IS THIS WHAT DINOSAURS SOUNDED LIKE ?

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024

Комментарии • 13 тыс.

  • @calandraco2888
    @calandraco2888 10 месяцев назад +3098

    When you only have one minute to audition for Jurassic Park

    • @markusmilla6968
      @markusmilla6968 4 месяца назад +19

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @MegaKg9
      @MegaKg9 4 месяца назад +9

      Well said

    • @Romi_ditzydonutsdesigns
      @Romi_ditzydonutsdesigns 4 месяца назад +14

      Brilliant comment 😂 👏

    • @muzzleflash1
      @muzzleflash1 4 месяца назад

      Dinosaurs aren't and were not real.

    • @action4free369
      @action4free369 4 месяца назад +1

      Why it give no dinos? Mamuts are found why not a dino? Or why the evolution not work on a shark or croko? 🤣🤣

  • @TheNutmeg666
    @TheNutmeg666 Год назад +16235

    This is a European Starling, if anyone is wondering. Related to Mynah birds, they can learn an endless variety of sounds and vocals. I raised one from hatching to the end of her life, named Cheepie. She was nearly 20 years old & the best little bird ever.

    • @Sillyrabbit896
      @Sillyrabbit896 Год назад +265

      How exciting for you. I would have loved to have seen it.

    • @tdperrychatham
      @tdperrychatham Год назад +113

      Thank you for the name

    • @lauraroberts2250
      @lauraroberts2250 Год назад +184

      Thank you for your story. It's good to know how long they can live. It's clear they have a language. I've heard them telling each other that a cat is around. It sounds like someone blowing a raspberry.

    • @wd1534
      @wd1534 Год назад +62

      if you had put videos on RUclips, you'd had made millions of views

    • @eui6037
      @eui6037 Год назад +16

      Learn?

  • @Scalpaxos
    @Scalpaxos Год назад +31202

    So, this little guy alone can do the job of an entire sound effects studio.

    • @GamingDad
      @GamingDad Год назад +1534

      He basically did the whole avatar soundtrack.

    • @leeberry1363
      @leeberry1363 Год назад +780

      This little guy needs a job on the Jurassic park sound effects team 👍🏻👍🏻

    • @50zezima
      @50zezima Год назад +86

      ​@@GamingDadLmao

    • @twilightgardenspresentatio6384
      @twilightgardenspresentatio6384 Год назад +83

      Michael Winslow 2.0

    • @DreamingConcepts
      @DreamingConcepts Год назад +211

      and has access to the collective memory of its species from the beginning of time

  • @EL_Impulsiv-ld3mh
    @EL_Impulsiv-ld3mh 2 месяца назад +500

    The older I get, the more birds fascinate me

    • @PJ_Davis
      @PJ_Davis 2 месяца назад +5

      Me as well!

    • @odietamo9376
      @odietamo9376 Месяц назад +6

      I feel exactly the same.

    • @It_is_in_you
      @It_is_in_you Месяц назад +2

      Same 👍

    • @Ruminatinghafez
      @Ruminatinghafez Месяц назад +13

      When you find yourself watching birds out of binoculars, you're officially old
      I need new binoculars

    • @AndrewConkling
      @AndrewConkling Месяц назад

      It is the way of the world. 🥲

  • @mamazalama
    @mamazalama Год назад +6283

    Can you even imagine an entire forest filled with these sounds? Chilling!!!!!

    • @MADINAUZ2022
      @MADINAUZ2022 Год назад +34

      Yess😮😮

    • @deaganachomarunacathasaigh4344
      @deaganachomarunacathasaigh4344 Год назад +111

      You hear these sounds in most modern forests

    • @silly_on_
      @silly_on_ Год назад +59

      Fucking metal

    • @urzakarn9782
      @urzakarn9782 Год назад +36

      ​@deaganachomarunacathasaigh4344 No, you do not. In most North American forests, the most you'll here is the rustling of underbrush. Animal calls are infrequent. Plus, most animals that do make calls in North American wilderness sound nothing like this. (A few exceptions of course)
      But a lively wilderness is predominantly defined by underbrush stirring sounds in modern North American woodlands.

    • @moodybloomscraftsandfloral
      @moodybloomscraftsandfloral Год назад +30

      I don't know about all that.
      But the New Zealand bush can get pretty loud and noisy, especially during the warmer months.
      Lots of the same sounds and calls coming from mostly birds and insects, and they're pretty cool 😎

  • @helenhamilton7500
    @helenhamilton7500 Год назад +4911

    She committed to show us everything she knows, like she knew we are listening 😂

    • @BillKapriII244
      @BillKapriII244 Год назад +14

      He*

    • @Bmorefan
      @Bmorefan Год назад +33

      ​@@BillKapriII244zee/zem

    • @starlight_garden
      @starlight_garden Год назад +9

      ​@Squidipus22Birds don't have sex/gender?

    • @alopecia09
      @alopecia09 Год назад +31

      ​@@starlight_garden
      Dude if they don't, how do they reproduce lol?

    • @prasundas478
      @prasundas478 Год назад +9

      ​@@alopecia09now that's a valid question

  • @Nessy-of-the-Lynn
    @Nessy-of-the-Lynn Год назад +4662

    It's crazy how many urban noises it imitates. Cars, motorcycle, dog, jack hammer, back up alarms, siren, etc. Really cool.

    • @chibchan3765
      @chibchan3765 Год назад +26

      Not cool tho

    • @dillweed3902
      @dillweed3902 11 месяцев назад +56

      I dont think it's actually imitating any of those, 💀 this thing probably lives wayy deep in the woods somewhere.

    • @MMK86
      @MMK86 11 месяцев назад +97

      theres a group that comes to nest near my house every year and its hilarious to listen to the sounds they make if you observe them enough....one of them learned to mimic the call of a red tailed hawk and I've seen it being used to scare off other birds when they are feeding and dont want to compete with robin's or sparrows for food 🤣

    • @johnglassfiftyseven
      @johnglassfiftyseven 11 месяцев назад +109

      ​​@@dillweed3902uhm, yeah sure, and that's why that wild little critter is sitting calmly on a human arm 😂😂😂

    • @dillweed3902
      @dillweed3902 11 месяцев назад +21

      @@johnglassfiftyseven it's obviously a pet, compare it to a parrot.

  • @charlesfenton2063
    @charlesfenton2063 3 месяца назад +320

    Put a Lyre Bird and this little one together and the feedback loop would be inter-dimensional.

  • @XSathex
    @XSathex Год назад +7325

    Imagine walking through a forest and all of a sudden a bunch of these birds all around starting going off like sirens. That'd be terrifying

    • @onefelineinachannel1028
      @onefelineinachannel1028 Год назад +150

      Natural alarm system

    • @cyclistman6358
      @cyclistman6358 Год назад +88

      Why would you be afraid? It would be a privilege to hear such unique sounds in the wild.

    • @odrisrosario2465
      @odrisrosario2465 Год назад +23

      just to imagine😮 I will be 🏃‍♀️ to save my self 😅😂 I love the sound by the way ❤

    • @TopeA8
      @TopeA8 Год назад +39

      @@cyclistman6358 it's a bit more than asmr lol, without knowing exactly what was going on.

    • @safeenaslivingworld1904
      @safeenaslivingworld1904 Год назад

      😂

  • @davids7009
    @davids7009 Год назад +10757

    Now imagine those sounds 10X louder, 10X deeper... And quickly moving closer in the night... 😳

    • @BenFirth
      @BenFirth Год назад +201

      IN YOUR IMAGINATION ONLY

    • @keroro407
      @keroro407 Год назад +493

      Usually you only hear the sound when the creature is away from you, if it's closing on you, you'll hear very little.

    • @BenFirth
      @BenFirth Год назад

      @@keroro407 Dinosaurs are a hoax they simply never existed

    • @ItsJustAgamingThing
      @ItsJustAgamingThing Год назад +113

      @@keroro407 that makes hella sense

    • @brielle6397
      @brielle6397 Год назад +86

      Yeah no that'd be terrifying 😀

  • @kyberkreeper
    @kyberkreeper 4 месяца назад +959

    The FBI: "tell us what you know about dinosaurs"
    Birb:

    • @beebo-cat
      @beebo-cat 4 месяца назад +15

      The FBI: interesting...🤨🤔

    • @zainmudassir2964
      @zainmudassir2964 2 месяца назад +6

      ​@@beebo-cat
      CIA bursting in the room: it's our investigation now

    • @sapiophile545
      @sapiophile545 Месяц назад +3

      Birb. I know it may have been a typo, but it's cute lol

  • @branjosnow6244
    @branjosnow6244 Месяц назад +4

    It's the sounds within sounds that amazes me. Like it has multiple voice boxes operating independantly.

  • @mikefriend1514
    @mikefriend1514 Год назад +4607

    Starlings are incredible mimics and the vocal range is very impressive. They can imitate car alarms, pneumatic drills, pretty much anything. Amazing birds.

    • @KatieDeGo
      @KatieDeGo Год назад +26

      Is this a starling? What kind?

    • @whiteknob7944
      @whiteknob7944 Год назад +25

      I was thinking a motorcycle engine but maybe they live by a garage with an air gun. Either way I heard a lot of different animals that he must have seen on TV.

    • @brandoncherry3537
      @brandoncherry3537 Год назад +38

      ​@@KatieDeGoCommon Starling (European Starling)

    • @Luian-PR
      @Luian-PR Год назад +2

      Starling,is that his name?

    • @White_Wrath
      @White_Wrath Год назад +4

      ​@@brandoncherry3537This looks alot different than the European starlings in Canada

  • @raydelmartinez2905
    @raydelmartinez2905 Год назад +2424

    Those are some impressive primal sounds coming from such a little body.
    I can imagine how intimidating the deep forests of the dinosaur ages would have been.

    • @jeroenb.8405
      @jeroenb.8405 Год назад +102

      These are not primal sounds tho. This bird replicates noises it hears. Like car alarms, other birds etc.

    • @sarcasm-83
      @sarcasm-83 Год назад +25

      @@jeroenb.8405 1:03 and the p-hub intro

    • @tupacsslayer42
      @tupacsslayer42 Год назад +52

      @@sarcasm-83? I think you’re the only one that hears that

    • @sarcasm-83
      @sarcasm-83 Год назад +2

      @@tupacsslayer42 Could be 😅

    • @whitedragoness23
      @whitedragoness23 Год назад +8

      Check out the shoebill bird, it has a powerful beak. It’s tall and could of been what a dinosaur sounded like

  • @karinabrampt1556
    @karinabrampt1556 Год назад +1765

    This is just fascinating how this Starling's vocal chords can produce such sounds that in some cases sound other worldly.

    • @pdreding
      @pdreding Год назад +118

      Birds don't use vocal cords. Instead they have a structure known as a syrinx at the base of their thrachea. Since the airway splits there, many birds can use it to produce two tones at the same time, which permits complex vocal performances such as this.

    • @karinabrampt1556
      @karinabrampt1556 Год назад +19

      @pdreding • Thankyou for your information about birds, their syrinx and their trachea. Very interesting. Still quite fascinating since the starling is not related to the Lyre Bird but must have a similar anatomy as you gave described regarding their syrinx.

    • @rnswann6324
      @rnswann6324 Год назад +3

      ​@@alkent8570Thanks. I did not know what bird this was. Astonishing bird!!!

    • @DoktrDub
      @DoktrDub Год назад +3

      Birds have extremely intricate and complex vocal chords, when not vocal chords, but their own type of organ that produces sounds, syrinx? As somebody pointed out.

    • @Meowth666
      @Meowth666 Год назад +3

      You should check out how seals sound underwater. Such a cute and goofy animal sounds completely alien in the sea.

  • @fj5434
    @fj5434 3 месяца назад +66

    I swear there's always some new weird and awesome bird I've never even imagined before.

    • @catqi1929
      @catqi1929 Месяц назад

      theyve been around for a while

  • @CMustaine-ky5hv
    @CMustaine-ky5hv Год назад +2591

    He’s the entire sound of a whole movie.His own soundtrack and scored the music win for oscar

    • @zyourzgrandzmaz
      @zyourzgrandzmaz Год назад +23

      He's imitating construction noises

    • @Mianao1314
      @Mianao1314 Год назад +8

      This is really sad if that's the case 😭

    • @TheAncientAmbassador
      @TheAncientAmbassador Год назад +2

      I'll make sure the gets proper royalties from his upcoming film

    • @deancafe4739
      @deancafe4739 Год назад +3

      This is how jim carrey would sound.

    • @dknandez
      @dknandez Год назад +1

      Oh, R2D2

  • @itravellight
    @itravellight Год назад +4203

    Not a Lyrebird but a Starling. Both make incredible sounds. This little guy would definitely be a good sound effects source for dinosaurs and more.

    • @szolanek
      @szolanek Год назад +64

      Finally somebody named it. Thanks!

    • @hildaqueenb9067
      @hildaqueenb9067 Год назад +22

      ❤I thought it might have been a Starling. Thank you for confirming ❤

    • @Encourageable
      @Encourageable Год назад +22

      That’s not a Starling. I’m not sure what it is but Starlings are common birds in the Midwest US and they don’t look like this.

    • @renderizer01
      @renderizer01 Год назад +72

      @@Encourageable Of course it is. That's the common or European starling (sturnus vulgaris) and it is indeed very common here in Europe - and looks exactly like this. The common starling has successfully established itself in the US and Canada.

    • @BenStrutton-qb9rx
      @BenStrutton-qb9rx Год назад +13

      Its definitely a starling from europe do.t know what American starlings look like thou

  • @carolyntalbot947
    @carolyntalbot947 Год назад +2058

    This is absolutely incredible, it’s hard to believe this variety of sounds coming from this little creature. I’m blown away!

    • @ROGUE-Pamu_Love
      @ROGUE-Pamu_Love Год назад +3

      It is fake 😊 no bird can do that 😂

    • @crazyjay6331
      @crazyjay6331 Год назад +16

      @@ROGUE-Pamu_Love I think it might just be slowed down till the very end where u can hear the siren in the background

    • @grimm_satisfaction1292
      @grimm_satisfaction1292 Год назад +3

      ​@@ROGUE-Pamu_LoveParrots

    • @m00nsicle
      @m00nsicle Год назад

      @@ROGUE-Pamu_Lovelook up Lyrebirds, they can imitate chainsaws and traffic etc. nature is crazy

    • @clairen4584
      @clairen4584 Год назад

      Me too!!!

  • @TheAutumnWind_RN4L
    @TheAutumnWind_RN4L 25 дней назад +5

    This bird is like a concept car. It has all of the cool futuristic bells and whistles you want in a bird, but it'll never reach production.

  • @icewalker23
    @icewalker23 Год назад +1205

    Can you imagine these sounds coming out of an animal hundreds of times larger than this bird? the range of sounds is fascinating and beautiful. wow

    • @Dom4z
      @Dom4z Год назад +86

      I bet the sound in prehistoric dinosaur would be even louder due to sheer size of neck chords. 👀 Would be super scary hearing these sounds at night in the forest.

    • @Laurencita
      @Laurencita Год назад +12

      Simply magnificent

    • @AristasTheMonsterHunter
      @AristasTheMonsterHunter Год назад +62

      ​@@Dom4z they didn't have chords. Vocal chords are part of the Larynx, wich is unique to mammals. Birds have the Syrinx wich produces sounds without having chords, however non-avian dinosaurs didn't have it. Scientists think that most likely dinosaurs mainly sounded like crocodilians and other reptiles.

    • @HerrAndreasSkog
      @HerrAndreasSkog Год назад +10

      That is what small dragons should sound like in fantasy series.

    • @bilveytoman8125
      @bilveytoman8125 Год назад +38

      ​@@AristasTheMonsterHunterYet a mummified Ankylosaurus was found with a preserved Syrinx or at least a proto Syrinx. Don't count out singing Dinos yet.

  • @muddyfalcon
    @muddyfalcon Год назад +9569

    Imagine if birds can carry down sounds heard through hundreds of generations!

    • @CorvusRemalius
      @CorvusRemalius Год назад +827

      That might actually be true lol.

    • @ronboerste1813
      @ronboerste1813 Год назад +90

      Right 😏👍

    • @plopdoo339
      @plopdoo339 Год назад +806

      They do and it's been proven that they actually teach their young sounds and copy sounds from their relatives.

    • @sirweebs2914
      @sirweebs2914 Год назад +488

      Ive been trying to teach ravens outside of my house some cuss words for a few years now, no result yet but Ill just have to try longer.

    • @EssentialTruth_
      @EssentialTruth_ Год назад +90

      I just had this same thought. Wouldn’t that be so cool?

  • @bouchecaldwell330
    @bouchecaldwell330 7 месяцев назад +786

    Feels like a Prehistoric Forest rolled all into one little Being. B E A U T I F U L!😂

    • @rickwilliams967
      @rickwilliams967 6 месяцев назад

      How would literally anyone know?

    • @krakowski_6237
      @krakowski_6237 4 месяца назад +10

      @@rickwilliams967I know. I was there. I am John Mesozoic.

    • @Vigorous_Potato
      @Vigorous_Potato 4 месяца назад +1

      It literally started mimicking a car

    • @jijijijijiji44
      @jijijijijiji44 4 месяца назад

      ​@@Vigorous_Potato and a Chainsaw

    • @raheltadesse8527
      @raheltadesse8527 4 месяца назад

      Ikr😂😂❤❤❤ she is darling

  • @Afro.G.
    @Afro.G. Месяц назад +10

    Imagine how annoying earth must've been with triceratops sized creatures screaming like this all day like birds do 😂😂😂

  • @gojiberrii1261
    @gojiberrii1261 Год назад +1143

    As someone who is a massive fan of accurate dinosaur vocalizations, this video brought me an incredible amount of joy.

    • @wolfofwallgreens
      @wolfofwallgreens Год назад +57

      Well I'm a massive fan of minivans made in July of 1993 !

    • @gojiberrii1261
      @gojiberrii1261 Год назад +11

      @@wolfofwallgreens lol

    • @ApolloThyrteen
      @ApolloThyrteen Год назад +48

      How would we known what accurate dinosaur vocalizations sound like? Aren’t we guessing?

    • @sertaysakizoglu5553
      @sertaysakizoglu5553 Год назад +19

      ​@@ApolloThyrteenit ain't accurate per se but the accuracy is based on real bird vocalisation instead of arbitrary animal sounds, like Jurassic Park did

    • @Danileptic
      @Danileptic Год назад +11

      ​@@ApolloThyrteenthere are special bones where they probably blew air into. Idk if that's proven and which dinosaur that was.

  • @cathrynmartin4395
    @cathrynmartin4395 Год назад +824

    Actually, to me, this bird sounds as if she lives near or in a mechanic's workshop - fixing cars or motorcycles. Lots of those sounds are like the machines - like an air compressor used to remove lug nuts, a dynometer to measure engine performance....maybe that's just me, but it's what I heard in many of this bird's sounds. They tend to imitate what catches their attention - I have a very old (in his 80s) Orange Wing Amazon and over the years he has learned and repeated sounds that seemed to interest him. He heard kittens once upon a time with a mama cat gave birth under my house and he imitated baby kitten cries for a time. He barked for a time too, when there was a dog next door. He also imitated the songs of birds he heard outside his window. Some birds are more prolific at it - like this little Starling bird!

    • @cornparade6874
      @cornparade6874 Год назад +34

      Part of it sounded like a train chugging

    • @HogTime
      @HogTime Год назад +36

      I definitely hear motorcycle/engine sounds from 8 seconds on and around 20 seconds sounds like revving

    • @TheVZizzle
      @TheVZizzle Год назад +14

      I heard an air ratchet and car alarm. Heard the motorcycle and reving. High rpm stuff. Reverse alarm. And that effect when sound is compressed and then stretched by speed moving past.
      Maybe a racetrack?

    • @eljefe9106
      @eljefe9106 Год назад +1

      No

    • @Lenaaaa30
      @Lenaaaa30 Год назад +21

      The thing is that they copy the sound perfectly and not just sounding a little bit like she's living next to a mechanics workshop. If a stearling copies a mechanics workshop it will EXACTLY sound like one. It sounds different when someone is fixing a car, doesn't it? Sure, it sounds like some revving at one point. But isn't it amazing to imagine that for millions of years they have been copying dinosaur sounds from each other?

  • @mycabages5184
    @mycabages5184 11 месяцев назад +1293

    Bird noises can sometimes be too much, especially if they're loud and repetitive, but I'd never get bored listening to this guy

    • @Shellshellzee
      @Shellshellzee 11 месяцев назад +38

      Until you're trying to sleep and he won't shut up 😂

    • @taagolarts3787
      @taagolarts3787 11 месяцев назад +12

      Sometimes they pick a short loop of sounds and just keep repeating it over and over, that gets old pretty quick xD

    • @cipher88101
      @cipher88101 11 месяцев назад +9

      Yeah, no incessant "chirp chirp" with this little guy, he has an encyclopedia of sounds.

    • @jamesmcluvlee
      @jamesmcluvlee 11 месяцев назад

      Never gets old to me

    • @havefuntazarasu5367
      @havefuntazarasu5367 11 месяцев назад +1

      This bird sounded like allah

  • @donnageoghan4328
    @donnageoghan4328 25 дней назад +8

    Wow!!!! Aren’t they the same starlings all over the Americas? I never knew they could vocalize so amazingly.

  • @Alister222222
    @Alister222222 Год назад +741

    I suspect this amazing bird was copying at least some things from her environment, such as lawnmowers, cars, and other birds. Absolutely amazing and beautiful.

    • @destroychihuahua
      @destroychihuahua Год назад +7

      Good point! Right in the last 2-3 seconds, it sounded like a passing motorcycle.

    • @AlextheENTP
      @AlextheENTP Год назад +13

      There was definitely a car alarm in there! And an elephant trumpeting.
      (Clarity edit: not a wailing alarm, I meant the bleep-bleep when you arm or disarm your car's alarm system.)

    • @kenny5292
      @kenny5292 Год назад +2

      i can definitely hear someone sawing wood and also a woodpecker in there

    • @AbbasBinYounas
      @AbbasBinYounas Год назад +1

      Maybe even a train?

    • @SandraCat22
      @SandraCat22 11 месяцев назад

      The Lyrebird can imitate a baby crying perfectly

  • @thatguy4413
    @thatguy4413 Год назад +817

    Played this on full blast with the family dog laying down. Towards the end he immediately started howling as if he were responding to another dog.

    • @brielle6397
      @brielle6397 Год назад +31

      My cat started getting super wide-eyed, looking for my phone under the blanket 😅

    • @TehSinWithin
      @TehSinWithin Год назад +18

      My dog came in here half way through, in haste, to see what was going on

    • @rogerpratchet
      @rogerpratchet Год назад +9

      Cockatiel goes crazy screaming, tweeting and jumping in its cage.

    • @nlouistrations
      @nlouistrations Год назад +4

      My dog hated this video lmao. He's convinced its coming from outside

    • @astro5935
      @astro5935 Год назад +3

      ​@leandroaude6926what does this intend to mean😰

  • @hymajaya8347
    @hymajaya8347 Год назад +9983

    Imagine hearing this in the middle of the night so dark when you are in a lonely place where no one is around

    • @Loveyov362
      @Loveyov362  Год назад +162

      Куркунчли

    • @SagaciousDjinn
      @SagaciousDjinn Год назад +358

      I like how this implies that I'd be in the woods, while nobody is in the woods, implicating that I, myself, am a nobody. Very immersive.

    • @luv2luv720
      @luv2luv720 Год назад +124

      A lot of people go in the woods by themselves! It's great for the mind & soul!!

    • @Brucev7
      @Brucev7 Год назад +52

      @@SagaciousDjinn if a Tree Falls, Does it Make a ......

    • @SagaciousDjinn
      @SagaciousDjinn Год назад +23

      @@Brucev7 nobody?

  • @czikkanhardt4750
    @czikkanhardt4750 Месяц назад +3

    Allegedly, this is similar to how a T-Rex would sound, but _muuuch_ deeper, and with enough bass that you would feel the resonance throughout your entire body, even from great distances away.
    What an experience that would be...

  • @morganmarston
    @morganmarston Год назад +1800

    Very prehistoric sounding

    • @Loveyov362
      @Loveyov362  Год назад +48

      Рахмат акажон

    • @MADINAUZ2022
      @MADINAUZ2022 Год назад +25

      Ха бу музлик даври даги жонзотлар давуши

    • @Hothenrik
      @Hothenrik Год назад +3

      Very "AI".....👾

    • @John-wd5cb
      @John-wd5cb Год назад +12

      It swallowed a navy sonar.

    • @christianlingurar7085
      @christianlingurar7085 Год назад +17

      construction site sounds...

  • @nightmare348
    @nightmare348 Год назад +1226

    That is epic, and terrifying. Imagine being alone in the middle of the woods and all of a sudden you hear a bunch of these starlings making all sorts of weird-ass noises.

    • @thewormarchives7876
      @thewormarchives7876 Год назад +12

      Nope... Nope

    • @75blackviking
      @75blackviking Год назад +19

      Yeah, I'd run like a scared child.

    • @CMustaine-ky5hv
      @CMustaine-ky5hv Год назад

      nightmare348-brilliant and hilarious comment

    • @borskavin6395
      @borskavin6395 Год назад +7

      I am not sure if it's exactly this species of birds, but there's one in the Amazon rainforest that can imitate the sound of a chainsaw & absolutely scares people for fun

    • @DarkJak
      @DarkJak Год назад

      I don't feel this would be epic unless I was taking my victim into the woods?

  • @10191927
    @10191927 Год назад +2776

    I’ve often wondered if Dinosaurs were capable of a wide range of sounds rather than just our one-dimensional interpretation of what dinosaur vocals could be.

    • @kloe869
      @kloe869 Год назад +242

      Dinosaurs were not capable of making such sounds unfortunately. The syrinx, which helps us make our vocalizations, only appeared in a few dinosaur species. There were also no specialized vocal chords our birds have today, any sounds dinosaurs made were likely to be breathy and low grumbles. :)

    • @todahsalaam8538
      @todahsalaam8538 Год назад +67

      @@kloe869 we know that Parasaurolopus used it's nostril portrusion to blow it like a horn. We also know Velociraptor used vocalizations to communicate.

    • @DjeauxSheaux
      @DjeauxSheaux Год назад +100

      ​@@todahsalaam8538Neither of those things are known. I'm aware of the hypothesis that parasaurolopus used its crest as a resonance chamber, I've never heard anything about dromaeosaurs vocalizing to communicate. Where did you hear that?

    • @saucy_celery2012
      @saucy_celery2012 Год назад +60

      If you want a accurate representation of what dinosaurs sound like you need look no further than modern day chickens and crocodiles

    • @JustDoittt-rf9xf
      @JustDoittt-rf9xf Год назад +1

      Yeah look at all animals they have different tones

  • @kenmilne2379
    @kenmilne2379 2 месяца назад +4

    Isnt he lovely ! ❤ precious !! 💖

  • @feralbluee
    @feralbluee 11 месяцев назад +710

    i didn’t know starlings could imitate noises. quite amazing. what a repertoire! 🐦‍⬛🌷🌱

    • @DarthOblivious7891
      @DarthOblivious7891 11 месяцев назад +15

      First time I heard it, it was chainsaw and R2D2 sounds, I laughed my ass off. 😂

    • @jatzi1526
      @jatzi1526 11 месяцев назад +7

      M elementary teacher taught a starling to talk. Brought him to class, little bird was a superstar

    • @bens.8787
      @bens.8787 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@DarthOblivious7891Goes to show how narrow your sound perception is.

    • @LeviAckerman096
      @LeviAckerman096 11 месяцев назад +5

      We get starlings frequently where I live. I usually hear them mimicking hawks and even human voices! It's very cool.

    • @Revelationscreation
      @Revelationscreation 11 месяцев назад +3

      So are all sturnidae's... pretty interesting family.

  • @joannot6706
    @joannot6706 Год назад +492

    Imagine a predator with that kind of imitating capabilities to lure you towards it.

    • @wallacewilliams535
      @wallacewilliams535 Год назад +9

      lol! ...uh...
      Predator 1987
      Predator 2 1990
      AvP 2004
      AvP: Requiem 2007
      Predators 2010
      The Predator 2018

    • @John-wd5cb
      @John-wd5cb Год назад +8

      It's maping the environment. Technology mimics nature.

    • @kobold7466
      @kobold7466 Год назад +7

      skinwalkers

    • @mossystonesubs
      @mossystonesubs Год назад

      I know there are cryptids/historic creatures in the southeast that are rumored to do that. You should never start whistling while alone in a field/forest with poor visibility. The sound gets copied to lure people in

    • @BoltRM
      @BoltRM Год назад +4

      Hey baybee.. Hey baybee..

  • @moritamikamikara3879
    @moritamikamikara3879 Год назад +1217

    This is why I tell all my city folk friends that being in the countryside is like being on an alien planet.
    They've all never heard birdsong before, so when they come out to somewhere where there actually are birds, it sounds like a movie soundtrack.

    • @EyeSeeThruYou
      @EyeSeeThruYou Год назад +78

      How sad they are so disconnected from the natural world 😢
      This evening, while swimming, I heard a Red-shouldered hawk, a family of four Great-crested Flycatchers, a family of Northern Cardinals, a Bluejay, and watched a Florida Blue land crab and several Brown anoles.
      I cannot imagine not experiencing the activities of my animal neighbors on a daily basis. It would leave a void in my existence if I had to live without their presence!

    • @icanseeyou9820
      @icanseeyou9820 Год назад +24

      That's so sad, I live in a city centre in England and even here I hear and see all sorts of birds. I'm going to assume your friends are from the US, seems like cities here have much more parks and green space. I live next to a huge park with a lake and see just as many birds as I did living in the countryside

    • @EyeSeeThruYou
      @EyeSeeThruYou Год назад +27

      @icanseeyou9820 I'll be kind and just communicate that your assumptions appear to be based upon stereotypes.
      The US, as a nation, is situated on a vast area of geography, and therefore blessed with biodiversity in terms of flora, fauna, habitats, and even climates.
      The ecology of the habitats and larger ecosystems is diversified, even within a single state.
      Accordingly, the nation is not culturally, chronologically, nor agriculturally monolithic, so its citizens and their preferences and aesthetic aren't monolithic, either.
      Much depends upon the region, size, and history of the area.
      Some older cities, in fact, do have green space interwoven and set aside.
      I live in such a place on the eastern coast of Florida, and this city is more than 100 years old. Yet, there are parks, greenspaces, wildlife, and naturalized domesticated animals (we have a special district set aside for peacocks, residents here since the 1970s). The city of Key West does the same for hens and roosters.
      It just so also happens that I live on a riverbank property, and have alligators which sun on my riverbank. In a city. In Florida. Normal, here.
      In Florida, alone, more municipal planning is moving towards an emphasis on walkability, increasing green space comprised of *native* plants, for both public and private space.
      Arizona, Nevada, and California are moving away from water usage for "lawn space" and towards xeric gardening techniques comprised of native plants to showcase the region's ecology to save water, prevent erosion, and increase habitat functionality.
      Even New York City has Central Park, an exceptionally large area, which doubles as wildlife habitat and human recreation.
      My point is that this is a matter of perception, culture, generation, and priorities.
      Younger people are increasingly inside more of their lives with fewer daily interactions with the environment, and that may have more to do with OP's observations than anything else.

    • @EyeSeeThruYou
      @EyeSeeThruYou Год назад +8

      @@ryan-qz5xb "no" what, exactly?

    • @icanseeyou9820
      @icanseeyou9820 Год назад +12

      @@EyeSeeThruYou This was very informative, thank you for being kind about it despite my ignorant statement

  • @zmvpainting
    @zmvpainting 20 дней назад +1

    Sounds like it can mimic just about anything. Incredible

  • @traviswoolston8108
    @traviswoolston8108 Год назад +576

    what’s really crazy is how it’s able to replicate reverb of some of the sounds

    • @katthefantastic
      @katthefantastic Год назад +15

      Yes! Birds are incredible.

    • @supergnaw
      @supergnaw Год назад +38

      ​@@katthefantasticI think it was sarcasm since the first 3/4 of the video was slowed down and reverb was added lol

    • @clairen4584
      @clairen4584 Год назад +4

      Amazing!!!

    • @genericalfishtycoon3853
      @genericalfishtycoon3853 11 месяцев назад +4

      The bird can genuinely tell you with acoustic analysis what part of the room it was standing in when it heard you fart. Unreal lol

  • @dr.magnusnyhusurgentcarebar
    @dr.magnusnyhusurgentcarebar Год назад +861

    That bird has a decent chance at signing a record deal. It's an entire band in one with a whole new sound. The kids will be digging it, man!

    • @huntermediaphotography
      @huntermediaphotography Год назад +4

      It's like #PrehistoricIndustrialMusic. Sounds a lot like old @ThrobbingGristle for sure !

    • @Woozlewuzzleable
      @Woozlewuzzleable Год назад +4

      Or the car is broken.

    • @erikdeeNOSPELLSNO
      @erikdeeNOSPELLSNO Год назад +4

      Singing a record deal...

    • @gerwinstellingwerf4432
      @gerwinstellingwerf4432 Год назад +1

      You mean those jiving, beebopping greasy hair kids chewing gum on the corner? They will think it's totally swell, man!

    • @jewante
      @jewante Год назад +2

      😂Let the bird listen on elvis...and then he sings like him😅

  • @monicapushkin3274
    @monicapushkin3274 Год назад +6

    Love how the throat feathers move according to the sound ....

  • @block4562
    @block4562 18 дней назад +1

    Imagine if T-Rex's had this sort of mimicry ability, we would never know

  • @melaniecampbell7055
    @melaniecampbell7055 Год назад +129

    Get this bird a movie contract. This is amazing.

  • @blackblurable
    @blackblurable Год назад +820

    Okay this was actually pretty badass. It reminds me of that video where scientists recreated what the tyrannosaurus might’ve sounded like. Very low rumbling in a frequency barely recognizable yet insanely powerful. It was akin to hearing the earth bellow or maybe that’s just a trip induced thing I remember ages ago. That’s how I’d describe it.

    • @adrianaslund8605
      @adrianaslund8605 Год назад +13

      Depends on how geologically active your area is. The brain gets temporarily hyperconnected when people trip. Look up the hum phenomenon too. Where in some areas people hear a persistent hum without any obvious external explanation.

    • @Vor567tez
      @Vor567tez Год назад +6

      It's crazy to think Science has advanced so much that we can now recreate extinct sounds!

    • @firegator6853
      @firegator6853 Год назад +13

      It's a nice hypothesis but tbh when it comes to sounds there is wide range of speculation, this year there was a very complex larynx discovery found in a pinacosaurus the authors even describe that it's almost as developed as most birds so that proves any non avian dinosaur could have this organ and therefore allow for a wider range of sounds than just rumbles and growls...not to mention even cassowaries and crocodiles who are used as comparison can make some really loud sounds too

    • @whichsherice
      @whichsherice Год назад

      Is this the Tyrannosaurus video you're talking about? ruclips.net/user/shortsTi3VHk2j2Sc?feature=share4
      That sounds absolutely terrifying, I would hate to hear that anywhere let alone in the night.

    • @burleydad
      @burleydad Год назад +2

      ever heard an emu vocalize?

  • @Momcat_maggiefelinefan
    @Momcat_maggiefelinefan Год назад +5

    Starlings are great mimics! I’ve heard one bark like my dog!

  • @marorerimeraremaro2533
    @marorerimeraremaro2533 Месяц назад +1

    Awesome how nature mimics JoJo Stand SFX so well, the sound team is just THAT good.

  • @Frosty_tha_Snowman
    @Frosty_tha_Snowman 11 месяцев назад +284

    Starlings are such cool birds. You'd never think that such a little guy could make such mesmerizing, otherworldly noises.

    • @rolandthethompsongunner64
      @rolandthethompsongunner64 10 месяцев назад

      They’re an invasive species here in the states and horrible for the echo system.

  • @FerusUltor
    @FerusUltor Год назад +1064

    Slowed-down speed or not, the vocals of this bird are absolutely BREATHtaking. The shivers sent down my spine are absolutely welcome. He deserves a goodie bowl for that.🐦🥜

    • @siliconhawk
      @siliconhawk Год назад +5

      lmao i just realised i was watching at 1.5x

    • @FerusUltor
      @FerusUltor Год назад +2

      @@siliconhawk 😂😂

    • @mattoucas869
      @mattoucas869 Год назад +1

      I think this might be a medical concern..

    • @tatsuya4887
      @tatsuya4887 Год назад +1

      You weird

    • @jonathanmellqvist2
      @jonathanmellqvist2 Год назад +7

      To be fair he's just a fraction the size of a dinosaur, another sounds are going to be wayyy higher in frequency. Imagine him 50x bigger 😉

  • @justusb.plorer8773
    @justusb.plorer8773 Год назад +206

    Modern birds are still considered part of the clade dinosauria, so technically, this is a dinosaur we're listening to.

    • @Mario87456
      @Mario87456 Год назад

      Those scientists are idiots and they are wrong birds are NOT dinosaurs.

    • @ComsiCaterpillar
      @ComsiCaterpillar Год назад +17

      Of course. Birds were a type of dinosaur, and sadly the only ones to survive.

    • @Mario87456
      @Mario87456 Год назад +8

      @@ComsiCaterpillar No they are NOT dinosaurs just related to them albeit distantly.

    • @noneed4sleep64
      @noneed4sleep64 Год назад +20

      @@Mario87456birds are dinosaurs, why do you think we talk about the extinction of “non-avian dinosaurs”?

    • @Mario87456
      @Mario87456 Год назад +2

      @@noneed4sleep64 Because idiots scientists made up that term that’s why.

  • @e.t.8541
    @e.t.8541 19 дней назад +1

    Loved the "one minute to audition for Jurassic Park" comment! 😅👍🏻

  • @rolloxra670
    @rolloxra670 Год назад +17

    It’s more likely that dinosaurs made similar sounds to that of birds than the roars we hear in movies.

  • @Tylwaa
    @Tylwaa 4 месяца назад +84

    I grew up on an East Texas cotton farm, my grandparents had owned since 1920. Every year a heron would fly around the land and land on a fence post for a day or two. Just sit there. Just him....for years. It was usually the same post or one close. My Grandpa would say "Your friend's here!" As young as I was I thought it was awesome to see. But I wondered why? My grandpa, who only went to the sixth grade in school, said "Maybe he has an old memory and to him all those many years ago, this land was underwater. Or close to water. So he still comes here" That shocked me. As I grew older I realized my Grandpa was right and I did some research, that part of Texas WAS underwater in the past. The bird stopped coming, but it was a beautiful creature, I do believe it was a Great Blue Heron. Why he was always alone and why he would always come to our farm? Still a mystery.

    • @YazminBamford
      @YazminBamford 3 месяца назад +8

      Its genetic memory passed down through generations through nuerological pathways in the brains cortex like gorrillas and apes knowing what plants to eat or like when elephants find watering holes hundreds of miles apart in the dry season .

    • @dantesinferno1258
      @dantesinferno1258 2 месяца назад

      @@YazminBamford ⁠my partner experienced this happening when a young deer jumped over the central reservation of a dual carriageway and was struck by his car. It was 5am, partner pulled over, rang police but the young deer had took itself off to die. So sad.

    • @tightbhole420
      @tightbhole420 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@dantesinferno1258 nah deer just do that

    • @dantesinferno1258
      @dantesinferno1258 2 месяца назад

      @@tightbhole420 this was in the U.K. and we don’t tend to have deer randomly roaming around…. At least I think not 😂

    • @tightbhole420
      @tightbhole420 2 месяца назад +1

      @@dantesinferno1258 if you have deer, they WILL commit suicide by vehicle, its what they do
      some of the biggest most elusive bucks ever have been killed not by hunters, but by vehickes

  • @HEYTWIDDLELEEDEE-c6p
    @HEYTWIDDLELEEDEE-c6p Месяц назад +1

    Amazing. He doesn't repeat himself.
    Next Jurassic Park movie sound effects expert contributor.

  • @hyenidae9999
    @hyenidae9999 Год назад +147

    This is a starling, they're amazing mimics of all sorts of sounds. The video is slowed, pitched and given reverb to make it sound more dinosaur-like until about the 1:00 mark. Hope this clears things up for some people :)

    • @dopesickdog
      @dopesickdog Год назад

      i love ur pfp, yeenas are the most underrated & adorable animals

    • @adreabrooks11
      @adreabrooks11 Год назад +6

      Good catch about the speed!

    • @dara83000
      @dara83000 Год назад

      Was thinking the same thing

    • @DRFishsticks221
      @DRFishsticks221 Год назад +8

      Well birds *are* dinosaurs

    • @aleksamrkela831
      @aleksamrkela831 Год назад

      Figured as much. Good ear!

  • @jessicaheger1880
    @jessicaheger1880 Год назад +30

    This totally freaked my cats out. Like they inherited an instinctual hyper awareness for those sounds. 🦖 🦕

  • @luislaplume8261
    @luislaplume8261 Год назад +80

    Who needs a sound machine for the next Jurrasic movie when you have a bird that can imitate various dinosaur species? 😊

  • @annaolivarez2578
    @annaolivarez2578 Месяц назад +1

    I can only imagine this little birdie repeating after Pavarotti after he’s done his throat warming exercises!

  • @LazzarrusLong
    @LazzarrusLong Год назад +250

    I need to create a 10-hour version of this with overlapping, random bits of the same layered sound. I’ve not heard these beautiful sounds before and I regularly have forrest soundtracks playing in the background while I work, read, and chill. Lovely bird!

    • @horizonblack
      @horizonblack Год назад +7

      Add Great tailed grackles and sign me up.

    • @LazzarrusLong
      @LazzarrusLong Год назад +4

      @@horizonblackLoL will do!

    • @dtnamastertech1911
      @dtnamastertech1911 Год назад +12

      Damn no link in the comments yet. Looking for that dope bird track.

    • @j.rjunior5584
      @j.rjunior5584 Год назад +4

      That would be awesome? When is the vid dropping? This is soo relaxing ngl

    • @SilverBucket47
      @SilverBucket47 Год назад +3

      Leaving a comment for when the link drops. Thanks in advance!

  • @DH-gk8vh
    @DH-gk8vh Год назад +405

    Starling. Not native to the U.S. but believed to have accidentally been brought over from Europe. I don't know the details. I love watching them especially in the fall in large groups foraging for food. Incredible those sounds are so intricate and varied. Such a huge repertoire of sounds. Incredible. Birds just aren't given credit for how intelligent they really are.

    • @Minceraft69
      @Minceraft69 Год назад +7

      It's weird to think they're capable of arguably more impressive sounds and mimicry than parrots are, considering they're just normal garden and street birds here like sparrows or pigeons, lol.

    • @MostlyInteresting
      @MostlyInteresting Год назад +15

      The story of how sterlings in several other invasive species of birds got started is basically. Some idiot released a bunch of different ones in Central Park in New York City way back years ago. This of course cause competition with native species and some of those don't exist anymore.

    • @nerysghemor5781
      @nerysghemor5781 Год назад

      Heh…it wasn’t an accident. It was some idiots who wanted all of the birds mentioned in Shakespeare here in the States and they were too successful. Now they pay the price for human stupidity because they have no protections like native birds do.

    • @nerysghemor5781
      @nerysghemor5781 Год назад +4

      @@MostlyInterestingIt’s really sad, both for the native species, and for these incredibly smart birds who can’t help that their ancestors were released into the wrong environment. 😢

    • @michaelmclachlan1650
      @michaelmclachlan1650 Год назад +8

      @@MostlyInteresting There were multiple releases of starlings in the 19th Century but apparently the 1890 Central Park release by Eugene Schieffelin was the first that resulted in a successful nesting colony. Accidental or intentional releases of non-native animals have caused ecological nightmares around the world.

  • @Stopstaring101
    @Stopstaring101 Год назад +1254

    This was played in a slower speed than it was recorded.
    That way we could really hear and appreciate the variety of sounds.
    It’s VERY cool and incredibly interesting!!
    Thank you !!

    • @riddikulus1432
      @riddikulus1432 Год назад +21

      I do not think so
      You can see , the vibration, movement, all normal speed

    • @Stopstaring101
      @Stopstaring101 Год назад +14

      @@riddikulus1432
      The OP has seen my comment and did not say I was wrong.

    • @carolinecoy3164
      @carolinecoy3164 Год назад +35

      ​@@Stopstaring101the op has liked every comment on this post. That doesn't mean he agreed with what you said,or even read it in full. Being polite is an option also. The bird's movements looked natural to me. Doesn't look slowed down at all.

    • @maddestruction1
      @maddestruction1 Год назад +36

      ⁠@@riddikulus1432You’re wrong. Birds don’t take a second to blink and the movement of the feathers is way to slow to be at normal speed, not to mention the drawn out echo-ey sound made when audio is slowed down.

    • @GT_177
      @GT_177 Год назад +36

      Not to mention the heavy reverb that has been added. Reverb makes everything sound cooler.

  • @LoveYah777
    @LoveYah777 16 дней назад +1

    That's so cool! I know a lot of people think that these type of birds are imitating Star Wars, however it seems to me quite plausible that Star Wars got their theme songs from these birds lol
    Sounds to me like this bird is imitating traffic going by slowly on the highway. I really can't say what dinosaurs would truly sound like lol

  • @Park-ll6mj
    @Park-ll6mj Год назад +143

    I'd love if more media used slowed-down birdcalls as their dinosaur noises. It sounds so alien; I love it!

    • @Nifm0104
      @Nifm0104 Год назад

      Sounds like blue whale 🤔

  • @jodabney4358
    @jodabney4358 Год назад +256

    It really is amazing the sounds he can mimic from his outside world

    • @kenjiyamaha2879
      @kenjiyamaha2879 Год назад +6

      Check out the mimic abilities of the Lieyre bird

    • @jodabney4358
      @jodabney4358 Год назад +1

      @@kenjiyamaha2879 I will..thank you

    • @darkfur18
      @darkfur18 Год назад +5

      @@jodabney4358 *lyre bird, they're amazing

  • @billm3210
    @billm3210 Год назад +46

    Birds are cool. They make unique sounds if you pay attention. This one deserves to be in a studio for movies.

  • @erickz6828
    @erickz6828 2 месяца назад +330

    Technically, birds are dinosaurs. So, yes, they sound like dinosaurs.

    • @deinvater5427
      @deinvater5427 2 месяца назад +6

      How do you know dinosaurs sound? Did you hear them in person 🥸

    • @alvinp9269
      @alvinp9269 2 месяца назад +6

      Birds were created before land animals.

    • @patricknelson
      @patricknelson 2 месяца назад +17

      @@deinvater5427 … yes. He just told you that birds _are_ dinosaurs.
      Non-avian dinosaurs, that’s a different matter. But this video is literally of an actual dinosaur.

    • @LennyMiller739
      @LennyMiller739 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@deinvater5427How did you read the second sentence yet ignore the first?

    • @LennyMiller739
      @LennyMiller739 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@alvinp9269Yeah I'm surprised more people dont realise fish grew wings and flew out of the water /s

  • @KristyMcConville-bd3op
    @KristyMcConville-bd3op 11 месяцев назад +108

    Who would ever imagine a Starling could make such authentic sounds like this!?
    Incredible

  • @kennygonzalez8792
    @kennygonzalez8792 Год назад +165

    Anyone else can sit here and listen to this all day? Those are actual primal sounds. They mimic what they hear so they’ve got years of evolution working on those sounds

    • @earthling8585
      @earthling8585 Год назад +1

      Yes, I'd love to. ❤

    • @markopucek6400
      @markopucek6400 Год назад +3

      Yeee that is not how it works, bird can only mimic sounds they hear, its been a problem even for some species to keep breeding because the males forgot the song that attracts the females.

  • @cheesehead500
    @cheesehead500 Год назад +14

    Sounds like Raptor calling at 0:44

  • @tracieg6986
    @tracieg6986 2 месяца назад +1

    Best Michael Winslow impersonation I’ve ever heard!

  • @KingAsaBeatz
    @KingAsaBeatz 10 месяцев назад +98

    As a former dinosaur I can confirm this is how we sound

    • @through-faith-alone
      @through-faith-alone 3 месяца назад +3

      thank you

    • @rocketsfan6116
      @rocketsfan6116 3 месяца назад +2

      Because of the law of monophyly, you can't just be a former dinosaur... you're still a dinosaur today. 🙂😇

    • @KingAsaBeatz
      @KingAsaBeatz 3 месяца назад +3

      @@rocketsfan6116 Shhh they can't know!!

    • @sandynoby
      @sandynoby 3 месяца назад

      Hehe

    • @kenjackben
      @kenjackben 2 месяца назад

      nice to know a blob of oil has a has an internet connection

  • @AutumnRayne936
    @AutumnRayne936 Год назад +1863

    I mean birds are technically dinosaurs. Who knows, he may have the whole prehistoric dino vocal range too. Based on what scientists know about dinosaurs and their possible calls so far, it sounds kinda possible too. That’s super cool!
    Because people keep coming here to argue and tell me birds aren’t actually dinosaurs, I invite you to google “are birds dinosaurs?” And see the results.

    • @VagishaDas
      @VagishaDas Год назад +51

      Maybe these sounds are passed down hen to chicks, generation after generation, since the dawn of creation. 😅❤

    • @ErnestImken
      @ErnestImken Год назад

      Birds have always been birds, and dinosaurs have always been dinosaurs. There is no fossil evidence of a species becoming another species.

    • @BOBAFETT25882
      @BOBAFETT25882 Год назад +24

      Don’t forget crocs and turtles and sharks

    • @AutumnRayne936
      @AutumnRayne936 Год назад +43

      @@BOBAFETT25882 sharks are incredible because they’ve existed since before trees! I always find that fact so fascinating. It’s also incredible how little crocodilians have changed in millions of years, and they really teach us so much about how dinosaurs lived. Super duper cool!

    • @scootypuffjr.
      @scootypuffjr. Год назад +7

      @bobafett742 those all pre date dinosaurs

  • @cherish9493
    @cherish9493 Год назад +52

    The world of mother nature is full of wonders. 💕

  • @hansnorleaf
    @hansnorleaf Год назад +346

    I think this is what the starling thinks an entire forest sounds like today :) I can hear cats, several different species of bird calls (also a woodpecker pecking), a deer and sounds that might just be animals moving through vegetation.

    • @coffeync
      @coffeync Год назад +31

      And a truck backing up

    • @andreah1104
      @andreah1104 Год назад +10

      And an elephant at one point 😂

    • @kenmorris8219
      @kenmorris8219 Год назад +20

      Heard a car alarm, a washer/dryer, even sounded like he started a car and revved the engine bit.

    • @aaishasingh3565
      @aaishasingh3565 Год назад +4

      Exactly.

    • @hansnorleaf
      @hansnorleaf Год назад

      @@kenmorris8219 Are you trying to tell me in a round abound way that I am imagining hearing sounds?

  • @shelleyj5939
    @shelleyj5939 4 месяца назад +5

    She’s beautiful 😢

  • @CrankyAf
    @CrankyAf 3 месяца назад +15

    This is what dinosaurs sound like, today at least. Birds are dinosaurs

    • @humbleskye
      @humbleskye 2 месяца назад

      modern birds first appeared in the fossil record dating back to the cretaceous period, so they co-existed with many other groups of dinosaurs at one point!

    • @CrankyAf
      @CrankyAf 2 месяца назад +1

      @@WolverineXOXO birds have scales on their legs and feet, and it’s not about size. Plenty of dinosaurs were quite small and not all were covered in scales.

  • @ct3po776
    @ct3po776 2 месяца назад +1

    No, it's what this particular bird sounds like!
    Quite a mimic!

  • @C3R0_N1L
    @C3R0_N1L 9 месяцев назад +170

    First quarter: scientifically accurate dinosaur
    Second quarter: troops marching
    Third quarter: war calls and galloping horses
    Last quarter: normal birb

    • @Vigorous_Potato
      @Vigorous_Potato 4 месяца назад +2

      What about the part where the car’s engine was being revved

    • @C3R0_N1L
      @C3R0_N1L 4 месяца назад +3

      @@Vigorous_Potato no that was the Kazakh language sorry comrade.

  • @bagpipes978
    @bagpipes978 11 месяцев назад +4

    Highly intelligent bird with incredible vocal skills!! Amazing!!!

  • @EyeSeeThruYou
    @EyeSeeThruYou Год назад +6

    Hahaha!! Slowing down the vocalization reminded me of the Jurassic Park scene where the scientist and two kids are up in a tree and wake up to Dino herbivores grazing and trumpeting 😂 🦕

  • @odietamo9376
    @odietamo9376 Месяц назад +1

    That bird is just…well, I don’t know how to put it, other than to say it is absolutely astonishing. The motorcycle especially cracked me up.

  • @ГалинаСкачкова-т6ы

    Никогда не думала, что скворцы такие мастера и умельцы в голосах,пели, но что бы так?!

  • @peanut_butter_cookies
    @peanut_butter_cookies Год назад +85

    This bird alone can recreate the sounds of the city streets and the great outdoors.

    • @DarkJak
      @DarkJak Год назад

      I love the great indoors!

  • @addi7719
    @addi7719 Год назад +172

    It's probably a little too complex; as far as we know, birds are the only dinosaurs with a syrinx, which is what lets them make so many crazy sounds. But it's still very fun to listen to and think about :)

    • @Archesuchus
      @Archesuchus Год назад +36

      We just found an Ankylosaur with one so it’s could be a basal feature

    • @addi7719
      @addi7719 Год назад +21

      @@Archesuchus I hadn't heard! That's extremely interesting

    • @andryuu_2000
      @andryuu_2000 Год назад +5

      ​​@@Archesuchussyrinx or larinx?

    • @clairen4584
      @clairen4584 Год назад +1

      Interesting! Thanks.

    • @shoosh222
      @shoosh222 Год назад +1

      @@andryuu_2000Syrinx.

  • @evanwest271
    @evanwest271 3 месяца назад +1

    Imagine teaching birds how to mimic dinosaur noises and bringing your friends over to trip balls

  • @earthtoemily4855
    @earthtoemily4855 Год назад +194

    I have one too, found him as a baby and he's been the best pet ever, lol. He whistles, talks in both my voice and my husband's voice, calls our dog and bosses him around, makes the squeaky door noise, etc. He's been so much fun :D

    • @isaiahhallett9871
      @isaiahhallett9871 11 месяцев назад +7

      How much trouble is he? How do you care for him, how much attention does he need, etc? I’m interested

    • @earthtoemily4855
      @earthtoemily4855 10 месяцев назад

      @@isaiahhallett9871 He's actually very good, extremely well behaved. We have a big cage for him that he stays in when we're not home or busy doing things around the house. But we try to let him out for a little while most days of the week for about a half hour to an hour. He spends 95% of his out of cage/free flight time on my shoulder, arm or hand, and will literally follow me around the kitchen and mudroom. He's very friendly, social, and enjoys being around people. His first year he was a little more curious, and occasionally explored a little more, but now he prefers to stay in the 2 rooms closest to his cage. Unlike our dogs, he doesn't wander around our house or go places we preferred him not to, he seems to stay in his "zone". We didn't train him to do that, he just did it naturally. We feed him a mix of Blue Buffalo high protein cat food and a special dog food made from insects (for dogs with food sensitivities). I also give him dried soldier fly larva, meal worms, and fresh fruit and vegetables each day. Treats I give him dried river shrimp, tuna, eggs. I've never had another pet bird before for comparison, but I imagine he's a lot like a regular pet bird, perhaps even easier in a lot of ways. These birds can't really hurt or bite you, they sometimes poke and peck at you, but not in a mean way, that's just how they explore, but that seems to be a first year thing mainly. They don't really like getting "pet", but they love to be close and hang out on your shoulder, hand, lap, etc. Hope that helps!

  • @crying2emoji5
    @crying2emoji5 11 месяцев назад +1450

    It is indeed what dinosaurs currently sound like. I sometimes walk to work and I will see a bunch of geese fly overhead as they call. I listen to the sounds they make, and the river flowing by the road, and the breeze rattling the cottonwood leaves. I’ll close my eyes, and get this strange feeling that is hard to describe. It feels sort of like I am an alien and I am walking on a living planet I’ve never seen, or maybe like I’m a time traveler crossing the ancient lands of the earth before mammals ruled it. I also may or may not be under the influence of certain special brownies on these walks.

    • @gismosfinalform2031
      @gismosfinalform2031 11 месяцев назад +48

      I feel ya, what is reality even? Something random and arbitrary or is it definite? We all deserve to have these questions every now and again

    • @redwoodrebelgirl3010
      @redwoodrebelgirl3010 11 месяцев назад +45

      Nothing wrong with special brownies.
      We all need to think & FEEL deeply,
      engage our imagination, wonder, & creativity,
      & learn to think, see, & feel in new ways.
      Special brownies can be very helpful in assisting this process. 💗

    • @tammijo9409
      @tammijo9409 11 месяцев назад +27

      the best times❤are outside feeling nature

    • @k8lynmae
      @k8lynmae 11 месяцев назад

      Except dinosaurs never existed and were created for the globe earth agenda by a guy in the British museum

    • @k8lynmae
      @k8lynmae 11 месяцев назад +22

      You word things so beautifully that it takes us right there. ❤️❤️

  • @Lab-Rat
    @Lab-Rat 4 месяца назад +15

    Imagine bigger creatures such as dinosaurs with bigger torsos and vocal cords and lung air capacity making these kinds of sounds but with a deeper sustaining sound. Scary

  • @ishaantiwari8969
    @ishaantiwari8969 Месяц назад +1

    Yes, i used to hear raptors growing up. This is exactly what dinosaurs sound like

  • @9VARZ
    @9VARZ Год назад +314

    Adding a bass synth to create lower octave stuff would be amazing!

  • @athensmajnoo3661
    @athensmajnoo3661 3 месяца назад +3

    What an incredibly talented bird!!♥️♥️

  • @babyyaga2201
    @babyyaga2201 Год назад +826

    To be fair , the video was slowed down quite a bit so the audio sounds far more terrifying and deep , but it's still so sick that all these crazy alien sounds are coming from a beautiful creature on Earth

    • @handledtruth
      @handledtruth Год назад +43

      Also though, the ancestors of this bird probably did sound like a slowed down, deeper version of it. Given how much larger they were it might even be more accurate

    • @hrinn
      @hrinn Год назад +4

      hey, was just wondering how u can tell if a video is slowed down?

    • @ryandowling1045
      @ryandowling1045 Год назад +12

      @@hrinn you can just tell i mean cmon

    • @Deeznutz29828
      @Deeznutz29828 Год назад +22

      ​@@hrinnthe birds movements seem slow mo, and Im pretty sure it goes back to normal at 0:59

    • @grandpanda2791
      @grandpanda2791 Год назад +3

      @@hrinnlook how slow the bird’s eyelids moves when it blinks

  • @RostovII
    @RostovII Месяц назад +1

    Bird at the end: "And now we're back with our regularly scheduled program"

  • @kitt7477
    @kitt7477 3 месяца назад +3

    That was the most beautiful music to my ears. MaShAllah!

  • @orangemanok5800
    @orangemanok5800 Год назад +18

    I wonder how many generations these mimics are able to pass on learned sounds to their offspring. In theory, it could be indefinitely.

  • @opabinnier
    @opabinnier 11 месяцев назад +6

    WOW! This will give a lyrebird a run for his money! This is stunning inventiveness... my jaw is on the floor.

  • @BG.........
    @BG......... Месяц назад +1

    This would be infinitely scarier than the sounds Hollywood uses for dinosaurs.

  • @l.h.4829
    @l.h.4829 3 месяца назад +8

    This is beautiful! And I can picture the dinosaurs roaming around!

  • @DarkGlitter666
    @DarkGlitter666 10 месяцев назад +14

    0:02 it's seems like Dave game. Jumping sound...