The Tyrannosaurus art in the first half of the video (8:35) is gorgeous! The Pachycephalosaurus painting looks great aswell, damn, the production was a mess.
Such a great video! And honestly it’s a shock more paleoartists haven’t accounted for intraspecific colour variation in their work. As someone who has kept tens of different colour variants of the same two centipede species, I’ve very much aware of how much variation can naturally exist within a species.
At first I thought you were going to explain what colours would be the least probable for dinosaurs - for example, the argument that sauropods couldn't be brightly coloured because their food would likely not produce the necessary pigments (kinda touched upon with erythrism though). But instead it's about unique cases. Interesting!
@ichthyovenator3351 for my speculative evolution setting, the sauropod Armigerassus does gets carotenoids turning its back pink/red and the carnotaurini Paluceros has leucistic variants. I'm happy that you talked about rarer conditions, it's just not the topic I was expecting from the title.
@@ichthyovenator3351 the patchy artwork reminds me of the time on a semi realism server where I was actually having a lot of fun before pounds came up basically I was just a black and white patchy and I grouped up with two random individuals that I heard in the distance and it was actually pretty fun interacting with them we actually creative much larger group but of course, some of us died
Additionally they may like birds and some reptiles have breeding season colours. Which I think makes sense, dinosaurs like modern birds would have had excellent colour vision. Ultraviolet colouration would be cool to depict as it is also very important to modern birds. Some otherwise drab tyrannosaurus glowing brightly coloured in UV light. False gharials have been observed to lighten in skin colour in lighter enviroments, and darken in darker enviroments as well. So if a dinosaur species is seasonally living in the forest or on the plains it may change shade.
The possibilities are literally endless. I only really touched on intraspecific differences but colour change within the same individual is also something that needs to be talked about.
Quick note on the eastern milk snake btw, they change in coloration dramatically as they age, so the reason why they look different might just be more of an age difference rather than genetic variation.
This is definitely true in a lot of cases, juveniles have a tendency to be far redder than adults, it doesn't completely explain it tho since the two I showed were both adults. That and I've also found a neonate milk that was the same pattern and colour as the whiter adult. But ontogenetic variation is huge in reptiles and I should've addressed it more
@@predatorking3131 It might be a camera thing. I also corroborated what I saw with iNaturalist sightings in my area so this isn't a unique thing I've noticed. On a side note I love how the brown morph milks are called chocolate milks bc that's just perfect
@@ichthyovenator3351 That is indeed perfect, lmao. Eastern milksnakes are neat little critters, wish we had more of them here where I live in Michigan, but back when I lived in Pennsylvania they were faaar more common.
23:26 bro you’re so good!! 🎉👍 so fantastic art works. Keep it up. This is a type of art work I’d love to have on my wall or something. It looks so good 🤩
AMAZING video!! I usually study an animals' environment when restoring it, but never really think of morphs and variation. I really have wanted to make videos like this, but I am rather worried about using my voice in videos, so I am not sure how to go about it. LOVE your approach in editing, scripting and choice of topic!
Each of your videos keeps getting better and better! After watching your speedpaints for a while, it’s been crazy seeing your improvement, keep up the good work man!
Great video, man! And really impressive painting work. As someone who focuses on digital, I respect anyone who knows their stuff with the brush. Keep it up!
I'm very new to this channel and really enjoyed it the moment I started watching! Especially the music is absolutely perfect. Gave it a sub, although I'm more interested in the paleo and less in the art Anyways, enjoyed it a lot!
Great video! Loved the discussions around variability in coloration among modern animals and how they relate to prehistoric ones, it’s fascinating stuff! And I think the final product turned out great too :)
Interesting subject! How fun. Although I was feeling quite sorry for you with that painting. I don't know how many times you painted over something. Whew! It ended up looking really cool though! Way to go for sticking with it.
Thank you! And I definitely had so many headaches with this one. I find that the goofs make the end product more satisfying, even if I didn't realize it when recording the outro.
Although the science parts were great, the art parts of the video were what I loce the most. Great talent and technique, and as an artist, I understand the pain of "something feels of but I don't know why". Great video in general!
Nice speculative paleobiology video ❤. I'll might even incorporate it if I'll ever do a diorama or something with multiple speciemens of the same species. I would welcome any coloration related topic for that is what I struggle the most with. As for ideas... maybe ontogenic changes in coloration and pattern.
Interspecies & individual variation are fantastic things, and ones that people often forget about. The only examples of media using this type of variation I remember are Disney's Dinosaur (with Iguanodons, obviously) and Dinosaur Revolution (especially with tyrannosaurs)
When I first came across this video I assumed it was something about what colors and patterns dinosaurs could realistically have. Like to what extent does a design have to be to become unrealistic as opposed to just unique. I think that’d be a very cool video. This isn’t to say I’m disappointed with this video, just giving you a suggestion since you said you wanted to do more like this
I certainly agree that Dinosaur color isn't something often thought about in paleomedia and frankly, that's a shame. There are a lot of interesting things one can do with color and speculative color can be just as interesting as speculative adaptations. I've personally always fancied the idea of Tyrannosaurus having a super bright mouth similar to a Cotton Mouth or Skink. Since Tyrannosaurus was an ambush predator I'm sure it was darker in coloration which begs the question of how it attracted mates. I assume its similar to Birds where bright colors are a sign of a strong potential partner and having a bright mouth, something that can be easily hidden while hunting and takes up a large part of the animal's body, would be perfect for that. Ideas like that are certainly missed in all of paleomedia.
@@ichthyovenator3351 I do wish more paleomedia would incorporate more speculative things into the designs of these creatures both in color and anatomy but, I guess everyone just wants to see the true to form Dinosaurs.
4:06 my freind has a little sister with albinism! She’s really cool! The combo of blue eyes and the reddish tint from the lack of melanin can make her eyes appear purple-ish sometimes. Also they essentially have to force her to wear sunblock she hates wearing sunblock idk why I wear it just fine (ginger, but for some reason my arms can tan in really weird cow splotch looking patterns and my face can tan a bit. Not much of the rest of me though unfortunately) 6:54 is erythrism the cause of being ginger in humans? That’s cool if so! :] 8:57 Piebaldism is also what makes pets have white patches! Piebaldism is so cool, also ball python breeders have genes down to a science goddamn I’ve seen piebald deer aswell! They look cool :]
Interesting. I don't think redheads are caused by erythrism. I think the best known example of dietary erythrism ( at least I think that's what it is) is that one episode of magic school bus where Arnold turns orange from eating that carrot snack
I like that dinosaurs colouration is always a big subject for discussion and we completely ignore the Paleozoic and Cenozoic area like they never existed.As for the reconstruction of colour based on Melanosomes i am very cautious like the possibility Prehistoric wildlife might got it's colouration by different biological factors in addition with modern wildlife which indeed owns its colour appearance to the Melanosomes but i might be just dramatic.
All of this totally applies to those eras, I’m just most familiar with dinosaurs that’s all. And yeah, Melanosomes alone don’t solely code for an animal’s colour with structural colour and environmental factors coming into play. But structural colour is used for this (microraptor and caihong).
For some reason if I was a Paleo artist, and if I wanted to draw a dromeosaurs the colors would be more of birds of prey like the larger ones they would be based on the larger birds of prey like bald eagles harpy, eagles, and etc. with troodontids I would do Corvid and with Tyrannosaurus some species of crocodilians I don’t know why
@@tyrannotherium7873 Animal of similar size and diet looks similar.After all they face the same constraints in pigment availability and selective pressure for camouflage.
Id like to see something in dinosaur media is melanistic or albino type of colors on the dinosaurs skin. Imagine a herd of Trikes or Rex'es and theres one that stands out from them with these genetics.
Well yes, dinosaurs probably ranged in every color, it's worth taking into consideration that predators often don't have bright colors, so megatheropods where most likely dark brown, grays, greens and blacks, with species in arid environments being yellow, brown and orange.
So something like yutyrannus although feathered is very big and a predator so would need to blend in in order to get food, so the common trope of a white yutyrannus is highly unrealistic, or pink or ant bright color that would give it away
Subspecies are usually genetically distinct enough from eachother and tend to be seperated geographically. Morphs are less dilineated and are more of a subjective thing. They can also coexist in the same area. But that's just what I think
I have another fan made character name Hellish Max, Unlike Other humans, Max Possess The ability to turn into a monster as looking creature, called Hellish Max, Regular Max is A 14 year old boy with long brown hair, Green eyes, He wears black Gray and green shorts, Along with the green shirt and wears Green shoes, He even wears 2 party hats His regular version stands at 5'6, And his favorite dinosaur is Brachiosaurus, He loves Pizza, Ice cream, Broccoli, etc, He can also write stories on his chromebook in google docs, And he is very intelligent As Hellish Max He is a Demonified person Who stands at 6'8, In his mouth he has long sharp pointed teeth. Some of his teeth are long Some of his teeth are Medium, And has a long devil like tail, That has spikes, And has long claws on his fingers, Along with pointy Ears, Plus has 2 devil like horns on its head, And is usually barefoot, And has a rather muscular body, His hand has an obsession with pancreases, And views pancreas as food, And has a long terrifying looking tongue, And has red crocodile like eyes And he can breathe fire, He is my fan made Dino Dan/Trek/Dana/Dex
I find it dumb that birds are saursichians (lizard hipped dinosaurs) despite there being an entire unrelated Clade of dinosaurs called ornithiscia (bird hipped dinosaurs)
Also bc of leucism there's a yellow penguin somewhere out in the world And albino alligators have a lifespan of not long Not very long cuz dark blue and black helps the alligator to camouflage at the surface
One baffling trope I've seen in paleoart is having the T.rex be red while the Tarbosaurus is green. Has anyone else notice that? Personally, I think it should be the other way around with the T.rex green and the Tarbosaurus reddish, orange colors.
They exist in pretty much all animal group so statistically it'd be way more unlikely for there not to be any. But again we have no way of actually identifying any that may have existed with current techniques as far as I'm aware
That shouldn't really be the case. Part of the way I justified in the vid was showing examples of birds or reptiles with these conditions. It wouldn't really make sense for no dinosaurs to have these genes if modern ones do. Besides, we don't have any actual genetic material from dinosaurs, let alone a population size large enough to actually quantify that.
yeah they are, but in this instance they're distant enough from their relatives to be considered seperate in this case because of their feathers and whatnot. But phylogenetically they are indeed reptiles
@@ichthyovenator3351 Ok but I think the reason why you said that because you do not want to get some people bit upset if you say birds are reptiles that may led to a very controversial topic.
Yo, dude is an amazing artists, but his perfectionism was detrimental for the work, it was fine the way it was going, I saw no reason to keep repainting things all the time.
Feel free to give me ideas and questions to tackle for future videos (preferably not a redesign vid since I've gotten too many ideas for that).
Please cover Australian megafauna, I have been waiting since the start!
It'd be cool if you did more digital artwork, maybe a piece depicting two Dimetrodons wrestling each other like monitor lizards.
I got a question what diseases and symtoms could the dinosaurs get?
Take a skeleton of a uncommon dinosaur and redraw what it could of looked like from YOUR MIND(no research, nothing)
can you make a dragon?
The Tyrannosaurus art in the first half of the video (8:35) is gorgeous! The Pachycephalosaurus painting looks great aswell, damn, the production was a mess.
I like to think keeping in the chaos is part of the charm
Such a great video! And honestly it’s a shock more paleoartists haven’t accounted for intraspecific colour variation in their work.
As someone who has kept tens of different colour variants of the same two centipede species, I’ve very much aware of how much variation can naturally exist within a species.
It’s such a fascinating topic that gets no attention for whatever reason
At first I thought you were going to explain what colours would be the least probable for dinosaurs - for example, the argument that sauropods couldn't be brightly coloured because their food would likely not produce the necessary pigments (kinda touched upon with erythrism though).
But instead it's about unique cases. Interesting!
I found nobody really talks about it. Tho I think like I said in the video, sauropods that ate cycad fruit would have a source of carotenoids
@ichthyovenator3351 for my speculative evolution setting, the sauropod Armigerassus does gets carotenoids turning its back pink/red and the carnotaurini Paluceros has leucistic variants. I'm happy that you talked about rarer conditions, it's just not the topic I was expecting from the title.
Man's Back From Extinction
Fr, this one took a while
@@ichthyovenator3351 no problem man keep up the good work we can wait :D
@@ichthyovenator3351 the patchy artwork reminds me of the time on a semi realism server where I was actually having a lot of fun before pounds came up basically I was just a black and white patchy and I grouped up with two random individuals that I heard in the distance and it was actually pretty fun interacting with them we actually creative much larger group but of course, some of us died
Nigel Marven be doing some work
Additionally they may like birds and some reptiles have breeding season colours. Which I think makes sense, dinosaurs like modern birds would have had excellent colour vision.
Ultraviolet colouration would be cool to depict as it is also very important to modern birds. Some otherwise drab tyrannosaurus glowing brightly coloured in UV light.
False gharials have been observed to lighten in skin colour in lighter enviroments, and darken in darker enviroments as well. So if a dinosaur species is seasonally living in the forest or on the plains it may change shade.
The possibilities are literally endless. I only really touched on intraspecific differences but colour change within the same individual is also something that needs to be talked about.
24:40 these would make some pretty sick skins in a dinosaur game
I think the Pachy painting turned out lovely
That Pachycephalosaurus piece is simply gorgeous. Keep it up; your art gets better and better with each video.
That's great to hear!
This video made me immediately think about dinosaur subspecies
Quick note on the eastern milk snake btw, they change in coloration dramatically as they age, so the reason why they look different might just be more of an age difference rather than genetic variation.
This is definitely true in a lot of cases, juveniles have a tendency to be far redder than adults, it doesn't completely explain it tho since the two I showed were both adults. That and I've also found a neonate milk that was the same pattern and colour as the whiter adult. But ontogenetic variation is huge in reptiles and I should've addressed it more
@@ichthyovenator3351 that smaller one looked definitely more like an juvenile compared to the larger one. Just saying, it looked much younger
@@predatorking3131 It might be a camera thing. I also corroborated what I saw with iNaturalist sightings in my area so this isn't a unique thing I've noticed. On a side note I love how the brown morph milks are called chocolate milks bc that's just perfect
@@ichthyovenator3351 That is indeed perfect, lmao.
Eastern milksnakes are neat little critters, wish we had more of them here where I live in Michigan, but back when I lived in Pennsylvania they were faaar more common.
@@predatorking3131 Probably my favourite snakes to find, even if they always bite me
Wow, this was like a lecture about animal coloration with cool drawings on top! Neat stuff!
23:26 bro you’re so good!! 🎉👍 so fantastic art works. Keep it up.
This is a type of art work I’d love to have on my wall or something. It looks so good 🤩
Dude you’re so talented and underrated. You deserve a trophy
AMAZING video!! I usually study an animals' environment when restoring it, but never really think of morphs and variation. I really have wanted to make videos like this, but I am rather worried about using my voice in videos, so I am not sure how to go about it. LOVE your approach in editing, scripting and choice of topic!
Thanks! Morphs and variation are things I never see discussed so I’m glad others are as curious as me in this.
Ichthyovenator will make anything but the finished Edmontosaurus VS Tyrannosaurus piece.
(Jk this video is probs your best one yet)
Lmao you're prolly right, I'm a procrastinating machine.
Each of your videos keeps getting better and better! After watching your speedpaints for a while, it’s been crazy seeing your improvement, keep up the good work man!
With all the talks about skins and morphs. I'm surprised Prehistoric Kingdom wasn't brought up at all.
Me too
Quite simply it's because I haven't played or really watched content on it. I heard it's really good tho
@@ichthyovenator3351 once development is done it'll be phenomenal
I love how that pachy art finally turned out!
Love the Pachycephelosaurid painting!
Nice art work of the tyrannosaurus
Great video, man! And really impressive painting work. As someone who focuses on digital, I respect anyone who knows their stuff with the brush.
Keep it up!
And I respect those who do digital because it's very tricky
Man, I still love this video and how well informal it is and can't wait to use this when drawing.
Overall hope you had a great day
It's great that it's noticeable! I feel so stagnant on this end so it's quite reassuring
I'm very new to this channel and really enjoyed it the moment I started watching! Especially the music is absolutely perfect. Gave it a sub, although I'm more interested in the paleo and less in the art
Anyways, enjoyed it a lot!
Your art is incredible and i also love your use of WWD ost lol
Best documentary ost by far
Your art is incredible man! The pachy's look amazing
Color mutation is one of my favorite topics, just the possibility is stunning!
Cool Accurate Tyrannosaurus 8:25 😎👌🔥
Thanks!
@@ichthyovenator3351 You Welcome Man And Can You Draw Fang The Tyrannosaur The Queen Of Killing Pls.
Great video! Loved the discussions around variability in coloration among modern animals and how they relate to prehistoric ones, it’s fascinating stuff! And I think the final product turned out great too :)
I still find it funny how this started from me being confused on how red belly snakes worked
Interesting subject! How fun. Although I was feeling quite sorry for you with that painting. I don't know how many times you painted over something. Whew! It ended up looking really cool though! Way to go for sticking with it.
Thank you! And I definitely had so many headaches with this one. I find that the goofs make the end product more satisfying, even if I didn't realize it when recording the outro.
Although the science parts were great, the art parts of the video were what I loce the most. Great talent and technique, and as an artist, I understand the pain of "something feels of but I don't know why". Great video in general!
Nice speculative paleobiology video ❤. I'll might even incorporate it if I'll ever do a diorama or something with multiple speciemens of the same species. I would welcome any coloration related topic for that is what I struggle the most with. As for ideas... maybe ontogenic changes in coloration and pattern.
Interspecies & individual variation are fantastic things, and ones that people often forget about.
The only examples of media using this type of variation I remember are Disney's Dinosaur (with Iguanodons, obviously) and Dinosaur Revolution (especially with tyrannosaurs)
The prehistoric planet trikes also did a good job, none of them looked the same
Wonderful video and wonderful art!
Great video. I think budgies would make a great inspiration for dinosaur morphs with how much variety they can have in their colors and patterns.
I forgot about those guys but that’s totally a good source of inspiration!
Another banger my friend, well done
Thanks!
Cool! have you heard about the Return of nannotyrannus?
I have, I don't really buy it tho but I need to read up on it more
Imagine seeing a blue beezelbufo
That'd be cool
Christ you're so cracked at art
18:30 for a second I thought you'd painted your palette to look like your art-piece. xD
lol
When I first came across this video I assumed it was something about what colors and patterns dinosaurs could realistically have. Like to what extent does a design have to be to become unrealistic as opposed to just unique. I think that’d be a very cool video. This isn’t to say I’m disappointed with this video, just giving you a suggestion since you said you wanted to do more like this
I want you to do a video about making the land before time characters accurate and not outdated
I’ve gotten a bunch of requests for that so it may happen in the future
12:10 fellow Ontario boi ayyy👉👉
This video is literally so helpful though
A really cool albino dinosaur I think you'd like to see is the albino pterodactyl in the Hallmark movie Dinotopia.
Thanks for the heart.
Well, in the breed standard, the labrador is black, yellow and chocolate black is the most common because it was the first when it was created
I certainly agree that Dinosaur color isn't something often thought about in paleomedia and frankly, that's a shame. There are a lot of interesting things one can do with color and speculative color can be just as interesting as speculative adaptations. I've personally always fancied the idea of Tyrannosaurus having a super bright mouth similar to a Cotton Mouth or Skink. Since Tyrannosaurus was an ambush predator I'm sure it was darker in coloration which begs the question of how it attracted mates. I assume its similar to Birds where bright colors are a sign of a strong potential partner and having a bright mouth, something that can be easily hidden while hunting and takes up a large part of the animal's body, would be perfect for that. Ideas like that are certainly missed in all of paleomedia.
I love that idea, and it makes sense. The only real skepticism I have is that modern predators don’t use it.
@@ichthyovenator3351 I do wish more paleomedia would incorporate more speculative things into the designs of these creatures both in color and anatomy but, I guess everyone just wants to see the true to form Dinosaurs.
good video 🎉
please do a paleoart of megistotherium or simbakubwa both of them are hyaenodont
4:06 my freind has a little sister with albinism! She’s really cool! The combo of blue eyes and the reddish tint from the lack of melanin can make her eyes appear purple-ish sometimes.
Also they essentially have to force her to wear sunblock she hates wearing sunblock idk why I wear it just fine (ginger, but for some reason my arms can tan in really weird cow splotch looking patterns and my face can tan a bit. Not much of the rest of me though unfortunately)
6:54 is erythrism the cause of being ginger in humans? That’s cool if so! :]
8:57 Piebaldism is also what makes pets have white patches! Piebaldism is so cool, also ball python breeders have genes down to a science goddamn
I’ve seen piebald deer aswell! They look cool :]
Interesting. I don't think redheads are caused by erythrism. I think the best known example of dietary erythrism ( at least I think that's what it is) is that one episode of magic school bus where Arnold turns orange from eating that carrot snack
Random question: What are your thoughts on ornithiscian cheeks?
What art software did you use? I am getting into paleoart and I need something better than Krita but I dont wanna waste my money.
For digital I use procreate
Nice pachycephalosaurus artwork. I’m glad that you did not put filaments on their backs, because there is no evidence of pachycephalosaurus.
It'd also be more work lmao
I like that dinosaurs colouration is always a big subject for discussion and we completely ignore the Paleozoic and Cenozoic area like they never existed.As for the reconstruction of colour based on Melanosomes i am very cautious like the possibility Prehistoric wildlife might got it's colouration by different biological factors in addition with modern wildlife which indeed owns its colour appearance to the Melanosomes but i might be just dramatic.
All of this totally applies to those eras, I’m just most familiar with dinosaurs that’s all. And yeah, Melanosomes alone don’t solely code for an animal’s colour with structural colour and environmental factors coming into play. But structural colour is used for this (microraptor and caihong).
12:55 Wow we finally got to see a face reveal! YES! Also ichthyovenator you look like a cool dude 👍! Will.
Thanks!
Dumb question, but is it correct the word “compatriots” to call individuals of the same species?
The term is conspecifics I believe
There was a squirrel in my backyard before which had a white tail, so we called him white tail.
For some reason if I was a Paleo artist, and if I wanted to draw a dromeosaurs the colors would be more of birds of prey like the larger ones they would be based on the larger birds of prey like bald eagles harpy, eagles, and etc. with troodontids I would do Corvid and with Tyrannosaurus some species of crocodilians I don’t know why
You just recognized a pattern.Big-big,medium-medium,small-small.
@@naamadossantossilva4736 what?
@@tyrannotherium7873 Animal of similar size and diet looks similar.After all they face the same constraints in pigment availability and selective pressure for camouflage.
@@naamadossantossilva4736 true I guess
I would love it if Power Rangers got the dinosaur colors right.
lmao
0:19 there was also sinosauropteryx in 2010
This is true. I don't recall if they were done in the same study tho, cuz if not I think Anchiornis was first.
nice vid can you do a Velociraptor and the color based off a beaded vulture pls
I find it's a bit of a paleoart meme but it definitely looks cool
@@ichthyovenator3351 exactly so will you do it ?
Didn’t expect a face reveal today my guy
Actually face revealed last video lol
nice vid bro
Id like to see something in dinosaur media is melanistic or albino type of colors on the dinosaurs skin. Imagine a herd of Trikes or Rex'es and theres one that stands out from them with these genetics.
I’m guessing any color because feathers can be just about any color there is
Yeah but we don’t know if all dinosaurs had feathers
True
@@rolloxra670 Abelisaur moment
Well yes, dinosaurs probably ranged in every color, it's worth taking into consideration that predators often don't have bright colors, so megatheropods where most likely dark brown, grays, greens and blacks, with species in arid environments being yellow, brown and orange.
So something like yutyrannus although feathered is very big and a predator so would need to blend in in order to get food, so the common trope of a white yutyrannus is highly unrealistic, or pink or ant bright color that would give it away
I know this isn’t really related to the topic of the video but where did you find the plains track by giachinno I can’t find it anywhere 😭😭😭
It's from the lost world ps1 ost
@@ichthyovenator3351 OHHHH tsym!
I hope to make a similar video in the future
Whats the difference between a morph and a subspecies?
Subspecies are usually genetically distinct enough from eachother and tend to be seperated geographically. Morphs are less dilineated and are more of a subjective thing. They can also coexist in the same area. But that's just what I think
0:33 china? like the utah raptor (spiderboi reference, please applaud)
I applaud.. or I would if you finished your half of our collab
@@ichthyovenator3351 shhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
@@ichthyovenator3351 i wanna upload more, but im lazy and lack motivation, if you publically berate me it will prolly get the ball rollin im ngl
Aren’t you going to finish the T. rex vs Edmontosaurus thing
I tried starting it today but I couldn’t get into the groove, Ik it’s been a while but I gotta get into the proper zone.
RAINBOW DEINOCHEIRUS
I have another fan made character name Hellish Max, Unlike Other humans, Max Possess The ability to turn into a monster as looking creature, called Hellish Max, Regular Max is A 14 year old boy with long brown hair, Green eyes, He wears black Gray and green shorts, Along with the green shirt and wears Green shoes, He even wears 2 party hats His regular version stands at 5'6, And his favorite dinosaur is Brachiosaurus, He loves Pizza, Ice cream, Broccoli, etc, He can also write stories on his chromebook in google docs, And he is very intelligent As Hellish Max He is a Demonified person Who stands at 6'8, In his mouth he has long sharp pointed teeth. Some of his teeth are long Some of his teeth are Medium, And has a long devil like tail, That has spikes, And has long claws on his fingers, Along with pointy Ears, Plus has 2 devil like horns on its head, And is usually barefoot, And has a rather muscular body, His hand has an obsession with pancreases, And views pancreas as food, And has a long terrifying looking tongue, And has red crocodile like eyes And he can breathe fire, He is my fan made Dino Dan/Trek/Dana/Dex
1:55 lingering jansi jumpscare
Menacing
😨😨😨
I find it dumb that birds are saursichians (lizard hipped dinosaurs) despite there being an entire unrelated Clade of dinosaurs called ornithiscia (bird hipped dinosaurs)
Cladistics my beloved
Also bc of leucism there's a yellow penguin somewhere out in the world
And albino alligators have a lifespan of not long
Not very long cuz dark blue and black helps the alligator to camouflage at the surface
I should've mentioned the penguin. I somehow doubt that 24 hours for albino gators just because they're protected by their mothers.
@@ichthyovenator3351 lemme edit my comment rq
I know that albino animals that are domesticated have a lot of health issues, some are deaf and blind
19:15 sometimes the best thing you can do is cover somsthing up with its surroundings, it can be such a life saver 😂
One baffling trope I've seen in paleoart is having the T.rex be red while the Tarbosaurus is green. Has anyone else notice that? Personally, I think it should be the other way around with the T.rex green and the Tarbosaurus reddish, orange colors.
I've noticed that too. Thank you Speckles the Tarbosaurus
@@ichthyovenator3351 It goes back even before that movie. Gregory S. Paul’s Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs did that as well.
interesting
It's me DOZIER World, on my grandmas computer. do something with triceratops.
It is possible the existence of subspecies in dinosaurs?
They exist in pretty much all animal group so statistically it'd be way more unlikely for there not to be any. But again we have no way of actually identifying any that may have existed with current techniques as far as I'm aware
@@ichthyovenator3351 Ok, for a book that I making I will create subspecies for some extinct animals to give more biological diversity
Hair can’t be green or blue but no Dinosaur or Pterosaur had hair they had scales feathers or pingnophibers
feathers, scales and keratin can be basically any colour yeah
I heard from someone that dinosaurs don’t have the correct genes to allow for genetic variations like albinism or melanism
That shouldn't really be the case. Part of the way I justified in the vid was showing examples of birds or reptiles with these conditions. It wouldn't really make sense for no dinosaurs to have these genes if modern ones do. Besides, we don't have any actual genetic material from dinosaurs, let alone a population size large enough to actually quantify that.
Reptiles and birds have more color variability than mammals. I think dinosaurs would have a wide range of coloration.
4:58 Aren’t birds reptiles? because dinosaurs are reptiles and birds are dinosaurs.
yeah they are, but in this instance they're distant enough from their relatives to be considered seperate in this case because of their feathers and whatnot. But phylogenetically they are indeed reptiles
@@ichthyovenator3351 Ok but I think the reason why you said that because you do not want to get some people bit upset if you say birds are reptiles that may led to a very controversial topic.
@@JackSnell-l8w not really, there’s just different studies for birds and other reptiles so they were seperate in the script
First! (I could be wrong, we’ll see lol)
Mayhaps you were
Icthyovenator face reveal!
OMG FACE REVEAL
Yo, dude is an amazing artists, but his perfectionism was detrimental for the work, it was fine the way it was going, I saw no reason to keep repainting things all the time.
Hit the nail on the head in the perfectionism thing. Tho I think it turned out better than where it was originally going
Misssttt--eeeeerryyyyy. Im so sorry
I'm so much worse irl
Any color that resembles a bird mate,their animals not aliens LOL
Hardy har har
They were colored like the cheap plastic toys
the rexes or the pachys? The rexes were just a proof of concept and weren't polished pieces
First.
Edit: Dangit not first.
lol nice try
6 trillion views in 64 months? bro fell off :/
gasp
You spelled color wrong
Colour is the British spelling
Colour is the English spelling.
Brother…
I'm canadian eh
@@BraydenBarras4174 no no no no no it can’t be!!
Great Video! :)
Gracias!