Genus of theropod dinosaurs
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After months of technical mishaps, we finally managed to get the podcast back up and running! Marc, Gemma and Natee start off by having a little moan about terrible dinosaur movies before moving into a fun German book Gemma found at a school! We got some typical late 80s fare, with some very unusual depictions of dinosaurs... Then, Gemma and Marc interview Yasmin Grooters, head of the dinosaur lab at Naturalis Leiden, who recently finished work on a whole herd of Triceratops! Will Natee narrate the next Walking With Dinosaurs special? How is a Quetzalcoatlus like a pair of embroidery scissors? How do you put a museum exhibition together? How many cute nicknames can you give to a giant dinosaur? When are the Hadrosaur Gang going to drop their ballin' hip hop album? And what in the name of all that is holy is wrong with that Deinocheirus? We're back! Show Notes at Chasmosaurs!
Zofia led several expeditions to Mongolia where her team discovered hundreds of mammals and dinosaurs including Deinocheirus and the Fighting Dinosaurs (a velociraptor and Protoceratops who appear to have fossilized in the middle of a fight to the death).For links to every news story, all of the details we shared about Deinocheirus (revisited), and our fun fact check out https://iknowdino.com/Deinocheirus (revisited)-Episode-527/Join us at www.patreon.com/iknowdino for dinosaur requests, bonus content, ad-free episodes, and more.Dinosaur of the day Deinocheirus (revisited), a dinosaur that was once considered fearsome, but now more goofy. It's a unique herbivorous theropod with enormous arms and claws.Two great books written by Zofia:In Pursuit of Early MammalsHunting for dinosaurs See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Join Digger Rex as he unravels the mystery of Deinocheirus, the dinosaur with some of the longest arms ever discovered!
This week meet the dinosaur with the horrible hands, Deinocheirus. Find out how this dinosaur went from being a pair of giant arms to a humpbacked duck-billed, plant-eating theropod. In the news, we look at what is being done to prepare for the possible return of the thylacine. All this and more. The cupboard is open, come on in!
In this episode is the 15th episode in the tournament Fight Fridays and todays is Carcharodontosaurus Vs Deinocheirus IF YOU GO ON ONE OF THE TRIPS FOR FOSSIL TRIPS Tell them you hear about them from Prehistoric Life Podcast and they will give you $250 off your tickets. Remember to follow me at Prehistoric_Life_Podcast on instagram and check out the new website PrehistoricLifePodcast.com and on youtube @prehistoric life podcast
Discovered in the 1960's, all that was unearthed was the hands and arms of this amazing dinosaur. It remained a mystery until decades later, when a near complete skeleton was found. Join us and learn more about this large omnivore.
It's time for the fifth Prehistoric Cage Match. Today's episode is at Ampelo's Pumpkin Patch & Cycad Orchard. This Halloween themed cage match is sure to be filled with plenty of tricks & treats, but make sure to leave the pumpkin smashing to the dinosaurs!! Listen now to find out who will be named the pumpkin king!!*No pumpkins were harmed in the making of this podcast!!
All you need is a few spells & a little hocus pocus to bring this witch-like dinosaur back to life!! The Deinocheirus might not have used its "horrible hands" to ride a broom, but they were definitely a mystery to paleontologists for almost fifty years. All it took was a glass slipper... I mean a toe fossil to unlock all the clues about this theropod dinosaur. Learn all about this strange species as we fly across the moon."I put a spell on you, and now you're mine!"
The long awaited dinosaur documentary Prehistoric Planet is finally here! The Apple TV+ show unveils the spectacular habitats and inhabitants of ancient Earth in an immersive digital experience. Using modern science and CGI, it gives us a possible look at the earth millions of years ago.Trey and Miles break down the show, the science, and what they thought about the story telling.Miles also tells the story of the Lord Howe's Island Stick Insect, one of the most amazing discoveries of an extinct species.Trey talks about some Roman Cheese Cake. There is a ramble about Avatar as well. *Shrug*There is no Monster Quest this episode. Instead there is coverage of the following two Prehistoric Planet Episodes. "Ice Worlds": Dromaeosaurs stalk a hadrosaur herd as they cross a freezing river. Male Ornithomimus raid rivals' nests to bolster their own. A herd of Olorotitan raise their offspring on fertile volcanic fields but contend with biting mosquitoes. A troodontid flushes out mammals by spreading a forest fire. A juvenile Antarctopelta scours the forest for a new winter den. A Pachyrhinosaurus herd stands off against a pack of Nanuqsaurus."Fresh Water"Velociraptor hunt pterosaurs on a cliffside by a waterfall. An old, battle-scarred male Tyrannosaurus nurses his wounds and encounters a younger female. A Deinocheirus seeks relief from biting flies. A female Quetzalcoatlus builds and guards her nest. A mother Masiakasaurus and her family hunt crabs and encounter Beelzebufo. Elasmosaurs enter an estuary in search of fish.((NOTE: This Episode has a few audio level problems) Support the show
Erica and Gil are delighted to welcome designer Amabel Holland of Hollandspiele, known for making games with challenging themes using an unconventional publishing model. SHOW NOTES 0m58s: Supply Lines of the American Revolution, Table Battles, Irish Gauge, This Guilty Land, Nicea, The Vote. 7m08s: Amabel is talking about her forthcoming game Eyelet. 15m02s: This is Geoff's game Versailles 1919, co-designed with Mark Herman. 17m28s: Benedict Arnold 18m34s: The Shackleton Expedition 21m16s: The Vote 28m22s: Nicea 31m38s: Irish Gauge, Northern Pacific, Iberian Gauge 32m29s: Winsome, Rio Grande 34m23s: Chicago Express 34m55s: Meltwater, An Infamous Traffic 36m11s: RIBBIT: The Jump, Move, and Block Game, Table Battles 38m51s: New Mill 43m45s: Westphalia 48m18s: Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae 49m52s: Cheapass Games 53m46s: Tobacco misinformation campaign 54m37s: Gil was thinking of Brandolini's Law, aka the BS Asymmetry Principle. 57m55s: Horse & Musket 59m03s: Deinocheirus, Pterodactyl, Therizinosaurus
This week, we are joined once again by the Reverend Matthew Kessen of Reverend Matt’s Monster Science! He joins us to discuss Creationism and why it is wrong. Tim spends some time trying to play devil’s advocate but he does a pretty crappy job because he agrees with Matt. We try to take a look at some common Creationist “arguments” and also take a look at the demise of the intelligent design movement. Also, we learn about a Deinocheirus!
In this fight it is and all out brawl a death battle a battle to the end with Deinocheirus vs Concavenator one will fall listen in to see who the victor is
The NeoJurassic Podcast : The Wild Possibilities of a Jurassic World
Join host Bri for the second installment of a two part series exploring the NeoJurassic possibilities of a group of deinocheirus taking up residence in the everglades. Self described reptile researcher & biologist Jenna Cole joins the episode to share her experience trapping & researching invasive argentine black & white tegus as they continue their conquest of Florida & the truly delightful Alice (@JurassicAlice) drops by to share some Jurassic Fantasies.
The NeoJurassic Podcast : The Wild Possibilities of a Jurassic World
Join host Bri for the first installment of a two part series exploring the NeoJurassic possibilities of a group of deinocheirus taking up residence in the everglades. Ecologist Dr. Jonathan Shurin joins the episode to share his experience researching Pablo Escobar's feral hippopotamus as they continue their conquest of Colombia & Sam Endres of Jurassic Outpost shares some of her Jurassic Fantasies.
We’re talking all things Jurassic, as we fact check Jurassic Park! Was John Hammond in over his head? Could life uuuuuuuuh find a way? And are T-Rexes eyesight REALLY based on movement? We’re digging up dinos and the truth with Kay B! Footnotes: Baby T-Rex was a cutie pie! Yutyrannus was a monstrous chicken More art of yutyrannus Deinocheirus: world's most terrifying muppet? Deinocheirus, like Big Bird and snuffleupagus had a baby Why is this feathery monstrosity not in movies??? Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
This week, the World-Weary women deliberate over dinosaur stumpers. Violet asks important questions such as why have dinosaur remains been shot into space, do advanced reptilian lifeforms exist on distant planets and are alien reptoids haunting an Irish castle? Cassiopeia uncovers the fossil mysteries of Deinocheirus, the "terrible handed" dinosaur.
To most eyes, dinosaurs are unusual looking animals but on this week’s show we take a look at some that are weird and wonderful even by the standards of dinosaurs. We start with the huge theropods of Late Cretaceous Mongolia, the sickle-clawed Theirizinosaurs and boat-faced Deinocheirus with a mention of the tiny ant-eating alvarezsaurs. From here, we move to Europe and ancient archipelagos that produced some dwarf species of huge animals and giant weird versions of small ones. We round off with some unusual and interesting adaptations that show up in multiple different dinosaurs and show the power of convergent evolution across tens of millions of years. Finally, we are joined by comedian Alice Fraser @aliterative who wants to ask about how dinosaurs might have done if alive today. (You should also check out her many podcasts and watch her special on Amazon Prime.) An old article of Dave’s on the astounding diversity of dinosaurs https://www.theguardian.com/science/blog/2012/jun/11/dinosaurs-incredible-diverse A blogpost on the wonderful arctometatarsal https://archosaurmusings.wordpress.com/2009/10/23/what-is-an-acrtometatarsal/
In todays episode we will discuss Herrerasaurus an Deinocheirus. With a little help from a friend
I mean, say what you will about it, it's out there.In which I discuss New Zealand's Fair Trade Act of 1986, what seperates Deuterstomes from Protostomes (Psssst: It's the Butthole), silly made up dinosaurs, and WHY THE KID FROM JURASSIC PARK WAS RIGHT ABOUT VELOCIRAPTORS! Transcription Available: https://docs.google.com/document/d/18o9QTxkhIGymIHxNSUQdpWDHU-Nzk-6dB0JjmIBbNpw/edit?usp=sharing Special thanks to Al Ectricity for the theme (www.soundcloud.com/alectricitynz) and Adam "Hobbit Underfoot" ICan'tRememberhowtospellyourlastnameandI'mtootiredtocheck for the support and logo.EAT YOUR BEANS
Hoy hablamos de Jurassic World: El Reino Caido y dedicamos la mayor parte del programa a Deinocheirus. ¡Por fin! Ah, si, y la actualidad.
Dinosaur George Podcast - A Podcast Devoted to Paleontology and Natural Science
Our Feature Creature for this episode is Deinocheirus. We interview paleontologist Scott Hartman who talks about the steps he takes when creating scientifically accurate skeletal drawings. And Dinosaur George answers listener submitted questions about pack hunting raptors, Spinosaurus weight, Utahraptor and Acrocanthosaurus.
Dinosaur George Podcast - A Podcast Devoted to Paleontology and Natural Science
Our Feature Creature for this episode is Deinocheirus. We interview paleontologist Scott Hartman who talks about the steps he takes when creating scientifically accurate skeletal drawings. And Dinosaur George answers listener submitted questions about pack hunting raptors, Spinosaurus weight, Utahraptor and Acrocanthosaurus.
Dinosaur news, including a fossil that was thought to be fake actually being an undiscovered species, Dinosaur National Monument being the quietest place in the U.S., and dark matter possibly killing the dinosaurs. Also, dinosaur of the day Deinocheirus, a dinosaur that ate everything in site (like a garbage disposal) and looked like Jar Jar from Star Wars, with a sail on its back, tyrannosaur-like jaw, sauropod-like hips, and hadrosaur-like bill. Visit http://www.IknowDino.com for more information including a link to dinosaur sites near you.
In this episode of MC Hawking's Podcore Nerdcast, Ken, Len, and Cassie talk about the pope's endorsement of exorcisms, The Unbelievable Truth, What We Do in the Shadows, and the results of the last couple of Will It Suck features. Cassie brings the latest in Dinosaur News. Rule the World Smorgasboard! New Game! Shout Outs! Will it Suck: Horrible Bosses 2. LIKE us on Facebook at http://facebook.com/mchawkingspodcorenerdcast, and follow @podcorenerdcast and @mchawking on Twitter! Index: Will It Suck Recap 00:01:08 Ouija and Horns Pope News 00:05:30 Pope Francis Endorses Exorcisms Shout Out! 00:09:34 A hearty hello to some Facebook fans Who Said It? 00:13:15 René Descartes or Honey Boo-Boo Rule the World 00:25:45 A Rule the World smorgasbord! Dinosaur News 00:34:42 Deinocheirus mirificus! Also, Sabre-Toothed Groundhogs! Nerds Need to Know 00:44:20 The Unbelievable Truth Another Shout Out! 00:47:05 MC Frontalot hugged a koala Nerds Need to Know 00:48:04 Flight of the Conchords (and What We Do in the Shadows) Will it Suck? 00:54:30 Horrible Bosses 2 Closing Chatter 01:05:18 Mining for Gold
Hace casi cincuenta años, en 1965, la paleontóloga polaca Zofia Kielan-Jaworowska descubrió en el “valle de los dragones” del desierto del Gobi los restos de un dinosurio sorprendente. Sus brazos medían casi dos metros y medio de largo y terminaban en garras de 30 cm de longitud. Los brazos eran lo único que quedaba de él, el resto había que imaginarlo. Así nació para la ciencia nueva especie, Deinocheirus mirificus, que significa “mano terrible peculiar”. Sin cabeza ni pies, el aspecto del dinosaurio fue un misterio hasta que, el 16 de agosto de 2009, un equipo de paleontólogos de Corea, Mongolia, Canadá y Japón descubrió en el yacimiento de Bugiin Tsav, también en el valle de los dragones, nuevos restos. Hoy les invitamos a escuchar la historia.
Quincuagésimo quinto programa y quinto aniversario. Las secciones habituales y dos entrevistas sobre el ártico y medicina geológica.
Chris and Grant discuss the Comet that flew by Mars this week, strange organic molecules in Titan’s atmosphere, and the Rosetta mission, naturally. There is no Rob, but console yourself knowing that he typed this for you. Links: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-29661446 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deinocheirus http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Science/Rosetta/Name_Rosetta_mission_s_landing_site http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/oct/20/comet-siding-spring-skims-close-to-mars-after-million-year-journey and http://mars.nasa.gov/comets/sidingspring/images/?ImageID=6682 and http://mars.nasa.gov/comets/sidingspring/images/?ImageID=6677 http://www.science20.com/news_articles/the_strange_organic_molecules_in_titans_atmosphere-147536 [MP3 Link] Episode #124. If you have anything you’d like us to look at, or any questions you’d like us to answer - use the links at the top of the web page at http://recycledelec.com. Follow us on Twitter @recycledelec @orbitingfrog and @chrislintott. Credits: Audio content Copyright 2011-2014 Chris Lintott and Robert Simpson. Many thanks to Oxford Press Office for recording space. Podcast Image of lightbulb courtesy of Flickr user bazik (http://www.flickr.com/photos/bazik/395792175/).
Darren and John discuss a Sussex big cat, the eating of a great white shark, punching in the face, Deinocheirus, and the Angeac dinosaur. Such pointless banter stops for the main event: GODZILLA. Thoughts and spoilers on three Godzilla films (1954, 1998, 2014). Surprise! Darren and John disagree.DarrenGodzilla (1954) ★★★★★Godzilla (1998) ★Godzilla (2014) ★★★★JohnGodzilla (1954) ★★★★★Godzilla (1998) ★★★Godzilla (2014) ★★Download here.