Dinosaur Vocalization Study (2022) | Cretaceous Era
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- Опубликовано: 25 июн 2024
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0:00 Intro
0:27 "Velociraptor"
1:04 "Utahraptor"
1:54 "Dryptosaurus"
2:44 "Tyrannosaurus Rex"
3:31 "Triceratops"
4:35 "Elasmosaurus"
5:16 "Mosasaurus"
6:15 "Quetzalcoatlus
6:56 "Spinosaurus Aegyptiacus"
An ongoing study utilizing the most recent scientific data on dinosaur vocalizations. Sounds are produced by myself and digitally workshopped from modern non-syrinx based avian reptiles. Using skull and olfactory cavity proportions, one can attempt to recreate the flow of sound, frequency, and volume of each animal. Much study is required for each particular species, and often several phases are trashed due to general unlikelyhood. The final results are based on acute representations of what sounds would be most comfortable and base-line for each animal. Video also includes 2 marine reptiles and a pterosaur, even though both are much more difficult to produce accurately.
Citations:
Concepts:
scholarblogs.emory.edu/nbbpar...
www.thoughtco.com/how-loud-co...
blogs.scientificamerican.com/...
www.livescience.com/306-dinos...
www.icr.org/article/tyrannosa...
www.sciencefocus.com/nature/i...
www.ndsu.edu/pubweb/~ashworth...
carnegiemnh.org/what-did-dino...
Proportions:
www.dimensions.com/element/t-...
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
www.researchgate.net/figure/C...
royalsocietypublishing.org/do...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physiol....
www2.ca.uky.edu/agcomm/pubs/AS...
Aim: To be more sophisticated than Julia Clarke's rendition, which included: combining the booming call of the Eurasian bittern with the growling vocalizations of the Chinese crocodile, and then scaling it up to T-rex’s estimated size (about 12 meters or 40 feet long), what they got was a ominous low rumble.
ruclips.net/video/kJd-jDMb0wU/видео.html
CHECK OUT THE WHOLE COLLECTION!
We are the priests
Of the Temples of Syrinx
Our great computers
Fill the hallowed halls.
We are the priests
Of the Temples of Syrinx
All the gifts of life
Are held within our walls!
@@whiteknightcat Amusing equivocation lmao. I should listen to Rush more.
@@StudioMod
@@teresa69984 What?
what the actual fuck is that supposed to mean@@whiteknightcat
If you listen really closely, you can also hear me shitting myself in the background.
that got a good chuckle out of me
@@Caakers same lmao
Best comment 😂
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣💩
😂😂😂
Every other dinosaur: Creepy, otherworldly sounds
Dryptosaurus: Sounds like my grandfather stepped on a Lego brick
Would still scare the 💩 out of everyone if they’d encountered one
These things weighed 1,7 tons on average and image how loud they would have been.
Even Lions and Tigers who are way smaller can make incredible loud noises so imagine one of these things would make these noises near you
@@derfremdeausdemghetto6887 That Doesn't Change The Fact That They Sound Like They Tried To Eat Something Hot And Burned Their Mouth
This got a good little cackle out of me help-
That was scary as shit in my opinion like imagine being alone in the woods and hearing that sound off in the distance
Ok but imagine youre in the middle of the forest at night and suddenly you hear those noises coming from a short distance
People talk about how eerie and intimidating the T-Rex sounds, but the Triceratops does NOT need to sound like that.
Well, that sounds like an alligator/crocodile.
@@metalmaster6667 And this herbivorous dino DOESN'T need to sound like one of the most dangerous predators in the modern day.
@@TheZorlock Yes, but what I wanted to say is, that dinos and alligators are similiar (don‘t hit me if I‘m wrong), so its natural that they sound alike.
sounds like an engine, honestly would love to ride one
sounds like a clogged toilet
I cant even fathom how loud a t Rex must have been.
God your entire body would vibrate. It would be chilling.
If anything it would be like an alligator bellowing. And that alone is already terrifying. Imagine a 17 foot tall animal making that noise
The trex would probably emit more low frequency sounds that aren’t able to be heard by the human ear but able to be felt by the human body, which is kinda more terrifying than the sounds that the trex could make
@@F-14_tomcat sort of like when a lion roars, I've always heard stories from people who've been near one and it triggers the fight-or-flight immediately.
@@natem1579 yeah
Velociraptor- angry seal
Utahraptor- cross between a pig and crocodile
Dryptosaurus- man raised by gorillas
Tyrannosaurus- prehistoric air raid siren
Triceratops- evil rhinoceros
Elasmosaurus- two whales made of rubber fighting
Mosasaurus- the last sound you hear as the alien blaster disintegrates your brain
Quetzalcoatlus- COD zombie charging up a space laser
Spinosaurus- world’s most terrifying wolf
Defiktelty not prehistoric air raid siren because prehistoric times didn’t have sirens
@@Vegito1scoutwow.😐
@@Vegito1scoutwow thank you sherlock
I still prefer describing Mosasaur sounds as "Whale songs in the key of 'Cthulhu Fhtagn'".
*triceratops - desiel engine starting on a cold morning
This version of the T-Rex sound is actually 100 times more terrifying than the ones I've heard in movies, that almost always sound like a loud horn. This is something more down to earth and at the same time sounds totally alien.
Who ain't scared of a freaking freddy fazbear
@@Tommyknocker.bruhhh 💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀
It sounds like a mix between bowser and freddy fazbear
and whats scarier is you would have felt the vibrations of it through your bones.
Dreadbear
I want to see a survival horror game called *100M* in which you spawn into the mesozoic as a naked human. No commentary, no music, no backstory, just one objective: SURVIVE.
I need that game...
I already love this game
Whenever a T-Rex comes near, this plays 3:14 and then it starts silently stalking you.
yeah with AI we will be able to when we are dead
I’m sorry… NAKED HUMAN?!
The spinosaurus sound is freaky yet beautiful
BEAUTIFUL? THATS THE SOUND OF THE DEVIL
It's beautiful but creepy@@Myphonesux-
guys it's just a pitchshifted and slowed loon call
real loon noises are still haunting tho
IWIWIWIWI OWOWOWOWOW
@@distinguishedgentleman756IWIWIWIWIWIIWI OWOWOWOWOWIOW
I'm from Mesozoic era and I can confirm that this is 100% accurate. Its been 65 million yrs since I last say them. Its so Nostalgic to hear their voice again.
Ha
Oh man tell me about it! Today's kids will never understand how it felt to wake up by Dryptosaurus going "EEEEEHH UUH UUHH EEEEEEHHHHH" in the morning.
😅😂
@@onurunlu129good old days :(
As a carnotaurus, I agree. It's beena long while.
Fun Science Fact: human bodies are sensitive to what is called "infrasound", sounds so low that very few things currently around make them. Feeling these sounds (we can't hear them through our ears, we instead feel them with more sensitive organs, including our eyes) causes intense fear and anxiety, as well as creating hallucinations on the edge of your vision. It is believed these traits were beneficial by helping our ancestors avoid things like unstable cave formations and dangerously powerful storms, which are two of the naturally occurring versions of infrasound. Another naturally occurring source of infrasound is very large animals, including predators.
This is entirely unrelated to the deeply terrifying sounds these animals potentially made, but imagining yourself increasingly anxious and seeing things on the edge of your vision while being stalked by a T-Rex sounding like the above might help you get a better picture of what experiencing this would be like.
Oh my. I’m absolutely going to use that information for a character. Thank you for sharing! I love learning about the weird little quirks humans have that we ourselves may sometimes consider superhuman or supernatural, when in reality it’s really just an ability most of us possess.
@@florpleborp2275 yeah, the above is believed to be a source of ghost hallucinations, as older houses can vibrate at these frequencies, especially if they're potentially structurally unsound.
That's so interesting! It makes sense we would have to evolve with such abilities but wow how cool
@@mol830 there's so many weird biological quirks that mutation just stumbled on and kept. "eyeballs hear Bad Cave Sounds" is just the tip of the iceberg.
Thank you for the information ❤️
I was NOT expecting velociraptor to make the exact same sounds as Jerma985
fascinating
Jerma985 what is that
@@volactic5240 Twitch streamer
When I heard the Tyrannosaurus calls, I felt some kind of primal instinct to run.
It sounds like a death rattle
That’s what’s weird about it is that the first trace of humans didn’t exist until millions of years after the extinction of the dinosaurs… although you are right
@@BKRL1343that we know of or have been told
Sounds like a big chicken tbh lol
@@maxcar7298 You wanna get lectured by Alan Grant? Because that is how you get lectured by Alan Grant. lol
You didn't have to add echo to make it extra creepy, but you did that. You did that for us.
Reverb
@@jorgitoislamico4224🤯
😅
Yeah its strange because you dont hear elephants echo their voices yet they are huge
@@Saad_ibn_abdelaziz Because Elephants live in largely open and very flat land there's no echoes to be made, the planet back then in time of dinosaurs was a LOT more dense and extreme.
It’s nice to hear their voice again after millions of years I miss my pets
Stockholm syndrome and trauma right there, because aren't you sure you weren't the pet instead?
@@maria-melek nah cause im the one who feed them and toke care of them
@@hope-uk6uhfeed them with...yourself u mean
@@hope-uk6uh hmm, then,why was there an proteceratops and velociraptor fossils that shows they were fighting each other ? And how did you raise an large predators that had an deep sounds that are sensitive to human organs,and we can't hear those sounds from our ears ? And how did you bring all those into one place ?
@@maisamzeiad1421 magic
I was laughing at That dryptosaurus sound until...at 2:28 he started that satanic laughter like he knows something we don't know or as if we have fallen into some of his trap
I'm literally standing in front of a life-sized reconstruction model of T.rex listening to the Rex sounds right now. It's making the experience a little more terrifying.
Yeah I don't think I could do that 😅 lol
Seriously dude? The T-Rex was the least intimidating of them all. It was weak. No way a walking mouth sounds like a god damn air horn. Like really?
@@shinigamigaming2941 that's your opinion, and a misinformed one, from the sounds of it, on that last part.
mosasaurus sounds like an alien trying to communicate
@@shinigamigaming2941T.Rex was the strongest, had the strongest bite force, and probably did sound like a bird like the one in the video, I don’t know what you’re yappin about💀💀💀
I want so bad to just see them with my own eyes. Dinosaurs almost feel like fiction because there's so little left of them, but it's infuriating to know that they were real and walked the earth just like animals today, but the gap of time is utterly untraversable.
I feel you on this one.
I've had that same thought my entire life.
@@Blinkptx Just to see one for 30 minutes would change my life.
@@StudioMod Preferably one of the biggest ones, but I wouldn't be picky. 🙂
“So little left” that means they are still out there…
I can envision that Spinosaurus head shaking wildly as it utters those spine chilling sounds
Honestly this video brings back my childhood fascination with dinosaurs, such a cool nostalgic feeling I can't put into words, thank you. It's like being in the museum for the first time again
The Utahraptor is really scary, and I'm surprised no one is talking about the Dryptosaurus.
Yeah the Dryptosaurus is really terrifying
Nightmare fuel.
Dryptosaurus sounds like a person going insane
@@lordeppiothe1 ikr wheres the poorly edited tortoise sex mp4s?
dryptosaurus sounds like a gorilla or monkey
Dude that Utahraptor "laugh" sent CHILS DOWN MY SPINE
*taking notes for my nocturnal, raven-feathered, Stygian owl-eyed Utahs for my Jurassic Park fanon novel*
And then it sounds like it's trying to say bagel
It sounds like those screw driver Gun thing that I hear
I read this comment half a second before the laugh started. Creepiest thing ever!
@@mb_allo-3023 a drill?
So beautiful we know they had feathers. Trying to replicate extinct sounds is amazing!
larger theropods most likely did not have feathers, but protohairs as these act as almost quills.
My dog got very interested by spinosaurus sounds 😂 and me too. It's beautiful and eerie at the same time.
My dog was interested too. In fact it sounds like the sound of a dog at times 😂
This makes me think of a dinosaur based survival horror game set in a jungle where you just hear these calls all the time
The studio that did Subnautica could do this flawlessly.
I want a full on realistic Cabela's Big Game Hunter style simulator where you can hunt dinosaurs but sometimes you'll find yourself being hunted as well. Would be cool to also be able to play as a dinosaur and hunt the hunters.
ark survival evolved
Dino Crisis
@@TexasGreed That kinda sounds like a game from a while back called Evolve, just that it's sci-fi with alien wildlife instead.
Utah sounds like a possessed person and dryo sounds like a dying person. I love it, really reminds me of how sounds from animals like cougars and foxes where often attributed to witches and other monsters
Utah sounds like a sterotypical 1950's recording of a man saying babam
@@bigboss9337 but in all seriousness there is a bird that makes a similar call
@@airena1449 what bird is it
Fox screams really do be sounding like evil screaming witches tho
utah sounds like a horse. like literally. i have heard horses make those sounds.
"Dinosaurs arent monsters, we're just not used to them yet." - Some dude on the internet
Said no one ever
Yet
Yet
Triceratops and quetzalcoatlus actually sound what I expected them to sound like
Dude that mosasaurus gave me chills, imagining swimming in the ocean underwater and you hear that but see absolutely nothing 😭
That’s what I thought when listening to the Elasmosaur.
*thalassophobia activates*
Or imagine u are in a abandones tunnel and you hear the Dryptosaurus but all is Dark
soundin' like a god damn courage the cowardly dog monster
Bajo el agua? Jajaja eso vivia en la superficie
Triceratops sounds exactly like what you'd expect. Everything else - some sort of strange nightmare.
Yea I figured I’d sound like a big elephant
To me I thought it sounded rather crocodilian-like with a mix of elephant
@@biohazard9164 definitely yeah
I hear like a crocodile
Velociraptor sounds about right
This is insane. The velociraptor was cute but the rest of them instantly gave me unreasonable amounts of stress, especially the Rex and the Mosa.
they turned me on
Really awakens some kind of primal inner fear, right?
The T-Rex kind of sounds like farts
I love how she chirps almost like a cat
Instincts: yo that’s familiar runaway
isn't it truly magnificent that we fet to hear the echoes of a long bygone past? love it. love their voices. wish they could hear mine.
Thanks for the work guy's! I love dinosaurs since im a kid, and now i can her them over 65 million years later. Incredible🙌🏼
I remember someone saying how terrifying it would be if in Jurassic Park there was a dinosaur who could mimic human speech like a parot, and would use it to lure people to their deaths. Something like that could make for a really effective horror sequence in a film.
Parotasaurus
The terrifying thing is, there had to be at least one species of these mfs that could do that
@@koza9842fr we have ravens and parrots, there must’ve been some back then too
Half of these creatures sound like a human sometimes.
Mountain lions often sound like women screaming bloody murder and have inadvertently led many concerned campers right to them which leads to them getting attacked. Seriously though look it up. Mountain Lion cries are terrifying
First I laughed at the Dryptosaurus, then I realized how horrifying it would be to hear coming from anywhere but my computer speakers..
Mosasaurus's calls were scary as hell, they just feel so alien and fear inducing. Same with Quetzalcoatlus, sounds like some hellish siren.
Honestly i thought one of the drypt’s was the best, the first half of it. The second half sounded too vowelly, like it had lips.
@@MackNcD … it did have lips.
@@jonahedmiston5144 I guess we don’t know either way because it’s body is largely speculative. But i suppose it could have lips. Anyway it sounded very human, perhaps an artifact that it was a human’s best shot at creating the sounds - and using himself as an instrument.
@@MackNcD why wouldn’t it have lips
@@MackNcD theres different types of lips. You're good bro. Dinos had non-flexible lips which makes it so producing vowel sounds is hard. Primates, like us, have flexible lips which makes vowel sounds easier to produce. The type of lip was discovered a while back by using the types of structures on the jawbone and skull and comparing them to the types of lips in modern animals. The structures in the bones most closely matched non-flexible to possibly semi-flexible lips. Even semi-flexible lips would make the vowel sounds difficult if not impossible. It's just the structure of the body and how sound/vocalizations work.
Anyway, you were spot on if you were meaning lips like ours, which it sounded like you were.
So many of these vocalizations are so familiar. Amazing work, thank you for sharing.
brooooo this is wild, thank you for this, truly appreciated
Honestly, the image of a gigantic creature making high pitched gibbering's instead of the expected low roar is far more terrifying.
This is a fantastic soundscape, it really had me in the feel of a primordial world. They sound so alien to what we're used to hearing animals vocalise like today yet there's just enough familiarity in them that it sounds plausible.
Imagine just hearing loud laughing coming from behind you
@@soggywaffles6288 ikr
@@soggywaffles6288 horrifying 😭
most of these are edited bird sounds! the first spino sound is a common loon i think
@@calhoungamingyou’re right!! but since birds are descendants of dinosaurs and these are the same frequencies dinosaurs probably had, this is probably pretty darn close
That Quetzal call triggered some kind of primal "GET DOWN, DANGER IN SKY" feeling in me.
I definitely wasn't expecting spinosaurus to sound like a loon, I was expecting something more crocodilian, but it was still very cool.
I guess when you consider a Spinosaurus like a non avian semi aquatic dinosaur you can kinda see certain loon similarities. Now I can't unsee and unhear spinosaurus like a giant reptilian loon
Weren't they mostly on the ground hunting?
@@akiraasmr3002 probably, they would have been like giant prehistoric death storks
@@akiraasmr3002 Some say they primarily ate fish in river water
Its not scientific, but I like to think the feeling we get from hearing primal noises like these are leftover instinct from out small mammalian ancestors telling us, "GET INTO THE BURROW !!!!"
These are so beautiful and haunting at the same time
4:39, my stomach when I watch cooking shows at 2AM.
Joking aside, this video is so fascinating! It makes you appreciate how there is so much that is yet to be discovered. It displays the overwhelming power of nature
Me when I watch Aden films videos of various steaks.
The Spinosaurus sounds like a demon in a nightmare. Imagine seeing and hearing one in a tropical forest. Same with the Dryptosaurus. It sounds like a man screaming in horror and hurt.
No wonder why they call it Dryptosaurus cuz it literally means to tear and this poor thing is tearing itself to pieces
He sounds like a fuckin monkey and a cricket, don’t kid yourself
@@Jay_Gut001 wat
I can imagine Kevin (one of the 3 heads of King Ghidorah) with those noises lol
dryptosaurus sounds like a gorilla screaming
Here’s a dino sound fact for you guys.
Scans of a T. rex skull have revealed that their olfactory would have been adept at hearing low frequency sounds-even lower than we are capable of hearing. This means _those_ were the types of sounds they would hear in their environment. Imagine instead of being able to hear a T. rex approaching, you would *feel* the vibrations of its vocals getting closer
EDIT: Definitely not the olfactory, but I’ve forgotten the name of the relevant part of the brain
and your eardrums would burst
@@jesusisafly8689 wait really
If it was hunting you, you probably wouldn't hear anything.
Kind of like an elephant, actually.
So...they smell sounds? 🤨
All these calls me so happy to hear. It’s sooooo cool.
My dog liked this. He especially loved the “Spinosaurus”. Thanks!
The Utahraptor and Dryptosaurus sounded the freakiest to me. Those deep rumbling and the guttural tones above at the same time?! Especially the Dryptosaurus hyena-like laugh just gave me chills. Cool video!
I agree. Those guttural sounds just trigger something primal in me, like reading a Lovecraftian tale. I feel so vulnerable.
The Quetzalcoatlus and the Spinosaurus were also pretty terrifying.
The velociraptor sounds pretty cute, though.
Weird. Those were the least intimidating to me. The T-Rex was way scarier.
Hyena with an ape
@@gamayundoom This is when you know this shit is for real. We inherit things genetically, and when you hear those screams and it terrorize you to the bone, you know for sure those animals hunted our mammal ancestors for millions of years.
This study really highlights how alien and otherworldly animals we've never met could sound. Also, animals in their natural habitat often make a LOT of noise when they feel like it. I think the dinosaur world could have been very noisy at times.
If I was dropped into the Cretaceous I think a large part of my time would be hearing the weirdest, spine chilling noises and thinking "WHAT the FUUUUUHHUUUCKKK was THAT!!!??"
Awh don’t worry that was just Jerry ^_^
true lol
if it was nighttime and i heard the dryptosaurus call I think I'd just curl up into a ball and sob
lol yea, a walk in a nature reserve is always very noisy. Birds, insects, toads, etc. just living their best lives screaming all they like at their own leisure. It's quite nice actually.
@@crowdemon_archives sarcastic t wat. I guess you haven't heard monkeys, lions, elephants, flamingoes, hyaenas.. or maybe you think they all make tiny inaudible squeaks. P rick.
Best thing i saw/heard in a long time. Horrifying and amazing.
This sounds amazing. I would like to experiment and get similar things for my videogames. What software do you use? are you using a physical audio modeling system or similar?
Velociraptor: Vaguely avian. Chittering, purring, and geckering, with a certain keenness and intent.
Utahraptor: Distinctly aggressive; shutter-like, squealing, and scratchy, conveying restless fervor.
Dryptosaurus: Guttural and panicked, like a gagging sheep, before crescendoing to a mad laugh.
Tyrannosaurus: Reverberating bellows and hums, like a helicopter takeoff or an emergency siren.
Triceratops: Similar to a crocodilian. Hissing, raspy, creaking, and hollow, but not without great weight.
Elasmosaurus: An echoing ringing through the depths, like a ghost ship singing as it dances into the abyss.
Mosasaurus: Nightmarishly deep and throaty, as a bullfrog trapped in a stereo system. Eerily moist.
Quetzocoatlus: Shrill and alien, a sound unlike any other. Imagine an otherworldly ship calling to announce its discovery.
Spinosaurus: A mysterious, lonesome whistle accompanied by dancing, high-pitched whimpers, followed by distorted screams.
@@iangarcia9211 Almost as deep as your mom
how long did you spend writing this
i love this post it’s so accurate
I'd read anything you publish. Who are you? Your interpretation was as good as the video. Thank you Sir.
I don’t know why, but to me the sounds of the trike and rex feel like they’ve been switched,
The Utahraptor scared me the most, the gutteral laughing which transitions into this human-like "breaker breaker breaker breaker" policeman-like chanting evokes the same terror in me as hearing a cougar do its "screaming woman" cry. Great work man!
It triggered my flight response
@@my_girl_seraphine5294 did you run from your phone? :0
@@alisonmccain
No but I might have almost dropped it when I heard what the sound was
Dryptosaurus ngl funny as hell
@@tahtia
Lol
Even cooler than the sound in Jurassic Park! Excellent work!
Wow! Great Work! Really scary sounding creatures for sure... just wow.
These actually sound cooler than the roars and growls heard in Jurassic Park.
Just imagine after Jurassic World dominion. They reboot the franchise with accurate dinosaurs and these sounds
@@mukeshmalhotra9146 no, I don't want them to reboot it, I want them to create new original stories, they're just going to ruin the magic even with the accurate sounds, JP should just be left alone.
how dare you say that
@@RHSDudeman those growls are way more terrifying than your average tiger roar in Jurassic park
some of those are cool too, I'm amazed they made some new ones for the evolution 2 game given how lazy they are with their games.
they sound so "animal" rather than mindless monster. very interesting!
Sounds like both……
Don’t ask how
T Rex almost sounds like a cow, I'd say. Like a friendly giant who just happens to be a meat eater.
@@alijankhan3330 They actually look very pretty when given more accurate depictions, since their eyes were bigger and more facing forwards, it would really give you a sense on intelligence when you look at them :]
(I got this impression from the reconstruction of Sue the T-rex)
i mean i dont think they would sound that similar to birds, just because they're closely related doesnt mean they sound the same
You can really hear the emotion in the Rex’s sounds
Marvellous sound design!
This is EPIC!!!!!! This is super fascinating! I have so many questions. Lol
The dryptosaurus is haunting. The fact that something that large coukd make essentiakly a haunting, bird like call is astinishing. Really makes you realize how alien these things were.
It sounds like hitler having a tantrum
It almost sounds like a person, same with the ‘laugh’ from the Utahraptor. They might have shared our planet but they came from a completely different world.
@@ursadabear2810 yeah it’s spooky
It also sounds like someone screaming
Sounds like a Sheep to me. Imagine hearing that in the modern day, thinking there’s some type of Sheep stuck only to see a Dryosaurus
Mosasaurus one is terrifying. Imagine swimming in a lake and hearing that from the abyss beneath you.
Right I’d be like 5 more minutes guys and we’re swimming back to the dock. One more game of marco polo and we’re out.
If you could hear that though the water, it's already to late...
*prays that in some way they could be trained*
@@TheKiroshi I dont think Mosasaurs lived in lakes
@@bigboss9337 uhhhh. Ever heard of the LOCH NESS MONSTER? ❕️❗️ 🦕🦖🦎🐍🐊🐋❗️❕️
@@TheKiroshi thats not a mosasaur, thats a plesiosaur. Also its existence isnt confirmed.
The bill clapping of the velociraptor is a lil terrific
Isnt it strange how you can see so much about what 250 my ago mustve been like .. yet THIS is what for the first time sparks my brain into imagining these creatures like i'm standing in the middle of a forest with them. I know its a replication, but still. Those sounds register as very very real.
Those last few t-rex calls were really chilling. 100% would make jurassic world more creepy if they actually tried to be scientifically accurate.
Edit : Stop harassing me in the comments please. I'm just a person who think these dinosaur calls would've been really really cool in the jurassic series. Stop leaving hateful comments with your own opinions that no one asked for.
Remember they spliced them with frogs in Jurassic Park, people seem to forget that.
@@HouseClarkzonian yeah, and it dosent really make sence imo, why not reptiles? Or birds.
@@ghartuckt663I'm pretty sure it was so they could logically have a reason for some of the dinosaurs to change their sex
@@sarahfreakinlynn isn't there a species of lizard that's all-female and reproduce asexually? I wonder if Michael Crichton didn't know about that. It would have been more interesting than the frogs.
yes only that t rex didnt sound that way. and i dont know who made up that shit. but pitching a few goose sounds deeper dont make a trex
The Tyrannosaurus is just absolutely dreadful. Hearing that in an eerie setting would immediately trigger your fight or flight response. But you don’t exactly have a chance of fight, only flight. That is if you can make it out alive. Same with Spinosaurus. It kicks in some major thalassophobia and The Bloop vibes.
Mammals that lived at that time would've been small and mouse-like.
Our flight response would've put us below a tree. But I don't think a t-rex would be hunting those. Too small to be worth the effort.
Tbh it has Jack and the Beanstalk vibes. Ho ho ho ffee fifo fum and was pretty hilarious
Probably flight, also a T. rex is theoretically slower, so a human can easily run from one (that’s also why in ark you can run from a rex, because a T. rex is theorized to only speed walk and not run)
Made up phobia blah blah blah
@@Tabi-Kun the average person is probably not outrunning a T. Rex. They're theorized to be as fast as 25 mph
But how do you came up with these? We dont know anything about their sounds.
You can also hear a lot of other familiar sounds of animals and objects in them. I'm curious about the preciseness of how they got the "pattern" of calls or communication if thousands of similar bird and reptile species have differing variety of communication sounds. We can't even specify the sound in different situations like when they lay eggs or when they are hungry, mate, agrressive, or when they are fighting or DYING.
I think a lot of pople forget that dinosaurs weren't monsters, they were animals. Beautiful, living, breathing animals.
Big carnivores are monsters
@@alifaizan4377 oh boy. It's people like you that give them a bad name.
animals are monsters
They are no more monsters than we are ourselves.
@@earthly_holiness1649 Ironically, I believe humans *can* be the most inhumane animals.
I love how they almost sound "bird-like". Almost makes them sound like actual bird ancestors rather than the ones in Jurassic Park
Well yeah the dinosaurs in Jurassic park are just cloned living things complete with frog dna to set thing even further
LOL, many of these sounds ARE modern bird calls that were simply edited. For instance, the Utahraptor features distorted Willow Grouse and Western Capercaillie calls easily found here on RUclips.
birds actually have evolved from dinosaurs :D
most of them sounds are actual bird sounds
@@mxxhi170 birds are dinosaurs
i had a visceral reaction to all of these, they all fill me with an intense dread and feeling like i need to run
Utahraptor being a bro at 1:40 and warning us that there’s a werewolf
2:29 That’s when the laughing starts to get scarier than it already was, the deep growls mixed into it make it sound more monstrous
The only place I want to hear THAT is on my device. Big nope.
sounds like a car engine but yea scary it is
@@allosaurusfragilis6652 i cant even imagine that thing standing in front of you and making that sound
you guys ever seen Predator?
@@Thedisciplemike yes
3:15 I can’t even imagine hearing a t-Rex on a foggy evening in the middle of a forest when it makes these reverberations, the echoes off the trees making it sound like it’s coming from everywhere, the only certainty that it’s getting closer and closer.
I HAVEN'T HAD A NIGHTMARE IN 5 YEARS DON'T MAKE ME START NOW
It didn't sound scary at all
maybe multiple rexes out there watching...
They wouldn't even bother you, they would waste too much energy trying to catch you
@@gamergrill4933 no shit Sherlock
This is very beautiful and fascinating
Fantastic video. If you wander around NYC, you could sometimes still hear the Dryptosaurus. They usually shuffling down the street, or dancing in the middle of it. Scary stuff.
Or, you woke one up while it was sleeping on a subway bench
Quetzalcoatlus is definitely the most unsettling. I'd love to see a movie scene with those sounds on a foggy day, high up in a mountain.
It's taken from a real animal alive today, the Channel-billed Cuckoo. The maker of this lifted that bird's call directly for this.
There's another video of a recreation of its calls and I think that ones so much more unsettling.
In a plane... wait a minute! Nah nevermind JWD doesn't count.
to me sounds like a nucleaur bomb siren
true but imagine being in the midle of a foggy swamp and hearing around the start of spinosaurus
not only you would be able to hear the eerie sound of a Tyrannosaurus Rex, but you’ll will be able to feel the vibrations of the growl as well.
How do you determine what they sound like do you base them off of something similar in modern times or by using bone structure you can find the structure of vocal cords and determine that way
Awesome sounds.
Middle of the night and I've decided to sit in the dark and put these sounds loud on my speaker across the room. Just recreating the terrifying experience, very cool, lots of primal fear.
Who tf does this to themselves
I like the way you think
That's actually kinda cool
You indeed are a chad
Bro's got surround sound speakers
I can imagine hearing multiple spinos across a large foggy lake in the morning. You can’t see them, only hear them communicating with each other.
Very eerie…
Edit:
Hey wow thanks everyone for the likes!! ❤
Sea, lake, river or offshore mangroves, I just had a vision when I was walking the dog one morning near a big foggy lake.☺️
At least you could take some solace in the fact that they probably wouldn't have any reason to hunt you
@@mr.tomatohead3709 exactly!
Right, just distant silohettes beneath a moonlit cloudy sky. The fog of the bog rising, their far off footsteps sending large waves rumbling through shallow water. The heads look like lumbering trees, on the move…
Dragons.... 🔥🔥🔥🐉
@@hopetagulos RAOR
Beautiful sound. I wish I could sleep in a tree canopy of a jungle at that time
Have they also considered the diaphragm and the like in producing the pattern of sound?
This is one of the only “what dinosaurs really sounded like” videos that actually seems correct and has proper research rather than being clickbait. I actually love this.
Media heard the hypersound and lack of a larynx and really said “that means dinosaurs were silent- like crocodiles.” Like bruh, did you forget crocodiles still vocalize? Hiss and growl? Even bellow? The thought is just that whatever sounds they made, dinosaurs probably didn’t roar- and your video captures that idea flawlessly. Thank you so much for this!
that "hollow" throat rumble is on point imo I didnt expect spino to sound like it did, i thought itd be more like a the gator sounds, but im good with how it is haha
I thought the t rex produces low frequency sounds but this video makes them sound different, so which is it?
This isn't correct at all, cool video tho
@@MithriVideolari "tHiS iSn'T cOrReCt aT aLl" lmao watch out guys we got the guy with roamed with dinos... Please Ozgur, do show us your research on the sounds they made? I'm sure its more extensive and scientific than this video.
@@Ratmanbiggy The vocalizations in this video are purely speculative and most of them are taken from extant animals, mostly birds, the direct descendants of dinosaurs.
Avian dinosaurs (birds) can make very diverse sounds due to their vocalization organ called "syrinx" It's really easy to track this organ in fossils due to the minerals it leaves behind. The oldest example of a syrinx we have is from a duck-like AVIAN dinosaur from 66 million years ago, from the cretaceous period. But if we look at non-avian dinosaurs from the same time period, none of them have any sign of syrinx'. Which means that they weren't capable of making diverse and loud sounds like the ones in the video, but make sounds similiar to growling and belowing at a very low frequency. Which we probably wouldn't even be able to hear, but would be able to feel their vibration.
I suggest u educate yourself before calling others ignorant.
Omg the Quetzalcoatlus is actually insane. Just imagine hearing that flying above you would be terrifying
No kidding I would be shitting myself if I heard that as well as the trex
💀💀💀
I would shit myself
What's more terrifying, is the fact its almost as big as the t rex
The quetzalcoatlus one is litterally the sound of the Channel Billed Cuckoo’s call
Thanks man
las ganas q me dan de ver como era y se escuchaba el mundo en esos tiempos... es inexplicable, q maravilla...
love how half of these almost sounds so realistic to the point I actually get so alert just imagining if they were still alive
The Mosasaurus sounds far scarier than how it was ever depicted in any movie c': and the Quetzalcoatlus is very fitting. Definitely sounds like death from above yep
you could possibly create a siren out of this noise, tbh any of these would work in terms of emergency sirens like tsunami warnings or whatnot. some better than others.
Kinda makes me wonder what the tylosaurus would sound like
@@ordovicianinnova Probably very similar since it's also a mosasaur of a similar size.
It's scarier when you think about hearing that thing underwater
@@crystalalumina in the complete dark underwater 😳
Nostalgia hit different with this video 🙏
How did you acquire the data to recreate these sounds? What is the theory on how certain dinosaurs sounded? Is there an article to the research you can link? Thanks.
7:00 that is absolutely horrifying. Imagine you are stranded in the time that thing was alive and you hear that at night.
just sounds like a whale
kinda scary doe
@@qui-gonjinn6887 it’s a loon. A bird. So depending on where you life, you will hear this sounds all night long xD
Sounds like a dodo bird, but then all of the sudden it becomes the dodo satan...
I used to live in a house that was right next to a lake that would get loons swimming in it all the time, so despite it being in a lower pitch, that was a very comforting sound to me lol.
perhaps you were listening to spinosaurs instead of people on shrooms
For anyone who is watching Prehistoric Earth on AppleTV, the dinosaur noises are absolutely fantastic and very similar to these.
Yes I was just thinking that especially the trex and quetz sounds.
I watched the first 2 episodes. Pretty good show
Shame no one has apple tv, that shit is dead
@@AverageAlien I just watch it on illegal streaming websites, we don't have an Apple TV+ in the Philippines 😅
@@AverageAlien some might say it’s… extinct… I’ll let myself out.
The triceratops call sent a shudder down the back of my neck
The last 4 seconds of Dryptosaurus sounding like Mark Hamil Joker-chuckling makes this 10x more unnerving.
The T-Rex sound here is actually much scarier than anything heard on Jurassic Park or other films showing dinosaurs. It actually sounds like the calling sounds of the tripods from "War Of the Worlds". Picture yourself in a dark Jurassic forest in the middle of the night when it it is really cold and foggy and then you just hear those sounds of the T-rexes coming before you see them.
Cretaceous forest*, not Jurrasic
@@GlaxAScrimus Nobody cares, nerd.
I heard that you wouldn’t hear them coming rather you’d feel them coming. Like you’d feel strong vibrations. Terrifying man.
Not even hear, you’d FEEL it before you heard anything.
@@Brendan_InOT one thing that i always heard from hunters when they would encounter a predator in the wild: its not that you hear them before you see them, its that you will hear nothing, no other animal, the crickets stop making sounds. Eerie quiet. Thats when you know theres an animal on your ass.
It’s weird how dinosaur media has thoroughly conditioned us to expect roars, growls, and screeches that these more accurate sounds make them feel almost alien.
awesome!
This is going into my sleep asmr playlist
POV: You're an ancient mammal chilling, and this is what you hear everyday and every night....
This is primal fear...
6:16
I saw myself as a tiny rat trying to find shelter in a tree
Pretty sure they were interested in much larger prey, though.
@@matiassilva713 Kinda cute that we're all seeing ourselves as the little mammals
@@VOMITQUEEN that's what I'm saying
It kinda sounded like those laughs that are slowed down😭
Just imagine being in the woods at night at hearing these sounds. I think I'd die first from the fear alone. The Spino really got me too.
Just try to sleep simoly in a today forest or jungle. Nature is super loudy .
The t Rex is scary
That gives me a delightfully evil idea.
Most were stealth hunters so if you hear them hopefully it's because they aren't hungry 😅😅😅
The spino sounds like a loon
Craziest part about these sounds is that they are *only* the sounds. Imagine the feeling in your body from hearing a Mosasaurus underwater or the feeling of all your hairs standing straight up from the Spinosaurus's shrill.