To see my latest life-sized Dilophosaurus sculpture, now on display at the Las Vegas Natural History Museum, check out this video: ruclips.net/video/ocZeP4bp4-A/видео.html
@@malodos2295 All of the music in this video (and all the others on this channel) was made by @HistorianHimself. The track at the beginning of this video is called "Metatarsals" and was originally made for the St. George Dinosaur Discovery Site museum video. There are plans to release an album with a bunch of the soundtrack selections sometime in the future.
Anyone else find it interesting that as a paleontologist I can walk 30 feet to a Different site and end up digging in a completely different time period
MY GUY YOU ARE COMING SO FAR IN THE ARTS AND SCIENCES IM ACTUALLY SO PROUD OF YOU , YOU LITERALLY WENT FROM PAINTING PICTURES FOR MUSEUMS TO NOT ONLY JUST PAINTING PICTURES BUT DOING LIFE SIZED SCULPTURES AND HELPING OUT PALAEONTOLOGISTS IN MAKING REPLICAS AND STUDYING FOSSILS, ROCK ON
Being around a cassowary is the closest thing to meeting a dinosaur in this day and age. If you can go to a zoo with any, at some time in the future, do it. I’m Aussie, so our zoos often have them. They are intimidating and fascinating to look at, and the noises they make, the movements they exhibit, are incredibly fascinating.
Giant smart meat eating casos. No thanks man. That shits bonkers. Though i like the image of the giant therapods cocking the heads back and forth doing double contra bass chicken clucks.
@@GojiWars I don't think they hate the first movie, despite inaccuracies...the sequels, maybe. Jurassic World actually admitted that their dinosaurs are not 'real' but genetically modified to meet expectations.
Well,until we find more fossil evidence of a another new Skull of Dilophosaurus, this is the most accurate description of the Double Crest Lizard,of so far (and I love it.)
Bro I got shivers down my spine from the first 30 seconds, I feel like a kid again sitting on my living room couch watching a dino documentary with my dad! Thank you so much for uploading this!
One thing for sure, your reconstructions really bring these animals back to life and the narration of your videos is great. It's unbelievable that Dilophosaurus wasn't properly described until now, but I think that its weird features make much more sense with what we know about dinosaurs today
A very good short documentary! I especially liked how bits of text explaining paeleontological terms was added to the bits where the skeletons were discussed. I'm kind of used to scientific language, so understood the terms to some degree, but I know not everyone does, so the text bits were a brilliant addition. I also liked that the birds were described as 'living dinosaurs', too!
"wait, why am i scaring away my prey?" is actually SUCH a good point like it doesn't make much sense for a carnivore to have a defense mechanism when it would be more on the offense
@Bad Harmonics I dont think it was a South Park reference but an episode where Randy finds an important fossil at Tegridy Weed but refuses to give it to a museum would be so funny
The production quality of this is amazing. In an age when you could have just pointed a camera on yourself and talked for half an hour, you instead show the viewers everything you’re talking about with footage you captured yourself and beautiful illustrations and animations. Subscribed.
I wonder if there may have been different species of Dilophosaurus that could have evolved and specialized in different habitats? Such as a forest species vs a sandy desert species vs maybe a coastal species living in adjacent habitats at the same time?
And all probably had different crest formations. The frills of ceratopsians have proven to be incredibly varied even within what is considered the same species.
Incredible! There are so many small - medium sized channels out there that make jaw dropping work. From palaeontology, archeology, history, geology, and astronomy. Just amazing..
What an excellent video on this revolutionary new reconstruction on this animal. Thanks for sharing it. I can't believe all of the amazing paleontological finds, studies, and reconstructions to come out of this year despite everything (such as the Edmontosaurus 'hooves', Spinosaurus' tail, Dilophosaurus, the new Sue model display, etc). I'm going to have to check out those links you shared next too.
Dilo's are my favorite. I would like to imagine they used crests for them cool birdlike noises too. The ones you hear in modern media and games. Very predatory birdlike, and probably could be heard for a mile.
This video is so paleoamazing, Brian! Bravo! Bravo! This is a stunning and beautiful paleoartistical and paleontological video! I'm happy and glad to learn more about the Dilophosaurus, the Kayenta Formation and the geological sites with fossils and footprints! Also, the introduction with the Triassic archosaurs of the Chinle Formation was unexpected to me! What a great intro before going to the Early Jurassic! Congratulations, Brian! Love this paleovideo very much! I'm looking forward for your next paleovideos and new Mesozoic discoveries! :D
I'm sitting here all starry-eyed going WOOOW THAT IS THE MOST AWESOME THING EVER. The science, the narration, the art, the cinematics, the sculptures - this one has it all!!! Man I never stopped being excited by dinosaurs but this video takes my excitement to the next level. I only wish we had museums like that where I live!
Without a doubt, this is one of the finest dinosaur/paleontology-focused videos on RUclips. I'm so pleased to see it's broken one million views! May this video and channel continue getting the attention it deserves.
It's super enlightening when you look at a modern Birds' feet configuration, compared to a Theropod dinosaurs'. Just looking at the feet alone you can see the comparable decisiveness between the two dino's anatomical similarities. It's so mind blowing! I wonder if you can judge a Theropods' personality/character behavior based off the observation of the various bird populations. Especially when accompanied with the relativity of the various brain sizes between the two dinos as well. Gotta love paleontology! Keep up the great work 👍🏽
BRIAN ENGH PALEOART have any Ideas like recent discovery’s from any creature. I have done a Spinosaurus video with all its inhabitants on my channel recently, jeck that out
@@thelittleal1212 The Spinosaurus? the very one dinosaur known to evolve itself every year a new bone is discovered? I fucking love that. I will take a look on that video
6:46 I remember reading these "early speculations on Dilophosaurus' biology" when I was a dinosaur kid and thinking "this doesn't sound like the kind of predator that evolution by natural selection seems to typically create. Even the wording they chose made it sound like the palaeontologists themselves had some active, personal dislike for this particular species. Hell, they may as well have called it "weird-looking-pussy-couldn't-kill-anything-to-save-its-life-osaurus" lol. I mean I get it. It was probably a bitch to try to research this thing you have nothing but a few incomplete and sometimes fucked up skulls of but maybe don't take out your frustration on the dinosaur you are researching.
This was such a great video! Way better than any Walking with Dinosaurs documentary, you've really brought the creature back from the dead in this. can't wait for the next one!
The idea of Dilophosaurus's crest resemblinf a hornbills or cassawaries' is a cool idea. Like the 'two crests' are just the outer walls of a hollow structure that was vibrantly coloured.
Damn birds are amazingly evolved, never knew half of the things here either on Dilophosaurus, my first encounter was with When Dinosaurs Roamed America and their Dilo was definitely showing this strong apex predator of its time image, though the family it came from was by then still thought to be with Ceratosaurus.
How did I not find your channel until now? This is really scratching an itch I've been having for a really good, high quality science based dinosaur documentary. Thank you so, so much.
I found your channel today with this video - after watching a few more I came back to comment, which I almost never do on RUclips. Your content is awesome, please keep it up. You've got a real talent - videos of this length (and longer) will be welcomed!
Don't think I've ever expressed my appreciation towards this channel and your work. Excellent work! And this inspires me to illustrate Dilophosaurus with this new, better understood appearance.
Keep in mind, I love this content and your narrative. Wish we had more like it. It's very hard (scarce) to find Triassic information and detailed documentaries. We need more of the "old periods" like this one and the Permian, and before.
If I had any narrative constructive criticism, it would be to suggest replacing 'experimentation' with 'mutation', because experiments helps feed the creationists who aren't too keen on evolution. Excellent narration!
I added way too much new art and animation to Jurassic Reimagined p2 and now I have to finish a Dilophosaurus!! 😅 Thank you for the patience and support!
@@BrianEnghArt No problem! I can only imagine how much work has to be put into something of the scale you're making here. We aren't going to die if we have to wait some x-amount of time more.
So, I’m planning to make a game about dinosaurs (currently, I have six pages filled front to back in my sketchbook with concept art) and this really helped, so thank you for that. My dilophosaurus’s crests on my concept art are a bit too small, but eh, I rather like my designs. Also surprised to learn cryolophosaurus and dilophosaurus are related, but I guess it does make a lot of sense.
-flashbacks to when I tamed my first dilo and gave him an impressive name , being proud of myself, only to have him get murdered by another of his own kind like not even five minutes later-
Excellent. It's nice to see an effective systems approach to understanding the fauna of this period, and how modern dinosaur behaviour and morphology give insights into these marvellous extinct animals.
So much painstaking hard and tedious work. Thank you to all paleontologists past ,present and future. You all stand on the shoulders of giants in your field. Just another example of SCIENCE in action.
Yes we are really lucky to live right now: Generations of exploration, discovery, pains-taking fossil preparation and study are helping us understand the history of our planet and its fantastic lifeforms better than ever before. and also there are no Dilophosaurus still alive to eat us. 😬
Cool to see that you updated your rather short-necked dilophosaur in the Kayenta formation timeline drawing :D Your art just really improves looking back at your old stuff
Damn man you made a better quality doc with the dinosaurs you made than a national geographic budget with cgi dinosaurs. Those shots of the dinosaur you made in the woods were trippin af
I have a theory that the largest dilophosaurus was a full grown adult. If we take in to account the seemingly violent lifestyle, the small specimens might have been killed in a failed hunting attempt or other dilophosaus chose to eat a weaker young dilophosaur. We see this a lot in Africa where lions and hyenas pick off a young or injured herd members for an easy meal. Any thoughts?
Not much to say, but just a shout out to how excellent, informative and engaging this video is. It's one of those videos that make paleontology even more exciting than it already is.
Absolutely fantastic video. I would LOVE to see you cover any other species with such accessibility and detail, as well as engaging editing and illustrations.
To see my latest life-sized Dilophosaurus sculpture, now on display at the Las Vegas Natural History Museum, check out this video:
ruclips.net/video/ocZeP4bp4-A/видео.html
I was there this weekend and saw it in the dinosaur area with those weird gerbal things in the desert
Can you please tell me the name of the soundtrack used in the first 2 minutes of the video? Great work btw.
@@malodos2295 All of the music in this video (and all the others on this channel) was made by @HistorianHimself. The track at the beginning of this video is called "Metatarsals" and was originally made for the St. George Dinosaur Discovery Site museum video. There are plans to release an album with a bunch of the soundtrack selections sometime in the future.
I went to Vegas and saw it up close! It's amazing!
I love the way you draw your dinosaurs
I would love to see a full on documentary produced and directed by you. Your videos feel like a modernized version of paleoworld.
Yes! Someone get him on set lmao his models are amazing!
Yes, it's been awhile since there's been a good dino documentary, he should get on one.
I was hoping others would recognise the similarities with Paleoworld!
We could crowdfound him
well aren't we watching just that
Anyone else find it interesting that as a paleontologist I can walk 30 feet to a Different site and end up digging in a completely different time period
Yes very intersting
I'm resisting the urge to make a dwarf joke
@@churchboy4609 don't resist, embrace dwarfism
DWERF MOMENT
@@christiankoch3364 you heard of a guy named Mulch Diggums?
You’re a great narrator.
Good to see you here Bob
hi bob!
Love your videos dude
Hey Bob!
Thanks! It makes me nervous/uncomfortable as hell.
MY GUY YOU ARE COMING SO FAR IN THE ARTS AND SCIENCES IM ACTUALLY SO PROUD OF YOU , YOU LITERALLY WENT FROM PAINTING PICTURES FOR MUSEUMS TO NOT ONLY JUST PAINTING PICTURES BUT DOING LIFE SIZED SCULPTURES AND HELPING OUT PALAEONTOLOGISTS IN MAKING REPLICAS AND STUDYING FOSSILS, ROCK ON
👹CANT STOP WONT STOP LETS GOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!
appreciate you😂
Heheheh.... “Rock on”
I mean, not to mention Grade A youtube documentaries!
@@BrianEnghArt Do we know what sounds Dilophosaurus made?
@@ANT96-x8d similar to the sounds I make after eating too much
Indian food
Maybe the most criminally underappreciated channel on all of RUclips
I know right. I was watching this yesterday and was like why doesn't this have a million views. @youtube make this trending! #science
Being around a cassowary is the closest thing to meeting a dinosaur in this day and age. If you can go to a zoo with any, at some time in the future, do it. I’m Aussie, so our zoos often have them. They are intimidating and fascinating to look at, and the noises they make, the movements they exhibit, are incredibly fascinating.
Yeah there pretty much as tall as i am, and im 6ft tall
i think i got to touch one before
And they can and have killed dogs and even pushed a man off a cliff
im terrified of them, no thanks ❤
Giant smart meat eating casos. No thanks man. That shits bonkers.
Though i like the image of the giant therapods cocking the heads back and forth doing double contra bass chicken clucks.
Those things are really dangerous
This just shows how bizarre and awesome evolution can be can’t wait to draw this bad boy
Same
Same
@@littlestdude I look forward to seeing them! Still lots of new possibilities to explore!! #Dilophogaggle
On the one hand, the impending nuclear apocalypse will be awful.
On he other hand, I can't wait for evolution to happen again
@@BrianEnghArt Yeah right. That won't happen in your life time.
“Eh, no wonder you’re extinct!”
-Dennis Nedry
Just minutes before he went extinct! 😂😁😎
*then gets eaten a minute later*
Paleontologists hate that movie. And Spinosaurus
@@GojiWars I don't think they hate the first movie, despite inaccuracies...the sequels, maybe.
Jurassic World actually admitted that their dinosaurs are not 'real' but genetically modified to meet expectations.
Literally watching this movie as I write this ahah
Why didn't RUclips recommend this to me a long time back? I was hoping that a RUclips channel like this would exist
Same same, just 3 months later.
My jaw actually dropped at 10:27, such a great visual
Agreed
Well,until we find more fossil evidence of a another new Skull of Dilophosaurus, this is the most accurate description of the Double Crest Lizard,of so far (and I love it.)
Eyyyy
Sadly we might never find another. Not every dino becomes a fossil. It's a very low chance but would be amazing if were to happen.
Ur everywhere
@@frostbitetheannunakiiceind6574 who
@@harrymarkey9070 it is very low chance but every species had millions of specimens in total that were ever born
Bro I got shivers down my spine from the first 30 seconds, I feel like a kid again sitting on my living room couch watching a dino documentary with my dad! Thank you so much for uploading this!
Shut up
One thing for sure, your reconstructions really bring these animals back to life and the narration of your videos is great. It's unbelievable that Dilophosaurus wasn't properly described until now, but I think that its weird features make much more sense with what we know about dinosaurs today
2:37 the dude at left be like: WANNA A FIGHT BRO IM AS TOUGH AS YOUR BONES SCRUB
😂
I'm gonna save this to my Educational Playlist.
same
Isn’t the whole channel an educational playlist?
@@thehalobro9622 Ahhh... Yes.
Same *Adds to prehistoric facts playlist*
A very good short documentary! I especially liked how bits of text explaining paeleontological terms was added to the bits where the skeletons were discussed. I'm kind of used to scientific language, so understood the terms to some degree, but I know not everyone does, so the text bits were a brilliant addition. I also liked that the birds were described as 'living dinosaurs', too!
1:39 for lil nibble
lol
Omg..-
feesh is nibble
Furry
lil nibble
"wait, why am i scaring away my prey?" is actually SUCH a good point like it doesn't make much sense for a carnivore to have a defense mechanism when it would be more on the offense
Your paleoart really make me feel like I've gone back in time and seeing prehistoric life as real as it can get. Definitely don't mess with dinosaurs.
My favorites are changing drastically before my eyes, first my boy spino, then dilo, and now I'm waiting for compy
i love 2020 spinosaurus, it is so original and so cool
is your profile picture dilophoboa?
Paleontologist named Marsh
Me: Interest rising
Mr.J Glokta bone wars intensifies
REEEEEEEE
Lol that’s what you got out of this video? 😂
The violence has escalated.
✅ OK.
@Bad Harmonics I dont think it was a South Park reference but an episode where Randy finds an important fossil at Tegridy Weed but refuses to give it to a museum would be so funny
The production quality of this is amazing. In an age when you could have just pointed a camera on yourself and talked for half an hour, you instead show the viewers everything you’re talking about with footage you captured yourself and beautiful illustrations and animations. Subscribed.
I wonder if there may have been different species of Dilophosaurus that could have evolved and specialized in different habitats? Such as a forest species vs a sandy desert species vs maybe a coastal species living in adjacent habitats at the same time?
This is very likely.
Absolutely. Look no further than the clouded leopard. If there was geographical isolation, they would have been markedly different from each other.
1×
I don't see why not
And all probably had different crest formations. The frills of ceratopsians have proven to be incredibly varied even within what is considered the same species.
Such a fantastic documentary, I feel like it could be pilot for a Paleoworld reboot! You gotta pitch this around.
Incredible! There are so many small - medium sized channels out there that make jaw dropping work. From palaeontology, archeology, history, geology, and astronomy. Just amazing..
What an excellent video on this revolutionary new reconstruction on this animal. Thanks for sharing it. I can't believe all of the amazing paleontological finds, studies, and reconstructions to come out of this year despite everything (such as the Edmontosaurus 'hooves', Spinosaurus' tail, Dilophosaurus, the new Sue model display, etc). I'm going to have to check out those links you shared next too.
Dilo's are my favorite. I would like to imagine they used crests for them cool birdlike noises too. The ones you hear in modern media and games. Very predatory birdlike, and probably could be heard for a mile.
This video is so paleoamazing, Brian! Bravo! Bravo! This is a stunning and beautiful paleoartistical and paleontological video! I'm happy and glad to learn more about the Dilophosaurus, the Kayenta Formation and the geological sites with fossils and footprints! Also, the introduction with the Triassic archosaurs of the Chinle Formation was unexpected to me! What a great intro before going to the Early Jurassic! Congratulations, Brian! Love this paleovideo very much! I'm looking forward for your next paleovideos and new Mesozoic discoveries! :D
Triassic deserves so much more love. Silesauridae is amazing.
I'm sitting here all starry-eyed going WOOOW THAT IS THE MOST AWESOME THING EVER. The science, the narration, the art, the cinematics, the sculptures - this one has it all!!! Man I never stopped being excited by dinosaurs but this video takes my excitement to the next level. I only wish we had museums like that where I live!
Without a doubt, this is one of the finest dinosaur/paleontology-focused videos on RUclips. I'm so pleased to see it's broken one million views! May this video and channel continue getting the attention it deserves.
It's super enlightening when you look at a modern Birds' feet configuration, compared to a Theropod dinosaurs'. Just looking at the feet alone you can see the comparable decisiveness between the two dino's anatomical similarities. It's so mind blowing! I wonder if you can judge a Theropods' personality/character behavior based off the observation of the various bird populations. Especially when accompanied with the relativity of the various brain sizes between the two dinos as well. Gotta love paleontology! Keep up the great work 👍🏽
I want a whole documentary series with the music from this video because it's both haunting and sparks the imagination.
Awesome video Brian! Can’t wait to see the finished reconstruction at the museum!
Thanks Ben! Hopefully when the exhibit opens I can invite guests. If so I will def invite the whole UFOP family!
The future of dilophosaurus sounds exiting.
So many creatures yet to be discovered...
BRIAN ENGH PALEOART have any Ideas like recent discovery’s from any creature. I have done a Spinosaurus video with all its inhabitants on my channel recently, jeck that out
@@thelittleal1212 I subbed to you little al not because your name is such a big reference but also because I love claymation
Tommy Criton wary nice of you
@@thelittleal1212 The Spinosaurus? the very one dinosaur known to evolve itself every year a new bone is discovered? I fucking love that. I will take a look on that video
6:46 I remember reading these "early speculations on Dilophosaurus' biology" when I was a dinosaur kid and thinking "this doesn't sound like the kind of predator that evolution by natural selection seems to typically create. Even the wording they chose made it sound like the palaeontologists themselves had some active, personal dislike for this particular species. Hell, they may as well have called it "weird-looking-pussy-couldn't-kill-anything-to-save-its-life-osaurus" lol.
I mean I get it. It was probably a bitch to try to research this thing you have nothing but a few incomplete and sometimes fucked up skulls of but maybe don't take out your frustration on the dinosaur you are researching.
Science is heavily gate-kept. It’s a shame because gate keeping leads to ignorance and dismissal of new ideas.
The algorithm has blessed me today. I hadn't planned on watching a documentary just now, but I'm glad I did.
10:28
So dilophosaurus was similar to anjanath from monster hunter world cool!
Its the other way around
@@spinosaurusstriker similarity is a two way comparison, therefore it's fine to word it the way he does.
@@spinosaurusstriker
actually his way would be correct cause well Anjanath was lookign like this before we know Dilopho looks like this haha
@@Kurominos1 I didn't knew anja was that old 😳
So... What about the fire breath?
This was such a great video! Way better than any Walking with Dinosaurs documentary, you've really brought the creature back from the dead in this. can't wait for the next one!
When dinosaurs roamed America, 2020 ver
Yes! lol
Lol
Wow not expecting that much likes
I love the sort of video style with the painted assets being stationary yet sort of in motion at the same time. Great video.
Yo turns out paleontology is even cooler than I thought it was when I was a kid
The idea of Dilophosaurus's crest resemblinf a hornbills or cassawaries' is a cool idea. Like the 'two crests' are just the outer walls of a hollow structure that was vibrantly coloured.
who else waiting for it to premiere
Me :)
Me
Aye!
This is exceptionally well produced and engaging. We need more documentaries like this available at top streaming platforms.
Damn birds are amazingly evolved, never knew half of the things here either on Dilophosaurus, my first encounter was with When Dinosaurs Roamed America and their Dilo was definitely showing this strong apex predator of its time image, though the family it came from was by then still thought to be with Ceratosaurus.
How did I not find your channel until now? This is really scratching an itch I've been having for a really good, high quality science based dinosaur documentary. Thank you so, so much.
I found your channel today with this video - after watching a few more I came back to comment, which I almost never do on RUclips. Your content is awesome, please keep it up. You've got a real talent - videos of this length (and longer) will be welcomed!
Dilophosaurus is one of my favorite dinosaurs. Thank you so much for the opportunity to learn more about it
Don't think I've ever expressed my appreciation towards this channel and your work. Excellent work! And this inspires me to illustrate Dilophosaurus with this new, better understood appearance.
Crazy to hear such a massive shoutout to a dinosaur museum I drive by every day to work. Been years since I’ve been inside, time to change that.
This is my favorite dinosaur and im so happy to learn how much more badass it really is
The text explaining the jargon is very helpful, thank you! Great content
Fan of Dilophosaurus, and puppetry. This was everything. Thank you!!
Hell yeah! Love being up to date with paleontology. :]
Aaayyy
Fantastic video! I'm glad someone finally explains this theory in more detail!
Dilophosaurus is one of my favorite dinosaurs and I am happy you are covering it
Keep in mind, I love this content and your narrative. Wish we had more like it. It's very hard (scarce) to find Triassic information and detailed documentaries. We need more of the "old periods" like this one and the Permian, and before.
Strongly agree.
I really appreciate the use of araucacacae conifer branches in the sections with the hand puppet. Very appropriate!
Thank you for making this great video. Dilophosarus is my favorite dinosaur and it’s nice to speculate what it might’ve actually looked like.
Blown away how well put together and narrated this is. Well done!
You really should direct documentaries ! Your work is amazing ! The perfect mix between art and science ! Thanks dude 😉
Blows my mind that there are still tracks of these magnificent creatures. I wish I could travel back in time to see it in all its glory.
If I had any narrative constructive criticism, it would be to suggest replacing 'experimentation' with 'mutation', because experiments helps feed the creationists who aren't too keen on evolution. Excellent narration!
Hey this is GREAT, much better than most dino documentaries nowadays, keep up this wonderful work, good sir
Dilophosaurus was always one of my favorites
I want you guys to know how much myself and others love this all the way from Scotland and the world over. This is just awesome.
I should make a mini video about this, thanks for the many information about this really strange dinosaur.
Thanks, Brian! Amazing video production! And the information in your description make this so much usable :'o
Have you ever done any paleo art on prehistoric mammals, this stuff is amazing and it's awesome to see you get to work with all of this!
I appreciate the detail in the on screen text describing the birds as living dinosaurs. So many people have a hard time grasping that
very nice video! enjoyed every second of it especially the live action dilophosaur puppet, beautiful work
This just popped up in my recommended, didn't know you had a RUclips channel! I've been waiting for the Dilophosaurus display. Great video.
I was expecting Part 2 of Jurassic Reimagined, but instead I got something equally awesome. This channel just keeps getting better and better!
I added way too much new art and animation to Jurassic Reimagined p2 and now I have to finish a Dilophosaurus!! 😅
Thank you for the patience and support!
@@BrianEnghArt No problem! I can only imagine how much work has to be put into something of the scale you're making here. We aren't going to die if we have to wait some x-amount of time more.
i find the Triassic endlessly fascinating, its so great to find good content on that period.
So, I’m planning to make a game about dinosaurs (currently, I have six pages filled front to back in my sketchbook with concept art) and this really helped, so thank you for that. My dilophosaurus’s crests on my concept art are a bit too small, but eh, I rather like my designs.
Also surprised to learn cryolophosaurus and dilophosaurus are related, but I guess it does make a lot of sense.
I feel so fortunate to be able to view this amazing work. Thank you.
Ah yes the first tame of the game..
i came here looking for ark related comments and I'm pretty disappointed by the lack of it :V
-flashbacks to when I tamed my first dilo and gave him an impressive name , being proud of myself, only to have him get murdered by another of his own kind like not even five minutes later-
@@wannabewyvern F
@@wannabewyvern f
@@wannabewyvern late reply, but I always named mine after Greek Philosophers, dunno why, but I miss Aristotle
Fantastic! One of the best, if not THE best dinosaur videos I have ever seen. Thank you and keep up the good work.
Damn the art quality is good
Excellent. It's nice to see an effective systems approach to understanding the fauna of this period, and how modern dinosaur behaviour and morphology give insights into these marvellous extinct animals.
So much painstaking hard and tedious work. Thank you to all paleontologists past ,present and future. You all stand on the shoulders of giants in your field.
Just another example of SCIENCE in action.
Yes we are really lucky to live right now:
Generations of exploration, discovery, pains-taking fossil preparation and study are helping us understand the history of our planet and its fantastic lifeforms better than ever before.
and also there are no Dilophosaurus still alive to eat us. 😬
Cool to see that you updated your rather short-necked dilophosaur in the Kayenta formation timeline drawing :D Your art just really improves looking back at your old stuff
Damn man you made a better quality doc with the dinosaurs you made than a national geographic budget with cgi dinosaurs. Those shots of the dinosaur you made in the woods were trippin af
I love the music in this video, it really has a prehistoric vibe to it!
I love this video so much. As an artist I rely so much on these type of documentary videos, thank you so much for this
The work you guys do is extremely important. Just want to let you know that we appreciate it.
What exquisite paleo content . you sir have earned yourself a subscription from this humble nerd
this dungeon synth soundtrack is rocking, and this video is incredible
Awesome stuff, as always!
Thanks for the support yo!!
Thanks, wonderfully put together video. Shout out to all those museum workers and volunteers!
This is a really good fucking video. I was engaged and attentive the entire thing, I even stopped working to watch. Excellent quality
this is just how a good documentary has to be. No showing off, just pure science. Congratulations guys.
I have a theory that the largest dilophosaurus was a full grown adult. If we take in to account the seemingly violent lifestyle, the small specimens might have been killed in a failed hunting attempt or other dilophosaus chose to eat a weaker young dilophosaur. We see this a lot in Africa where lions and hyenas pick off a young or injured herd members for an easy meal. Any thoughts?
That thumbnail is most happiest dilo I every seen
I like this video, do more exactly like this! Freaking awesome work your doing!
Not much to say, but just a shout out to how excellent, informative and engaging this video is. It's one of those videos that make paleontology even more exciting than it already is.
It looks like an Anjanath, or maybe it would be more accurate to say Anjanath looks like a Dilophosaurus.
Absolutely fantastic video. I would LOVE to see you cover any other species with such accessibility and detail, as well as engaging editing and illustrations.