First they came for the velociraptors, and I did not chomp them - because I was not a velociraptor.
Then they came for the stegosauruses, and I did not chomp them - because I was not a stegosaurus.
Then they came for the triceratops, and I did not chomp them - because I was not a triceratops.
Then they came for me, and there was no one left to chomp them for me.
-Theodore Rex
26 0 ReplyGo back to your little hut that I had to build for you. Your age is long gone, chicken!
16 0 ReplyIs it though?
13 0 Reply
I wonder if you could see the meteor in the sky approaching in the days and hours leading up it.
16 0 Reply24 0 ReplyArguably the bleakest TV show of all-time, based solely on the ending.
18 0 Reply
Fun fact: I heard that the meteor was not actually what killed them off, but rather even before that, changes in the atmosphere had already begun to make ginormous lizards a less viable solution.
Mammals were just so adaptable, that we adapted to the post-meteor changes, even as we had already been adapting to the before-meteor ones.
6 0 ReplyI am guessing that most, if not all, mass extinctions were a multi-cause issue.
1 0 Reply
According to this you could: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dFCbJmgeHmA
Runs through the whole process and is an interesting watch.
4 0 ReplyFuck yeah thanks. Don't know how I missed this lol.
3 0 ReplyHere is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://www.piped.video/watch?v=dFCbJmgeHmA
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I'm open-source; check me out at GitHub.
2 0 Reply
Even if mammals will grow bigger, they will never threaten dinosaurs to go extinct
10 0 ReplyWhat do you mean extinct?
17 0 ReplyAh yes the dinosaurs, the alpha predators of today.
1 5 Reply
My 'sona is literally a dragon/troodontid hybrid.
8 0 ReplyDino D-Day Propaganda
7 0 ReplyThe D in D-Day stands for day
1 0 Reply
Those are my ancestors there 🥹
7 0 ReplyAgreed
6 0 ReplyIs this from that book of West of Eden? I haven't read it yet 🥲
2 0 ReplyThis is truly amazing!
2 0 Reply