I don't care how scientifically accurate it is, the idea of a T-Rex with downy feathers always strikes me as silly.
Call me crazy...
I don't care how scientifically accurate it is, the idea of a T-Rex with downy feathers always strikes me as silly.
Call me crazy...
Now just imagine him chirping. "Chirp! Chirp! CHOMP!"
Good thing that I watched Jurassic Park when it was still cool and not inaccurate. These scientists ruin everything.
Good thing that I watched Jurassic Park when it was still cool and not inaccurate. These scientists ruin everything.
Even the asteroid impact that wiped most of them out wasn't even a theory until 1980, when I was in Kindergarten.It often amazes me how much our knowledge of dinosaurs has changed since I was a kid. When I was born, the idea that dinosaurs were warm-blooded, often feathered, and evolved into birds wasn't generally accepted. These days, it's practically a mundane fact.
More knowledge is a good thing, regardless of whether or not it changes someone's childhood perceptions.
We figured out giant bones were of lizard-like creatures and not giant humans around the same time we invented the telegraph, made the first trains and were working on the first general purpose computer.
And dinosaurs were huge. Imagine if the human civilization dies, and another one emerges in a million years, they'll probably be oblivious of our existence by the time they start their space program, and would figure out we had a civilization of our own right about... now.
At least Jurassic Park was the first dinosaur movie to depict T. rex as a fast, agile predator that carried the weight of its body balanced on its pelvic girdle like a seesaw, unlike previous depictions that showed the creature walking more or less upright and dragging its tail.Good thing that I watched Jurassic Park when it was still cool and not inaccurate. These scientists ruin everything.
More knowledge is a good thing, regardless of whether or not it changes someone's childhood perceptions.
I still lament the non-existence of the Brontosaurus.
At least Jurassic Park was the first dinosaur movie to depict T. rex as a fast, agile predator that carried the weight of its body balanced on its pelvic girdle like a seesaw, unlike previous depictions that showed the creature walking more or less upright and dragging its tail.Good thing that I watched Jurassic Park when it was still cool and not inaccurate. These scientists ruin everything.
We figured out giant bones were of lizard-like creatures and not giant humans around the same time we invented the telegraph, made the first trains and were working on the first general purpose computer.
And dinosaurs were huge. Imagine if the human civilization dies, and another one emerges in a million years, they'll probably be oblivious of our existence by the time they start their space program, and would figure out we had a civilization of our own right about... now.
I remember watching the VOY episode, Distant Origins, which had in it a background story that said that a dinosaurs species achieved sentience and became intelligent enough to travel in space.
I know it is just fiction, but is there any chance that a species that lived millions of years before us could have achieved sentience. I am not only talking about dinosaurs but other ancient species as well. Animals have been around for 600 millions years at least.
Now just imagine him chirping. "Chirp! Chirp! CHOMP!"
More knowledge is a good thing, regardless of whether or not it changes someone's childhood perceptions.
More knowledge is a good thing, regardless of whether or not it changes someone's childhood perceptions.
I still lament the non-existence of the Brontosaurus.
So, I gather you're not one of those people who throws a tantrum because Pluto is no longer considered a planet, just because that's the way you learned it as a kid. "Planet 10, real soon."
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