Alcobaça Dinosaurs of the Late Jurassic

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 22 окт 2024

Комментарии • 59

  • @QalOrt
    @QalOrt Год назад +3

    Videos about Portugal's dinos are hard to come by in English so this is a real treat!

  • @MrPlainsflyer
    @MrPlainsflyer Год назад +5

    I has expecting an Anime "Baaaaaka" reference lol. Honestly this is not a dig I had ever known about. Beeing an American I have heard far more about Colorado so this is a wonderful piece to listen too!

  • @Balorian
    @Balorian Год назад +14

    Mrs Baldermort has done an amazing job on these videos, and I could listen to Baldermort talk about paint drying with a smile. Liked, shared and subscribed.

  • @connorriggs1518
    @connorriggs1518 Год назад +8

    Yay a nice video to relax to after a long day at work

  • @oleandreasjensen5263
    @oleandreasjensen5263 Год назад +3

    Thank you for a very exellent video and info. - Hope to take a trip to Portugal and looking for dinosaur fossils. The large Torvosaurus and the big teethed Ceratosaurus are my favorites

  • @europademon
    @europademon Год назад +23

    You see these fossils and begin to understand why our ancestors believed in dragons. Finding those skulls would be life changing, no matter the time period found.

    • @sardonicspartan9343
      @sardonicspartan9343 Год назад +2

      The legend of the cyclops came from an elephant skull.

    • @kiltedcripple
      @kiltedcripple Год назад +3

      @@sardonicspartan9343 I know we've all heard that, so I'm not calling you out for repeating it. But I will say, I'm enormously skeptical of that claim. The Greeks were a metropolitan society far before there even was a unified Greece. The various city states had academics across disciplines from as far back as antiquity has left us documents... and they had plenty of exposure to modern existing elephants. Elephants were used in Asia Minor, all the into modern Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, and North Africa (mostly into modern Ethiopia and Sudan) as beasts of burden and of war, and of course, there were still free ranging populations then too. Greeks most definitely saw elephant skulls from existing animals who died. There's no reason to believe that they wouldn't recognize a skull when they saw it, as extinct mammoths and mastodons presented skulls which were largely similar to existing species. Cyclops were a fun story to tell, and there's a lazy connection to be made by looking at the tusks and nasal cavity of elephant skulls, but I don't agree that's its beyond supposition that old skulls directly inspired the stories. Greek gods and myths were allegorical, not literal explanations of natural phenomenon, they just didn't culturally tie things that tightly together.
      Just imagine for a second if we transcribed Greek myth to reality... the God of War, Ares, is repeatedly shown as cowardly and inept, not traits you'd want your soldiers to emulate. He wasn't supposed to be an exemplar like Tyr or Thor, he was just a fun character to tell stories about. Similarly, Zeus is never treated as being a weather bringing God, despite his famous thunderbolts. So I'm just saying, until I see some kind of scholarly evidence that directly quotes that this skull found in the ground was a Cyclops, and its shown as an elephant skull, I don't buy it. I think it's no more accurate than the ancient aliens people seeing a helicopter in the hieroglyphics at the Seti Temple in Abydos.

    • @michelecastellotti9172
      @michelecastellotti9172 Год назад

      @@kiltedcripple some think its because they saw people forging and using masks similar to those we use today when using flames to weld materials togheter, but that too is up for debatw

    • @derkjh
      @derkjh Год назад +1

      Don't be silly.

    • @danielsonverissimo522
      @danielsonverissimo522 Год назад +1

      @@kiltedcripple the legend of the cyclops comes from the bible and it is not what you think it is. The one eyed monster is the 📺 your living room.

  • @trajanfidelis1532
    @trajanfidelis1532 Год назад +14

    Thanks for everything baldermort!

  • @jamesivie5717
    @jamesivie5717 Год назад +2

    Great video!

  • @Dctstampede88
    @Dctstampede88 Год назад +7

    You guys never come up short on these videos.thanks again for your effort and time. It does not go unnoticed!

  • @jadedone4679
    @jadedone4679 Год назад +2

    Just for reference, some of the footage was taken from a video game called "The Isle". It is available on steam for $20. If you love dinosaurs it is a good game to check out.

  • @serjobsalot8768
    @serjobsalot8768 Год назад +5

    Another great video, just what I needed for after work. Thank you and keep up the stellar work, Mrs. Baldermort and Mr. Baldermort!

  • @markbrownless1679
    @markbrownless1679 Год назад +6

    love your videos keep up the good work.....

  • @leaflet1686
    @leaflet1686 Год назад +2

    I love that the size comparison of the Allo didn't only show people but also a dog :3

  • @L1mp1nB1zk1t
    @L1mp1nB1zk1t Год назад +4

    Oh yeeaahhh, it's learnin' time.

  • @AniFam
    @AniFam Год назад +2

    Awesome~👍
    Thank you for sharing this video~🤗

  • @TheBcsilva
    @TheBcsilva Год назад +2

    We can have a big input on it. The major dinosaur collection from the Upper Jurassic of Portugal is housed at Sociedade de História Natural of Torres Vedras.

  • @Tuishimi
    @Tuishimi Год назад +2

    Some of the scenes, like the ceratosaurus shots, look like they came out of the game "The Isle."

  • @BohdanKaiba
    @BohdanKaiba Год назад +3

    Another fantastic video, I been recommending them to my co-workers who want there kids to watch something smart and fun on youtube.

  • @daveoverton8860
    @daveoverton8860 Год назад +2

    BALDEMORT!!! The Empirion of man needs you...

  • @andrewstrongman305
    @andrewstrongman305 Год назад +2

    I enjoyed this, but I wish the images did not include therapods with pronated hands. Therapods used their hands for grasping, and held them palms-in. They were not capable of twisting their wrists.

  • @stax6092
    @stax6092 Год назад +3

    Great Video as always.
    Keep up the good work.
    :)

  • @lloydmckay3241
    @lloydmckay3241 Год назад +2

    Very good one. The Allosaurus is a beast.

  • @loupiscanis9449
    @loupiscanis9449 Год назад +4

    Thank you , GK .
    🐺

  • @genuinehawken
    @genuinehawken Год назад +5

    This is fantastic stuff, thank you!

  • @jessedawg4693
    @jessedawg4693 Год назад +2

    I always love your content baldy

  • @Reaper-ii8ou
    @Reaper-ii8ou Год назад +2

    Baldermort For the win! Love the 40k lore vids and these history vids.

  • @bencarlos2555
    @bencarlos2555 Год назад +2

    So well done! Thank you!

  • @davebowman9000
    @davebowman9000 Год назад +2

    Thanks for anoter great video!

  • @Neonblue84
    @Neonblue84 Год назад +3

    3:25 looks like the short snouted Allosaurus

  • @johnkelly7757
    @johnkelly7757 Год назад +2

    Excellent video

  • @solarnaut
    @solarnaut Год назад +2

    AWESOME how many discoveries occurred in the past 20+ years ! ... AND the 1800s ... AND in the "lab" re-examining the finds in the following years ... 150+MILLION Years compressed and animated in a 20+ minute video... F-ing AWESOME ! Of all the geologic blinks of an eye to get to spend one's conscious life within, we're some lucky bastards! B-)

  • @Alberad08
    @Alberad08 Год назад +2

    Thank you for creating & sharing this fascinating documentation; really liked watching it! BTW the weight estimates regarding a big 12m Allosaurus seem far off with 1,5 tons - it would have at least three times that weight! Just imagine that animal.

  • @_-Soul-_
    @_-Soul-_ Год назад +3

    Those creatures were pretty interesting even the BoRiNg HeRbIvOrEs

  • @5eA5
    @5eA5 Год назад +2

    Great!

  • @europademon
    @europademon Год назад +6

    Arrive I have. Knowledge I crave. Let's learn.

    • @gknaturalhistory
      @gknaturalhistory  Год назад +2

      Hi Donald Hudson,
      We hope we haven't disappointed you and delivered it. :)

    • @europademon
      @europademon Год назад +2

      @@gknaturalhistory you haven't let me down yet. Another great video.

    • @NobleKorhedron
      @NobleKorhedron Месяц назад

      From approx. 8:00 - 8:45 @@gknaturalhistory, it's pronounced Tyrannosaurids, not Tryannosaurus. Tyrannosaurids are the overall group that eventually led to T. rex; Tyrannosaurus is the large, menacing theropod that terrorises the original Jurassic Park film, and many other documentaries since...
      RE Stegosaurus stenops VS S. ungulatus, it's possible that S. ungualtus is a younger life stage of S. stenops, while S. stenops represents the adult animals.
      Of course, for this to apply, S. ungulatus and S. stenops have to have existed at the same time...

  • @rebvamp13
    @rebvamp13 Год назад +2

    You just needs to make a military history channel and you would cover all my favorites things dinosaurs, myths, 40k and military history

  • @FilipeCardoso1
    @FilipeCardoso1 Год назад +2

    It is Alcobaça!

  • @stc6851
    @stc6851 Год назад +3

    Noice

  • @MSTavares
    @MSTavares Год назад +4

    Just a quick note here Alcobaça is written the way I've done it and not the way in the title, this comes from a hard to soft C in the portuguese language, where if the letter C if followed either by the vowel E or I, the C has a soft sound to it like an S in the word "sound", but if C is followed by either A, O or U the C has a harder sound to it like in the word "captain". For you to have a softer C with either A, O or U you'll need this Ç which is a C with a "sedilha", that the little thing bellow the letter C, and is what give the softer sound to C when followed by A, O or U.

    • @MSTavares
      @MSTavares Год назад +2

      The video was great though!
      And a big thank you for bringing to light prehestoric Portugal! As a Portuguese I think it is nice to see prehestoric Portugal, and Portugal in general being talked about here on youtube

    • @gknaturalhistory
      @gknaturalhistory  Год назад +1

      Hi Miguel,
      You absolutely right. We just couldn't get the right font.
      Thank you very much for the explanation. The narrator Mr B is trying hard to get all the names pronounced correctly. However, you can imagine how many languages are out there. 😥We hope we gave it some justice. :)

    • @gknaturalhistory
      @gknaturalhistory  Год назад

      It was our pleasure to create this video. We glad that you liked it. Please share with your friends so it can be reached by more people. Thank you :)

    • @MSTavares
      @MSTavares Год назад +1

      @@gknaturalhistory You actually got all names nailed it there were a few exceptions like Lorinhã, though I can forgive those for how hard they can be. And I know how hard it can be when it comes to having to speack multiple languages, I sometimes forget words in english, french and spanish

  • @Leptospirosi
    @Leptospirosi Год назад +2

    The Torvosaurus has gone missing... 🤔

  • @reneeglover4819
    @reneeglover4819 Год назад +2

    Was some of the Dino scenes come from a game of some sort? If so which one?

    • @jadedone4679
      @jadedone4679 Год назад +1

      some of it was from the game called "The Isle". It is on steam for only $20 and it is very fun if you are a dino fan.

  • @TheBcsilva
    @TheBcsilva Год назад

    Very good. But there is several mistakes. A pitty.....

  • @erinhaze1671
    @erinhaze1671 Год назад +1

    Does anyone else hear Whinnie the Pooh ?