Kids Discover The Newest Juvenile Tyrannosaurus rex Skeleton! - Meet Teen Rex
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- Опубликовано: 28 сен 2024
- Every dinosaur fossil has some information to provide, however minor that may be. However, some are more important than others. The more complete a specimen is, the better. The rarer the dinosaur, the better. That is why every single Pachycephalosaurus, Tyrannosaurus, and Torosaurus are cause of celebration. What might be even more important and valuable are useful specimens of immature individuals from these well-known dinosaurs. That is because juvenile animals are rarely ever found - they are smaller, lighter, and became snacks for other animals more frequently. Discovery of juvenile dinosaurs can provide a broader understanding of ancient biodiversity and ecology. It’s just a shame that Tyrannosaurus is so popular because many of the juveniles found so far have been sold off to unknown individuals.
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And THIS is the reason why proper education is so important :^) good to see kids actually understanding the world around them, helping with discoveries, and learning even more about science. With a surge of conservatism and anti-intellectualism, a lot of kids from such families have no clue what fossils are, or straight up think they're fake and government propaganda. This is lovely!!
What 💀
@godslaughter what like of kids are you meeting 💀
What kids these days say dinosaurs were not real? 💀
Why was this post hearted? This dude repeats himself and gets trolled hard. Then does the same thing he preaches against on other channels.I hate be the bearer of bad news.
@@paulgermano7837 Those who grow in conservatively religious families, or the creationist ones, or famillies of complotists, you have the choice lol.
Those kids are living the dream! What I would have given to find and dig up my own dinosaur!
There is no tooth fairy
There is no Easter bunny
And there is NO NANNOTYRANNUS!!!!
Because you know everything. Sure you do.
@@charlesmartin1121it’s okay to be wrong sometimes
@@Latenivenatrix_Mcmasterae Mr. Loggia is the only one putting forward an assertion. So what are you saying?
@charlesmartin1121 bro why you mad about a joke 💀
Until they find one
I appreciate your view on the 'just juvenile T.rex's' versus Nanotyrannus (or another taxon) debate. Some individuals are far too certain on one side or the other on this issue. When a whole more work and specimens are needed to clear up the mystery.
The most important specimens are in private hands unfortunately. One is heading for auction and is the 2nd most complete “Nano” after Dueling dinosaurs. Another much smaller specimen of T. rex is also for sale
I love this 💖 more kids need to be curious and educated about our world exactly like these kids were
1:37/1:38 If only there was a way to track down and confiscate the infamous "Son of Samson" specimen.
Baby Bob is heading for auction :(
What are your thoughts on the 2024 Nanotyrannus paper?
I live in LA County and I looked up a website of Natural History Museum of LA County to know if T-Rex released in theater, but it's still not there yet. So, when do you think it's going to release in it's theater when we passed 21 that it's not there than?
This is so Cool on Many levels, Well done to let the kids be apart of the process, its the Best way to inspire the Next generation, All school should engage in this type of hands on learning, when it comes to sciences.
Let me guess, there's gonna be a paper that'll name it midi-tyrannus
4:17 I had a feeling that this was showing on here. Also, Again about Nanotyrannus not a Genus? 1:22 I thought Jane was a Nanotyrannus? 1:44 That’s Bloody Mary. I could’ve sworn that this specimen was a Nanotyrannus too? 6:54 That’s one of the Nanotyrannus from the National Geographic Documentary Dino Death Match. I wish it along with T.Rex: Ultimate Survivor was released as either a Double Documentary feature DVD or a 2 Disc DVD set in America that I could add to my collection of one of my favorite National Geographic Documentaries on Modern & Prehistoric Animals. Especially those that have yet to released on DVD In America all these years & some that need to be re-released just Incase if some of us never get any of them in time earlier. 10:09 However, I better keep my eyes open for this that might premiere at any Museum & Science Centers I know of in the Eastern Seaboard of the United States that I come from.
Teen Rex sounds like a disney channel original series
These Kids are going Places
So we're just going to pretend the palentologists wernt deliberately cosplaying Dr Ellie Sattler and Dr Alan Grant from JP? No? OK just checking.
J’aurait aimé pouvoir découvrir des dinosaures fossiles a leur âge
Watched this after seeing the T.rex documentary
The problem with studying nature this old is it's really difficult, often we get it wrong and more often it brings a lot of disagreement amongst scientists.
Nanotyrannus is like women EXTREMELY COMPLICATED
Watch it get bought by a billionaire
It is literally owned by the DMNS.
That only happens when a specimen is found on private land (typically by private fossil hunting companies) and from the sounds of it, this wasn't the case here. Besides, once a museum or university gets their hands on a specimen it's definitively not up for sale, esp. when it's being prepared. No institution can afford the man hours involved in preparing a fossil that they don't own and can be bought from underneath them, and fewer still can afford to do that and create a new preparation and display space just for it. So, no, it's not for sale and it's not going to be bought from underneath them.
How much?
PLEASE cut down the intro length for this series, 50 seconds is way too long. Frankly a tenth of that would be more appropriate
But it's cool.
Just skip the intro
This video reminded me to ask if someone has a dinosaur bone but they aren’t sure the species it belongs to who should they contact? I have a bone that I was told was from a baby Triceratops. Personally I think based off looking a pictures of theropod skeletons that it’s either a toe, rib, finger, or tail vertebrae of a theropod but which one I don’t know. Who should I contact about what I believe is a dinosaur bone that I have?
Any paleontologists or geologists in your local area (museums, institutions, universities, BLM, National Parks or Monuments, etc.), you'll have to do the research yourself since it is area specific. If none exist, start emailing anyone that is labeled a paleontologist or geologist online.
@@EDGEscience Ok thank you. I live in the Atlanta Georgia area in the United States. Also BLM as in Black Lives Matter or a different BLM?
Bureau of Land Management
@@PackHunter117 BLM as in the Bureau of Land Management, not Black Lives Matter haha
@@EDGEscience Ok. Thank you for your help. I appreciate it.
A video about the rules for digging between BLM land, private land and public land would not be a bad idea
Let’s hope that someday we will find a real actual nannotyrannus because think about it, tyrannosaurs wasn’t the only Apex predator in the hell creek, other than besides dromeosaurs of course
Guys, I hate to break it to you but it's actually Spinosaurus
Based
Montanaspinus
@@ksoundkaiju9256 That word makes me shiver
Nanospinosaurus
Another good specimen of the Tyrannosaurus rex family.
Imagine if it ends up making nanotyrannus a valid genus again
didnt the 2024 nanotyrannus paper prove it already is valid again?
@@lisboa_editsno 😂😂😂
What's yalls opinion about spinosaurus not being able to swim
@@Ballingerdalinger1425 weird to say the least
@@lisboa_editsThat's something impossible _to prove._ It can get indicated by evidence, and this could be both good or bad evidence from case to case and paper to paper. Absolute proof exists only in mathematics - which is a huge pain in the ass for fields such as paleontology, paleoecology or other fields concerned with deep time in general and me personally in particular. 😅
that intro music brings back so much nostalgia but i cant help but want to throw my ass in a circle too
Those kids lived my absolute dream
I wouldn't be surprised if nanotyrannus turns out to be related to a different Tyrannosaurid genus all together, probably a westren dryptosurid if i have to guess
I mean it would make sense if Nanotyrannus (IF it would be permanently considered a valid genus) to be a Dryptosaurid as Dryptosaurus itself is known from the same age as T-Rex, just living on the east coast instead of the western portion of North America. But for Nanotyrannus to be a Dryptosaurid, it would have to mean that at some point before the asteroid impact, a population of Dryptosauids had to have crossed a very temporary land bridge between Laramida and Appalachia before the Interior Seaway flooded over said bridge and in a brief period of time became Nanotyrannus.
@@kylecollier7569Actually if I’m not mistaken the Western Interior Seaway had already shrunk significantly in size by the time T.rex was around so a land bridge likely wouldn’t even be necessary.
@@bennettfender9927 depends though if there were Dryptosauids on the western coast of Appalachia at the end of the Cretaceous, of which that's still unknown until a new formation/dig site is found in that specific area.
Would be surprised there a new cartoon call “my life as a teenager t-Rex”? Based on this discovery?
I’ve been in the Denver museum literally yesterday to see this incredible find for my very eyes
Dope. I'll be there in August.
@@EDGEscience it’s worth the trip
More tyrant files🎉
Teen rex that’s just a lousy name because there’s lots of teen Rexes lol
Wait and see for the Goonies-like movie adaptation of this particular discovery!!
damn he is lucky
У костей жизнь интереснее чем у меня
I think the nanotyrranus Is possible he can to be a "Ghost-dino"
Here's my problem with the "Nano" debate....they want to call it Nano because of its size....yet every one of the ones they claim are Nano's...are juveniles...which means it will get BIGGER..SO ITS NOT A FUCKING NANO ANYTHING!!! How are you going to name a full grown specimen the size Acrocanthasaurus(given for illustration) ...NANO!!
Nanotyrannus is a genus name. It would remain a Nanotyrannus regardless of age. That being said, no adult Nanotyrannus has ever been found. It's one of the big pieces of evidence used to lump Nanotyrannus into the Tyannosaurus genus.
dinosaurs like triceratops,T. rex,edmontosaurus,ankylosaurus,and sauropod dinosaurs are they bulletproof? I ask because
turtles are the sister of archosaurs but there totality different compare to dinosaurs,the only animal skin is close to dinosaurs skin is birds and crocodiles but dinosaurs skin is unique to compare any animal even the legs and even the head and the eyes some dinosaurs like ceratopsians have a protection around their eyes,even their big horns are protecting their eyes and so does ankylosaurus and also the dinosaur size helps the skin to be even thicker how do we know this because of their mummified skin which leads to so many questions.
No just get a big gun
I mean what I was really saying is in dinosaur like
triceratops, T.rex, edmontosaurus, a nkylosaurus, and sauropod dinosaurs are they bulletproof.
No
Thank you
Hypothesis. Juvenile T rex have more teeth due to different prey, since the larger adults need a more powerful bite, losing teeth would allow less contact points for the psi, and thus allow for more force to be carried on those points, allowing a more effective bite. The Juveniles have more teeth due to not needing as much psi on a certain point as compared to simply catching their more agile prey. I'm a genius. Had to put it here 17 hours later before I forgot it
Or they literally just lost teeth as they age due to all the biting and fighting with its prey. And infections, aging etc
That wouldn't account for tooth sockets.
@@reeyees50 that too, but tooth sockets don't disappear, so they'd either have to slowly grow, lose teeth, and have those sockets be filled with bone, or just slowly lose sockets for more psi as they age
Best intro song
are they spear proof
No
Ok but will they be extremely hard to kill
Idk they're dead 🤷♂️
8:39 I feel like it should be noted that juveniles of other tyrannosaurs are known preserved fully articulated with arms
MPC-D 107/7 is a great example it’s a 2-3 year old Tarbosaurus and it clearly has proportionally tiny arms like adult tyrannosaurs
The arm is significantly shorter than the femur
This is true of, every well-preserved Gorgosaurus and Tarbosaurus
I think it’s clear that tyrannosaurs do not grow into and/or shrink into their arms
True, but that doesn't rule out T. rex being a weirdo.
@@EDGEscience true dat! Rex is very much unique in & of itself!
I think a way to falsify or confirm it would be looking at subadult rex material
Is it transitional between the D.D. Tyrannosaur and adult rex?
Or is it significantly smaller than both?
UCRC PV1 is potentially important Rex material because it’s an articulated arm
PIN 553-1 “Gorgosaurus lancinator” is a subadult Tarbosaurus that could also have some merit, since Tarb & Rex are so similar
Obviously I’m getting ahead of myself cuz the D.D. Tyrannosaur isn’t even published yet but this is a fun discussion :)
The juvenile Tarbosaurus PIN 552-2 has an arm length comparable to the larger PIN 552-1
I personally dont feel comfortable claiming that there is no nanotyrannus...the last paper got me thinking well and a friend of mine who thinks nanotyrannus is valid genus has brought up some good points like arm size or like some skull features that could completely show that its a thrannosaurid not even closely related to trex itself...the most convincing thing to me is the arm size because bloody mary hands are bigger than even a fully grown trex, no animal shrinks bodyparts as it grows, they either grow with it or simply stay same size and with the growth of the rest lf the body they create the illusion that they "shrink" but no, bloody mary hands are straight up different from adult trex
You mean Nannotyrannus?