I'm happy to see the Asian hadrosaurs get the spotlight they deserve! Also I love how you put an emphasis on how they aren't only food for predators and are interesting on their own right, and the end is fabulous!
Aw, I wish I could remember the dino documentary I saw the followed a group of hadrosaurs, specifically a little one with a scar that the narrator nicknamed "Scar". Got super-invested, we even had a little cat that had a scar, and we would sometimes nickname him the same. Now I see a hadrosaur and I think of lil' Scar.
When I was a kid in 1980 Auckland New Zealand I was with my Dad and saw in a shop window an Airfix Corythosaurus and an Airfix Dimetrodon. I was beside myself and begged my parents to buy for Christmas. I just fell in love with the Corythosaurus and Duckbill Dinosaurs....google the box art. I also got Sinclaire Corythosaurus and Trachodon. Wonderful.
I’ve done a search on RUclips for videos about hadrosaurs and very little ever came up. This was more than I could’ve hoped for! Thanks! And for all your great videos. There’s some pretty suspect dinosaur videos and series out there.
Hadrosaurs r awsome and they lived everywere. If ur town doesnt have alot of fossils there u can bet at some point a hadrosaur was or will be found nearby that once lived there.
You do know that antarctica havent been covered in ice for all of the time right? For most of the last 100 million years antarctica was a tropical paradise. Last 35 million years it has become was it is, and has been covered in ice the last 15 million years. So if a dinosaur fossil is found in ice its just because it has come up from the ground, not frozen and preserved for +65 million years. The frozen mammoths and such we find in ice today are barely 0.1% the age of the youngest dinosaur. Not even 65.000 years old, big gap to a dino
Lambeosaurine hadrosaurs are the most common form of hadrosaurid in Europe, known as Arenysaurini tribe. Ajnabia Odysseus, a minipony-sized dwarf lambeosaurine hadrosaur found in Morocco, North Africa, is proof that some of them were good swimmers and used it to move between islands, as an oceanic dispersal, in the prehistoric European archipelago.
*Countless thanks, for this fascinating, documentary, that follows Real Science, and Nature's Rules of Species Behavior, while informing us all on updates, and the absolutely fantastic CGI artwork!* 👍👍& 10⭐ 14:40 *_YES!_** Ducks, Geese, and Swans are today's Hadrosaurs!*
Maybe next time explain more of their anatomy and interesting features. I liked your video but I find it kinda sad how most people speaking about the hadrosaurs focus nearly exclusively on their heads, head crests and maybe overall size. What about their tails, posture, feet, other interesting features? What do we know about their skin?
Dear Martin, That is an interesting question. I can recall some years ago scientists found a rare thing indeed. They were skin impressions left by a hadrosaur. The skin had scales like modern reptiles although some were bigger than others. So, no feathers.
Herbivorous dinosaurs, akin to modern-day birds, likely had a lot to do with development of forests via angiosperm distribution (excretions and accidental yet fortunate, pollination). 🤔💭
The lack of representation of these often beautiful animals is because they are not vicious killers or badass herbivores armed to the teeth. That is the stuff that most people want to see and so movie and book makers give people the violent horror that they want. Look at the covers of DVDs and books that have to do with dinos and what do you see? A scary rendition of a killer that appeared only at the end of the age of dinosaurs and was around perhaps two million years. Hadrosaurs were numerous, diversified, all over the place, and around for a long time. But no matter. They are used as victims for the T Rexes. Sickening.
I bet these animals were a force to be reckoned especially the larger species and given their sheer size I am certain they could do significant damage to a predator I wouldn’t want to be on the receiving end of a very pissed off herd of Hadrosaurs 🥴
I'm happy to see the Asian hadrosaurs get the spotlight they deserve! Also I love how you put an emphasis on how they aren't only food for predators and are interesting on their own right, and the end is fabulous!
Aw, I wish I could remember the dino documentary I saw the followed a group of hadrosaurs, specifically a little one with a scar that the narrator nicknamed "Scar". Got super-invested, we even had a little cat that had a scar, and we would sometimes nickname him the same. Now I see a hadrosaur and I think of lil' Scar.
I think u are looking for March of the Dinosaurs, a documentary about Edmontosaurus and one with the name Scar
That's it!! That's awesome, thank you@@maximo5714
March of the dinosaurs
This is the best dino channel on youtube!
When I was a kid in 1980 Auckland New Zealand I was with my Dad and saw in a shop window an Airfix Corythosaurus and an Airfix Dimetrodon. I was beside myself and begged my parents to buy for Christmas. I just fell in love with the Corythosaurus and Duckbill Dinosaurs....google the box art. I also got Sinclaire Corythosaurus and Trachodon. Wonderful.
I’ve done a search on RUclips for videos about hadrosaurs and very little ever came up. This was more than I could’ve hoped for! Thanks! And for all your great videos. There’s some pretty suspect dinosaur videos and series out there.
it's a great video but 5 midroll ads was certainly over the top
How about finding a witness that was actually there instead of 🤤🤪🤡 over RUclips videos
Would you eat a hadrosaur? If so, which one (and how to cook/serve)?
Hadrosaurs r awsome and they lived everywere. If ur town doesnt have alot of fossils there u can bet at some point a hadrosaur was or will be found nearby that once lived there.
I've heard of some of them.
Very interesting creatures 😊🦕🦖
Even in Antarctica in the ice?🙉
Excellent recreations.
Congratulations.
You do know that antarctica havent been covered in ice for all of the time right?
For most of the last 100 million years antarctica was a tropical paradise.
Last 35 million years it has become was it is, and has been covered in ice the last 15 million years.
So if a dinosaur fossil is found in ice its just because it has come up from the ground, not frozen and preserved for +65 million years.
The frozen mammoths and such we find in ice today are barely 0.1% the age of the youngest dinosaur. Not even 65.000 years old, big gap to a dino
Kritosaurus genus was I believe the hadrosaur found in Antarctica.
Lambeosaurine hadrosaurs are the most common form of hadrosaurid in Europe, known as Arenysaurini tribe. Ajnabia Odysseus, a minipony-sized dwarf lambeosaurine hadrosaur found in Morocco, North Africa, is proof that some of them were good swimmers and used it to move between islands, as an oceanic dispersal, in the prehistoric European archipelago.
Hadrosaurs get no respect, no respect at all. They are fascinating.
*Countless thanks, for this fascinating, documentary, that follows Real Science, and Nature's Rules of Species Behavior, while informing us all on updates, and the absolutely fantastic CGI artwork!* 👍👍& 10⭐
14:40 *_YES!_** Ducks, Geese, and Swans are today's Hadrosaurs!*
Corythosaurus was always my favorite dinosaur as a kid because it shared my name 😂
Call me basic but these are my favorite
Love this channel
That's rather a superior claim. I HAVE heard of them many times. They are not exactly a mystery.
Maybe next time explain more of their anatomy and interesting features. I liked your video but I find it kinda sad how most people speaking about the hadrosaurs focus nearly exclusively on their heads, head crests and maybe overall size. What about their tails, posture, feet, other interesting features? What do we know about their skin?
Dear Martin, That is an interesting question. I can recall some years ago scientists found a rare thing indeed. They were skin impressions left by a hadrosaur. The skin had scales like modern reptiles although some were bigger than others. So, no feathers.
Justice for Duckie😅 yeah too many people hype all kinds of other dinosaurs but never Hadrosaurs. All dinosaurs are interesting.
these are one of my favorites I like them better than t rex I like soropods too, they are so creative huge and interesting.
What an interesting video idea
what do crested birds use their big crests for? [e.g., cassowarys and some toucans].
Did hadrosaurs have feathers, or were they entirely covered in scales?
Herbivorous dinosaurs, akin to modern-day birds, likely had a lot to do with development of forests via angiosperm distribution (excretions and accidental yet fortunate, pollination). 🤔💭
The lack of representation of these often beautiful animals is because they are not vicious killers or badass herbivores armed to the teeth. That is the stuff that most people want to see and so movie and book makers give people the violent horror that they want. Look at the covers of DVDs and books that have to do with dinos and what do you see? A scary rendition of a killer that appeared only at the end of the age of dinosaurs and was around perhaps two million years. Hadrosaurs were numerous, diversified, all over the place, and around for a long time. But no matter. They are used as victims for the T Rexes. Sickening.
Well, there no Hadrosaurs being discovered in Australia. Only Iguanodonts ruled there.
Who hasn't heard of hadrosaurs?
The paucity of fossils recovered in Antartica tells us that they are hard to find when buried under ice and snow.
I to find a flame spitting parasauralophus ridiculous buuuutttt are we gonna talk about the fact it looks so cool is ridiculous too 😆
Is it just me?
The way he narrates....
I bet these animals were a force to be reckoned especially the larger species and given their sheer size I am certain they could do significant damage to a predator
I wouldn’t want to be on the receiving end of a very pissed off herd of Hadrosaurs 🥴
His crest was longer than a medium human being!🙄👍
Hadrosaurs - The Jar-Jar Binks of dinosaurs.
I love the content but I feel like you’re trying to put me to sleep with the voice and music.😂
Title is really dumb. Everyone who has a passing familiarity with dinosaurs has heard of hadrosaurs.
wait... am I first? I'm never first
Some of your borrowed modern video choices are totally bizarre
Species 521
¡Hey! ¿and the mexicans hadrosaurs?
show me some love ppl
Please don’t call them reptiles
What are they?
"Please don’t call them reptiles"
- why?
They’re reptiles
what bro all dinosaurs where reptiles
Second
Thirt❤
I think that you meant THIRD
Fourth 😅
Fake-a-saurses
Oh you’re one of those clowns 🤡
Fun fact: Hadrosaurus was found in Haddonfield New Jersey, hence the name, and is also the official state dinosaur.
hadros comes from greek, it means thick
Fact: fake-a-saurses