaleonard2848 Před 14 dny +1

    Love this episode it was awesome 😊😊❤❤

  • @bugs62
    @bugs62 Před 12 dny

    amazing stories!

  • @Plug042
    @Plug042 Před 14 dny +2

    we love you nat geo

  • @8888Rik
    @8888Rik Před 13 dny +1

    Very nice documentary. I would just point out that Dreadnoughtus and Borealopelta were Cretaceous animals, and although tyrannosauroids go back to the mid-Jurassic, all the tyrannosaurids are Cretaceous as well.

  • @waterandshovelgardening

    Really cool episode.

  • @sammy61187
    @sammy61187 Před 3 dny

    What an awesome doco

  • @cryptoclyps5049
    @cryptoclyps5049 Před 12 dny

    fantastic!

  • @vladline1882
    @vladline1882 Před 11 dny +3

    Seeing horizontal neck Sauropod Titanosaurs trend = means old, a decade.

  • @Gokash4672
    @Gokash4672 Před 14 dny +3

    Brilliant!!👍🇨🇦

  • @Marswxn
    @Marswxn Před 11 dny +3

    Ofc it broke you have 2 pressure points on this rock that you only guessed how strong it was, a full platform would’ve easily prevented this, not a big deal but you’d think these people would be smarter

  • @wildlifewonders01_
    @wildlifewonders01_ Před 12 dny

    Beautiful :)

  • @unknown50902
    @unknown50902 Před 8 dny +1

    The history of great dino-adds

  • @icekangaroo9392
    @icekangaroo9392 Před 12 dny +1

    I really wonder how big the Dreadnoughtus actually was.. like how close the calculations were to the living creature. Was it bigger? Or maybe smaller? I think there’s truly no way to know 100%

  • @streetkidgaming868
    @streetkidgaming868 Před 10 dny

    Amazing

  • @fizzyizzy8261
    @fizzyizzy8261 Před 9 dny

    Good stuff!

  • @leechild4655
    @leechild4655 Před 10 dny +1

    They have to guess as to what shape the head was. I think it must have had some sort of headcreast if only a boney hump for combat. I dont think it would have to rely sololy on its tail to fend off trouble.

  • @rellyasistio658
    @rellyasistio658 Před 14 dny +3

    Nice

  • @sherintv478
    @sherintv478 Před 14 dny +3

    Very very super nice video my finding super niice good ❤❤

  • @Yamahog
    @Yamahog Před dnem

    The T-Rex family issue makes me think of Tornado rather than a flash flood , which would have dispersed the bodies further apart from each other.
    So Say a tornado had whipped the family into a nearby stream, or flood plane, then water flow may have left their carcasses next to a log jamb, hence the proximity to each other when they were unearthed.

  • @dominicrosariodominicrosar8255

    Watching little ❤graphic eye 🎉🎉🎉

  • @Simp_Zone
    @Simp_Zone Před 14 dny +9

    22:01 I one hundred percent knew that was going to happen with how widely spaced those beams were. If they had placed them more central with equal spacing on either side of the beam it would have been perfect. And these are their "best rigging and hoisting guys" ... Hey mining company! can I have a job over there?

    • @czgator9000
      @czgator9000 Před 12 dny +2

      Same here. I wondered why they did not support the middle.

    • @doormatthew3995
      @doormatthew3995 Před 10 dny

      they’re probably used to regular rocks, I’m assuming they’d be less likely to collapse.

  • @deadwaterblacksmithing
    @deadwaterblacksmithing Před 11 dny +1

    Gator tail that is 5 ton or so moving at even 10 feet per second will absolutely rock every bit of your world... thats probably like 10-15k ft-lbs of energy if it has like 15 feet of swing. To think of something moving at 1.5 seconds to cover 5 yards that seems pretty slow, I imagine it could flip that tail way faster with all those attachment points for muscle. The weight is probably low as well, needs to be enough to offset the weight of the neck and head at full extension and keep full balance so probably around 1/5 of the total mass in the tail? Anyone got any mass ratio info on something like this?

  • @user-le5cz3vq2v
    @user-le5cz3vq2v Před 11 dny

    Thx

  • @xuliabritto
    @xuliabritto Před 8 dny

    22:03 my heart broke at the same time as the fossil

  • @X-075
    @X-075 Před 14 dny +4

    Was that the Ark Giga???

  • @ticzonabrahim
    @ticzonabrahim Před 13 dny +1

    LOVE

  • @johnconnor6725
    @johnconnor6725 Před 8 dny

    Video played fine for me.

  • @UsielX
    @UsielX Před 3 dny

    the way they lifted that "rock" was painfull. As someone who worked 12 years on luxury furniture delivery you know you just dont lift something and think its structure will be able to sustain its weight.

  • @teddygunzbarno2102
    @teddygunzbarno2102 Před 6 dny

    You souldve called Dave Sparks to get that 2nd fossil

  • @keepfaithful
    @keepfaithful Před 14 dny +1

    ❤ it

  • @rodneypantony3551
    @rodneypantony3551 Před dnem

    I'd ask the mining giants to fund your questions. The mechanics and information processing of dinosaurs may translate into better mining equipment. I'd approach an artificial intelligence institute like amiithinks, University of Alberta, to describe the various aspects of seniors, feedback and intelligence your new dinosaurs apparently had. Ask DARPA for funding too to design safer Bradleys and Humvees. For one thing, the levers, forces, masses, BIPM derived units could be standards to be emulated or striven for, in big machines. Relevant too to materials science.

  • @Beetwate305
    @Beetwate305 Před 3 dny

    12:35 😂 such a nerd!!!

  • @Calvin.of.Martin.Street
    @Calvin.of.Martin.Street Před 8 dny +1

    So..."Jurassic" Americas? Everything is from the Cretaceous

  • @teddygunzbarno2102
    @teddygunzbarno2102 Před 6 dny

    This means there could be hundreds of other species wow

  • @ItsRedLoaf
    @ItsRedLoaf Před 14 dny +11

    Water Dinosaurs? I think they might existed...

    • @FeliDJrah
      @FeliDJrah Před 14 dny +9

      Not dinosaurs, but there were plenty of marine reptiles that were around at the same time.

    • @captin3149
      @captin3149 Před 14 dny

      @@FeliDJrah Why would there not be actual marine dinosaurs among the marine reptiles? We just may not have discovered them yet. The fossil record is HORRIBLE at recording actual biodiversity

    • @kennethsatria6607
      @kennethsatria6607 Před 13 dny

      ​​@@captin3149Yeah but not usually for aquatic animals whom are safe from elements and get buried underwater quicker than land.
      Safe to say its likely dinosaurs even aquatic living would still be bound to the coast.

    • @user-cq5kn7tc7g
      @user-cq5kn7tc7g Před 12 dny +1

      Those might be the mosasaurs

    • @8888Rik
      @8888Rik Před 11 dny +3

      Speaking as an evolutionary biologist (now retired), I think it's quite possible that over the 150+ millions of years that nonavian and avian dinosaurs existed (avian theropod dinosaurs still exist, of course, we just call them "birds"), I think it's entirely possible that some taxonomically true dinosaurs may have been aquatic or marine.

  • @KelticTim
    @KelticTim Před 9 dny

    The leg bone was 6’3”? Holy smokes, I’m 6’5”, that’s insane to think of a bone as big as me

  • @Fallenangel_85
    @Fallenangel_85 Před 10 dny

    I mean, we only need to look at Orcas and Lions to see that pack hunting is not uncommon among Apex predators.
    Even though we also have Tigers ofc and Bears.

  • @rogerdudra178
    @rogerdudra178 Před 11 dny

    I always felt I'd peaked in life when I found T-Rex.

  • @MidKnight_Mysteries
    @MidKnight_Mysteries Před 3 dny

    Should probably be "Fugax Gigus" as often the larger species are more timid and shy, and the smaller the more bold ..... They call it "little guy syndrome" for a reason, and this translates from octopi's to dogs, even humans and let's not forget the classic elephant vs a mouse...

    • @MidKnight_Mysteries
      @MidKnight_Mysteries Před 3 dny

      How can we say for sure though, no better then the guesstimate CGI of what we thought they looked like to name it off speculations like that..... Just saying

  • @mikeshook5095
    @mikeshook5095 Před 13 dny +1

    The T. rex was really just a large rooster 😂

    • @SD_Chosen
      @SD_Chosen Před 11 dny

      With many teeth

    • @wendybarbe9221
      @wendybarbe9221 Před 10 dny

      Having been chased by a rooster as a kid, I'm glad it wasn't any bigger

  • @yourstepfatherrrr
    @yourstepfatherrrr Před 6 dny

    Not all the way through, but why is this titled “The Real Jurassic Americas” when the first 17 minutes is about a sauropod that lived during the Cretaceous 😂

  • @scottgordon8902
    @scottgordon8902 Před 6 dny

    The first dinosaur. Except.. no neck bones... 1 bone you think was in the neck. Maybe it had a short neck.. super short neck. No skull.. maybe it had a different shaped skull.

  • @meowman-kj6hg
    @meowman-kj6hg Před 12 dny

    land before time

  • @Teacher2Polis2XtraRice

    It looks like a crocodile with a body of turtle.😂

  • @Friskee62
    @Friskee62 Před 11 dny

    I love T-Rex so much, I have a tattoo of one on my inner right forearm...

    • @chuckkline2970
      @chuckkline2970 Před 8 dny

      What are you going to do if you ever divorce her?

  • @obifachinabi
    @obifachinabi Před 4 dny

    Why when paleontologist wonder how so big animals could move, there is no one that think about the fact that the gravity force on earth, due to the moon position, was much weaker 70 millions years ago than today. 🤔

  • @al20o33
    @al20o33 Před 7 dny

    how do we know that sediments in the Sea did not change/alter/influence the color of the skin of the dinosaur??

  • @dylangeltzeiler946
    @dylangeltzeiler946 Před 10 dny

    What Tyrannosaurs were they? Lythronax? Teratophoneus?

  • @dmitrysivolovskiy
    @dmitrysivolovskiy Před 2 dny

    33:19 quite beauty intern)) or maybe not just intern))

  • @xXxLeon21xXx
    @xXxLeon21xXx Před 13 dny

    Dinosaurs the best.

  • @GamingShocker
    @GamingShocker Před 14 dny +1

    They're like lions / wolves

  • @SheshaZilla
    @SheshaZilla Před 12 dny

    Megatheropod dinosaurs max size
    ( All 5+ tonnes Megatheropods In May 2024)
    1. Tyrannosaurus rex- 11.7 tonnes
    2. Giganotosaurus- 10.2 tonnes
    3. Mcraeencies- 8.8 tonnes
    4. Carcharodontosaurus- 8.5 tonnes
    5. Mapusaurus- 8.4 tonnes
    6. Spinosaurus- 8.3 tonnes
    7. Saurophaganax- 8.3 tonnes
    8. Sauroniops- 7.6 tonnes
    9. Tyrannotitan- 7.5 tonnes
    10. Bahariasaurus- 7.2 tonnes
    11. Deinocheirus- 7.1 tonnes
    12. Zhuchengtyrannus- 7.1 tonnes
    13. Alamotyrannus- 6 tonnes
    14. Titanovenator- 5.8 tonnes
    15. Meraxes gigas- 5.7 tonnes
    16. Acrocanthosaurus- 5.7 tonnes
    17. Torvosaurus- 5.5 tonnes
    18. Therizinosaurus- 5.5 tonnes
    19. Suchomimus- 5.4 tonnes
    20. Sigilmassasaurus- 5.3 tonnes
    21. Tarbosaurus- 5.3 tonnes
    22. Suciasaurus- 5 tonnes

  • @user-tb8ku3tg7g
    @user-tb8ku3tg7g Před 14 dny

    I first thought this channel would be solely about stuff like shipwrecks.😅

  • @emmajolene98
    @emmajolene98 Před 8 dny

    why wouldn’t they support the middle portion of the armored Dino, just the sides? of course it would break

  • @dinossauroextinction4042

    when you're going to do some 3D dinosaur representation, call some paleoartist why tyrannosaurids look horrible

  • @user-db9bm6cw2h
    @user-db9bm6cw2h Před 9 dny

    Poor family T Rex. He died by flood because usually auditory the fossil

  • @JohnNobody-sp7sj
    @JohnNobody-sp7sj Před 10 dny

    I jacket my giant bone too. Where's my documentary?

  • @voycressv460
    @voycressv460 Před 11 dny

    They did,Mesa sour,Montana, was ocean ,and this type swam these ocean.

  • @bradschoeck1526
    @bradschoeck1526 Před dnem

    The dinosaurs were killed by commercials.

  • @theyak2930
    @theyak2930 Před 2 dny

    STL PLZ

  • @fishmaniachannel
    @fishmaniachannel Před 11 dny

    👍

  • @chrisjordan7592
    @chrisjordan7592 Před 14 dny

    No bigger than a brontosaur😮

  • @Themis764
    @Themis764 Před 14 dny +1

    💙🌟🙂

  • @kordak197
    @kordak197 Před 7 dny

    @0:37
    Are we going to overlook the fact that National Geographic just stooped to shamelessly ripping the giga and triceratops from ARK for a fake movie scene instead of just paying a small fee to use footage from one of the hundreds of classic dinosaur films from over a century of cinema?

  • @jeremybennett2168
    @jeremybennett2168 Před 9 dny

    more dinosaurs

  • @gamingtamil6034
    @gamingtamil6034 Před 14 dny +2

    Today i watched the movie 65. It shows how the dinosaurs destroyed 65 million years ago.

  • @clarissaviens5778
    @clarissaviens5778 Před 4 dny

    Fascinating digs! I'd be interested in running a simulation considering a world wide flood for all three of these finds! What would it change, I wonder?

    • @Atheos-1
      @Atheos-1 Před 11 hodinami

      Take your fictional storybook to bed and read it at bedtime like the child you are.

  • @siegfriederich8161
    @siegfriederich8161 Před 11 dny

    more more more

  • @jennifermiller2040
    @jennifermiller2040 Před 10 dny

    It was an herbivore, and you guy's really blew it naming it.

  • @johnryan2193
    @johnryan2193 Před 9 dny +2

    I'd be looking over my shoulder for the dog that buried that bone.

  • @OhAwe
    @OhAwe Před 12 hodinami

    Is this made for restarts?

  • @eduarortiz8647
    @eduarortiz8647 Před 14 dny

    The T Rex 🦖 is my favorite dinosaur

  • @bronco1199
    @bronco1199 Před 12 dny

    " we were in the sun for 8 to 10 hours? Welcome to the real world.

    • @kyyomilo
      @kyyomilo Před 11 dny

      less about the time and more about the heat of the sun, remember this was in july in utah.

  • @michelecox5241
    @michelecox5241 Před 11 dny

    Excuse me, crocs and gators all hang out together as well. Just saying.

  • @rogerdudra178
    @rogerdudra178 Před 11 dny

    Wolves and coyotes are pretty mean

  • @markattila9835
    @markattila9835 Před dnem

    Why red?