Podcasts about Deinonychus

Dromaeosaurid theropod dinosaur genus from the early Cretaceous Period

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Best podcasts about Deinonychus

Latest podcast episodes about Deinonychus

Dinosaur George Kids - A Show for Kids Who Love Dinosaurs
114 - Dakotaraptor (A Mystery Raptor?)

Dinosaur George Kids - A Show for Kids Who Love Dinosaurs

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2024 62:50


Like its smaller cousin, Deinonychus, this large raptor was a swift and active hunter. But could there be something we got wrong when it came to this carnivore? 

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast

This history of dromaeosaurs (better known as raptors). Plus an A to Z guide of the most common dinosaur terms and inside jokes from our first 500 episodes.For links to every news story, all of the details we shared about Deinonychus (revisited), and our fun fact check out https://iknowdino.com/Deinonychus (revisited)-Episode-500/Join us at www.patreon.com/iknowdino for dinosaur requests, bonus content, ad-free episodes, and more.Dinosaur of the day Deinonychus (revisited), a dinosaur famous for its sickle-claws and eating the hadrosaur Tenontosaurus.Some highlights about dromaeosaurs:Dromaeosaurs have many bird like features in their shoulders, wrists, and feathersBoth with modern raptors (birds of prey) and dromaeosaurs the foot is the deadly weaponUtahraptor was discovered around the time the movie Jurassic Park came out, more recently a new huge block of Utahraptors was foundPaleontologist Bob Bakker tells a compelling story of a Utahraptor through her eyes in his novel Raptor RedPaleontologist John Ostrom named Deinonychus in 1969 (which also has ties to Jurassic Park)"The first definitive dromaeosaur with a reasonably complete skeleton ever found in the US" is nicknamed "Julietraptor"Plus, I Know Dino A to Z (the most common dinosaur terms you should know)This episode is brought to you by our patrons. Their generous contributions have gotten us to 500 episodes! Help us make our next 500 episodes by joining your fellow Di-Know-It-Alls at Patreon.com/iknowdino. You can save 10% by paying annuallySee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Story time with Philip and Mommy!

We learn about this terribly clawed dinosaur.

Paleo Bites
Sauroposeidon, the Lizard of the Earthquake God

Paleo Bites

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2024 26:34


(image source: https://jurassicpark.fandom.com/wiki/Sauroposeidon) Host Matthew Donald and guest co-host Stephen Curro discuss Sauroposeidon, an abso-giganto-freaking-mongus dinosaur and the state dinosaur of Texas, because they like everything big down there. They ain't compensatin' for nuthin', those durn cowboys. From the Early Cretaceous, this 70-foot macronarian sauropod lived alongside some heavy hitters like Acrocanthosaurus, Deinonychus, and Sauropelta, all of which we've covered on this show before, so they must be famous, right? Right? This show's good exposure for these critters, I know it. Want to further support the show? Sign up to our Patreon for exclusive bonus content at Patreon.com/MatthewDonald. Also, you can get links to follow Matthew Donald and purchase his books at https://linktr.ee/matthewdonald. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Common Descent Podcast
Episode 189 - Dromaeosaurs

The Common Descent Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2024 153:52


This group of predatory dinosaurs includes such famous names as Deinonychus, Microraptor, and Velociraptor, and they're among the most well-studied and popular dinosaurs of all time. This episode, we'll discuss what sets these dinosaurs apart, as well the much-discussed and -debated questions surrounding their relationships to birds, their distinctive claws and wings, and their hunting strategies. In the news: ant-mimic spiders, fishapod spinal column, early dinosaur growth, and a fossil tapeworm. Time markers: Intro & Announcements: 00:00:00 News: 00:05:20 Main discussion, Part 1: 00:33:00 Main discussion, Part 2: 01:13:50 Patron question: 02:22:05 Check out our website for this episode's blog post and more: http://commondescentpodcast.com/ Links mentioned in the announcements: Palestine Children's Relief Fund: https://www.pcrf.net/ Jewish Voice For Peace: https://www.jewishvoiceforpeace.org/take-action/ Join us on Patreon to support the podcast and enjoy bonus content: https://www.patreon.com/commondescentpodcast Got a topic you want to hear about? Submit your episode request here: https://commondescentpodcast.com/request-a-topic/ Lots more ways to connect with us: https://linktr.ee/common_descent The Intro and Outro music is “On the Origin of Species” by Protodome. More music like this at http://ocremix.org Musical Interludes are "Professor Umlaut" by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com). Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0

Paleo Bites
Tenontosaurus, the Sinew Lizard

Paleo Bites

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2024 27:19


(image source: https://alphynix.tumblr.com) Host Matthew Donald and guest co-host Stephen Curro discuss Tenontosaurus, a poor schmuck of a dinosaur whose entire existence seems to be cannon fodder for packs of Deinonychus. Hence why I chose this picture for the episode image, because it's funny seeing the tables turned. Mwuahahaha. From the Early Cretaceous, this 20-foot basal ornithopod was also notable in having a really long tail, which really would have been useful in fighting off those Deinonychus I reckon. But hey, who am I to judge? It seemed to work out for them. Oh wait, they're extinct, so I guess not. Want to further support the show? Sign up to our Patreon for exclusive bonus content at Patreon.com/MatthewDonald. Also, you can get links to follow Matthew Donald and purchase his books at https://linktr.ee/matthewdonald. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Natural History Cupboard Podcast

This week meet the real life inspiration for the Jurassic Park raptor Deinonychus. Find out why this dinosaur is more than just a movie monster. In the news hear how one zoo has gone above and beyond to help on of its smallest residents. All this and more this week the cupboard is open come on in!

The Dinosaur Review for Kids Podcast
79 - Hesperosaurus & Deinonychus (Y2K Double Review)

The Dinosaur Review for Kids Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2024 39:21


The Y2K bug has attacked the Dinosaur Review for Kids podcast & gave us an ultimate double review. Both of these dinosaurs may have shared the same battle grounds, but one had leaf-shaped teeth for eating plants & one had blade-like teeth for shredding meat. Regardless of how much time separated the two genus, one thing's for sure, the clocks always changed at midnight. It's time to drop the asteroid on these terrible lizards. Happy New Year!!

Palaeocast
Life On Our Planet 5.3 - Dr Anjan Bhullar

Palaeocast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2023 43:50


LOOP 5.3: We're exploring feather evolution with Dr Anjan Bhullar, University of Yale. We trace feathers up the theropod family tree and question whether or not they would be present in ALL dinosaurs. Anjan does NOT sit on the fence with this question or any other. Were dinosaurs brightly coloured? How intelligent were they? Do not miss some of these mind-blowing insights! Life On Our Planet (LOOP) is a new 8-part series created for Netflix by Silverback Films and Amblin Television. This Steven Spielberg produced series, narrated by Morgan Freeman, is hugely ambitious in its scope, telling the story of life throughout the whole Phanerozoic Eon. Ancient organisms and environments are painstakingly recreated by the supremely talented Industrial Light and Magic, whilst modern natural history scenes add vital context to the story. This show has been worked on for six years, during which time countless papers were read and around 150 different palaeontologists contributed their time and knowledge. The whole production had culture of letting the scientific rese arch dictate scenes, resulting in one of the most accurate on-screen representations of prehistoric life there has ever been. And how do we know all this? Well, our very own team members Tom Fletcher and Dave Marshall have been embedded within the LOOP team since day one! We are therefore in a totally unique position to reveal to you the work that went into this series, from both the production and research side of things. In this unofficial series, we've been granted exclusive access to many of the people responsible for creating LOOP, we explore what it takes to create a palaeontological documentary and we delve deeper into the science with some of the show's academic advisors. Each day, we will be releasing batches of interviews, each relating to a specific episode of LOOP. Image courtesy and copyright of Netflix.

Palaeocast
Life On Our Planet 5.1 - Introduction

Palaeocast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2023 21:32


LOOP 5.1: It's episode 5 and Dave and Tom are pronouncing dinosaur names all wrong. Does any actually pronounce it “Deinonychus”? Dave reveals why Netflix chose Morgan Freeman as narrator over himself, Tom talks about the complexity of producing CGI feathers and we address T. rex controversies. Finally, we're served up a confusing ‘dinosaur sandwich' metaphor. Life On Our Planet (LOOP) is a new 8-part series created for Netflix by Silverback Films and Amblin Television. This Steven Spielberg produced series, narrated by Morgan Freeman, is hugely ambitious in its scope, telling the story of life throughout the whole Phanerozoic Eon. Ancient organisms and environments are painstakingly recreated by the supremely talented Industrial Light and Magic, whilst modern natural history scenes add vital context to the story. This show has been worked on for six years, during which time countless papers were read and around 150 different palaeontologists contributed their time and knowledge. The whole production had culture of letting the scientific rese arch dictate scenes, resulting in one of the most accurate on-screen representations of prehistoric life there has ever been. And how do we know all this? Well, our very own team members Tom Fletcher and Dave Marshall have been embedded within the LOOP team since day one! We are therefore in a totally unique position to reveal to you the work that went into this series, from both the production and research side of things. In this unofficial series, we've been granted exclusive access to many of the people responsible for creating LOOP, we explore what it takes to create a palaeontological documentary and we delve deeper into the science with some of the show's academic advisors. Each day, we will be releasing batches of interviews, each relating to a specific episode of LOOP. Image courtesy and copyright of Netflix.

Paleo Bites
Deinonychus, the Terrible Claw

Paleo Bites

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2023 27:25


(image source: https://images.dinosaurpictures.org/Deinonychus_ewilloughby_2931.jpg) Host Matthew Donald and very special guest co-host Jason Singleton discuss Deinonychus, the one whose titular claw sparked the Dinosaur Revolution like a slash heard around the world. That's an American Revolution reference, that joke. Know your history, even if it's probably mostly propaganda. From the Mid Cretaceous, this 11-foot dromaeosaurid had the biggest beef with poor ol' Tenontosaurus, or should I say the biggest beef from it. That poor ornithopod just can't catch a break, always getting brutally disemboweled by this guy. Who does he think he is?! Oh yeah, a really important dinosaur. I guess it's okay then. Also check out Jason's book Dino Mike at https://amzn.to/48fSJ6y. Want to further support the show? Sign up to our Patreon for exclusive bonus content at Patreon.com/MatthewDonald. Also, you can purchase Matthew Donald's dinosaur book "Megazoic" on Amazon by clicking here, its sequel "Megazoic: The Primeval Power" by clicking here, its third installment "Megazoic: The Hunted Ones" by clicking here, or its final installment "Megazoic: An Era's End" by clicking here, as well as his non-dinosaur-related book "Teslanauts" by clicking here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Wonder with the Witte
Tyrannosaurs: Meet the Family ~ Feathered Friends: Birds and Dinosaurs ~ Avian Theropods

Wonder with the Witte

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2023 28:43


Are birds dinosaurs? What kind of dinosaurs are birds? And why are some dinosaur models covered in feathers? This week, Dr. Thomas Adams returns to the show and shares how paleontologists discovered the connections between dinosaurs and birds, what evidence supports this connection and which modern-day animals are dinosaur descendants. To learn more information about the sources and references for today's episode, visit: American Museum of Natural History, Get to know a dino: Archaeopteryx lithographica: https://www.amnh.org/explore/news-blogs/on-exhibit-posts/get-to-know-a-dino-archaeopteryx-lithographica Australian Museum, Tyrannosaurs: Meet the Family traveling exhibition: https://www.wittemuseum.org/exhibitions/tyrannosaurs-meet-the-family/ AZ Animals, Sinosauropteryx prima: https://a-z-animals.com/animals/sinosauropteryx/ Britannica, Deinonychus: https://www.britannica.com/animal/Deinonychus Library of Congress, What is the world's most dangerous bird?: https://www.loc.gov/everyday-mysteries/zoology/item/worlds-most-dangerous-bird/ Hosted by the Witte Museum's Abigail Jacks, Environmental Science Education Manager, and Daemon Piña, Health and Wellness Education Manager. Featuring paleontologist and geologist Dr. Thomas Adams, Chief Curator & Vice President of Research. Produced by Alyssa Sailor-Tynes, Digital Marketing Manager. A companion to the Tyrannosaurs: Meet the Family and Antarctic Dinosaurs exhibitions, at the Witte for a limited time. Tyrannosaurs: Meet the Family is created by the Australian Museum and toured internationally by Evergreen Exhibitions. Tyrannosaurs: Meet the Family at the Witte Museum is generously supported by The Alamo, Valero Energy Corporation and the Mary Pat and Michael Bolner Exhibit Endowment Fund. Antarctic Dinosaurs is developed and traveled by the Field Museum, Chicago in partnership with the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Discovery Place – Charlotte, NC and the Natural History Museum of Utah. Generous support was provided by the Kenneth C. Griffin Charitable Fund. Antarctic Dinosaurs at the Witte Museum is generously supported by HOLT Cat and Mary Pat and Mike Bolner. For more information and to experience the limited-time exhibitions at the Witte, visit https://bit.ly/3QiJ74m.

Lucky Paper Radio
Wishes, Lesson/Learn, and Companions: The Dynamics of Outside the Game Mechanics

Lucky Paper Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2023 59:28


Andy and Anthony talk about Wishes! Wishes are a special class of cards that let you access cards from outside your game. In competitive play and drafts, this means any card from your sideboard. In casual play anything at all from your collection. Andy talks about why it's interesting to him and the challenges he's faced trying to design a Cube focused around the wish cards. Our listener submitted pack 1, pick 1 this week comes from Deinonychus's The Bodleian Cube. Thanks, Deinonychus! View all cards mentioned in the episode → Discussed in this episode: Cube Con All Wishes on Scryfall Andy's Three Wishes “Cube” Andy's Lesson Learn “Cube” Foraminifera Fossils Diatoms The Dolomite Cliffs Timestamps: 0:00 - Introduction 3:15 - Draft Weekend Recap 7:37 - Andy's Exploration with Outside-the-Game Mechanics 19:53 - Andy's Goals for and Challenges with his Wish Package Cube 40:53 - Lessons Learned from the Lesson and Learn Cube 47:45 - Listener Submitted Pack 1, Pick 1 Check us out on Twitch and YouTube for paper Cube gameplay. You can find the hosts' Cubes on Cube Cobra: Andy's “Bun Magic” Cube Anthony's “Regular” Cube If want us to do a pack 1, pick 1 from your cube submit it on our website. Send in questions to the show at mail@luckypaper.co. You can also find both your hosts in the MTG Cube Talk Discord. If you'd like to show your support for the show, please leave us a review on iTunes or wherever you listen. Musical production by DJ James Nasty.

Screaming in the Cloud
Creating A Resilient Security Strategy Through Chaos Engineering with Kelly Shortridge

Screaming in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2023 32:21


Kelly Shortridge, Senior Principal Engineer at Fastly, joins Corey on Screaming in the Cloud to discuss their recently released book, Security Chaos Engineering: Sustaining Resilience in Software and Systems. Kelly explains why a resilient strategy is far preferable to a bubble-wrapped approach to cybersecurity, and how developer teams can use evidence to mitigate security threats. Corey and Kelly discuss how the risks of working with complex systems is perfectly illustrated by Jurassic Park, and Kelly also highlights why it's critical to address both system vulnerabilities and human vulnerabilities in your development environment rather than pointing fingers when something goes wrong.About KellyKelly Shortridge is a senior principal engineer at Fastly in the office of the CTO and lead author of "Security Chaos Engineering: Sustaining Resilience in Software and Systems" (O'Reilly Media). Shortridge is best known for their work on resilience in complex software systems, the application of behavioral economics to cybersecurity, and bringing security out of the dark ages. Shortridge has been a successful enterprise product leader as well as a startup founder (with an exit to CrowdStrike) and investment banker. Shortridge frequently advises Fortune 500s, investors, startups, and federal agencies and has spoken at major technology conferences internationally, including Black Hat USA, O'Reilly Velocity Conference, and SREcon. Shortridge's research has been featured in ACM, IEEE, and USENIX, spanning behavioral science in cybersecurity, deception strategies, and the ROI of software resilience. They also serve on the editorial board of ACM Queue.Links Referenced: Fastly: https://www.fastly.com/ Personal website: https://kellyshortridge.com Book website: https://securitychaoseng.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kellyshortridge/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/swagitda_ Bluesky: https://shortridge.bsky.social TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: Have you listened to the new season of Traceroute yet? Traceroute is a tech podcast that peels back the layers of the stack to tell the real, human stories about how the inner workings of our digital world affect our lives in ways you may have never thought of before. Listen and follow Traceroute on your favorite platform, or learn more about Traceroute at origins.dev. My thanks to them for sponsoring this ridiculous podcast. Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud, I'm Corey Quinn. My guest today is Kelly Shortridge, who is a Senior Principal Engineer over at Fastly, as well as the lead author of the recently released Security Chaos Engineering: Sustaining Resilience in Software and Systems. Kelly, welcome to the show.Kelly: Thank you so much for having me.Corey: So, I want to start with the honest truth that in that title, I think I know what some of the words mean, but when you put them together in that particular order, I want to make sure we're talking about the same thing. Can you explain that like I'm five, as far as what your book is about?Kelly: Yes. I'll actually start with an analogy I make in the book, which is, imagine you were trying to rollerblade to some destination. Now, one thing you could do is wrap yourself in a bunch of bubble wrap and become the bubble person, and you can waddle down the street trying to make it to your destination on the rollerblades, but if there's a gust of wind or a dog barks or something, you're going to flop over, you're not going to recover. However, if you instead do what everybody does, which is you know, kneepads and other things that keep you flexible and nimble, the gust you know, there's a gust of wind, you can kind of be agile, navigate around it; if a dog barks, you just roller-skate around it; you can reach your destination. The former, the bubble person, that's a lot of our cybersecurity today. It's just keeping us very rigid, right? And then the alternative is resilience, which is the ability to recover from failure and adapt to evolving conditions.Corey: I feel like I am about to torture your analogy to death because back when I was in school in 2000, there was an annual tradition at the school I was attending before failing out, where a bunch of us would paint ourselves green every year and then bike around the campus naked. It was the green bike ride. So, one year I did this on rollerblades. So, if you wind up looking—there's the bubble wrap, there's the safety gear, and then there's wearing absolutely nothing, which feels—Kelly: [laugh]. Yes.Corey: —kind of like the startup approach to InfoSec. It's like, “It'll be fine. What's the worst that happens?” And you're super nimble, super flexible, until suddenly, oops, now I really wish I'd done things differently.Kelly: Well, there's a reason why I don't say rollerblade naked, which other than it being rather visceral, what you described is what I've called YOLOSec before, which is not what you want to do. Because the problem when you think about it from a resilience perspective, again, is you want to be able to recover from failure and adapt. Sure, you can oftentimes move quickly, but you're probably going to erode software quality over time, so to a certain point, there's going to be some big incident, and suddenly, you aren't fast anymore, you're actually pretty slow. So, there's this, kind of, happy medium where you have enough, I would like security by design—we can talk about that a bit if you want—where you have enough of the security by design baked in and you can think of it as guardrails that you're able to withstand and recover from any failure. But yeah, going naked, that's a recipe for not being able to rollerblade, like, ever again, potentially [laugh].Corey: I think, on some level, that the correct dialing in of security posture is going to come down to context, in almost every case. I'm building something in my spare time in the off hours does not need the same security posture—mostly—as we are a bank. It feels like there's a very wide gulf between those two extremes. Unfortunately, I find that there's a certain tone-deafness coming from a lot of the security industry around oh, everyone must have security as their number one thing, ever. I mean, with my clients who I fixed their AWS bills, I have to care about security contractually, but the secrets that I hold are boring: how much money certain companies pay another very large company.Yes, I'll get sued into oblivion if that leaks, but nobody dies. Nobody is having their money stolen as a result. It's slightly embarrassing in the tech press for a cycle and then it's over and done with. That's not the same thing as a brief stint I did running tech ops at Grindr ten years ago where, leak that database and people will die. There's a strong difference between those threat models, and on some level, being able to act accordingly has been one of the more eye-opening approaches to increasing velocity in my experience. Does that align with the thesis of your book, since my copy has not yet arrived for this recording?Kelly: Yes. The book, I am not afraid to say it depends on the book, and you're right, it depends on context. I actually talk about this resilience potion recipe that you can check out if you want, these ingredients so we can sustain resilience. A key one is defining your critical functions, just what is your system's reason for existence, and that is what you want to make sure it can recover and still operate under adverse conditions, like you said.Another example I give all the time is most SaaS apps have some sort of reporting functionality. Guess what? That's not mission-critical. You don't need the utmost security on that, for the most part. But if it's processing transactions, yeah, probably you want to invest more security there. So yes, I couldn't agree more that it's context-dependent and oh, my God, does the security industry ignore that so much of the time, and it's been my gripe for, I feel like as long as I've been in the industry.Corey: I mean, there was a great talk that Netflix gave years ago where they mentioned in passing, that all developers have root in production. And that's awesome and the person next to him was super excited and I looked at their badge, and holy hell, they worked at an actual bank. That seems like a bad plan. But talking to the Netflix speaker after the fact, Dave Hahn, something that I found that was extraordinarily insightful, was that, yeah, well we just isolate off the PCI environment so the rest and sensitive data lives in its own compartmentalized area. So, at that point, yeah, you're not going to be able to break much in that scenario.It's like, that would have been helpful context to put in talk. Which I'm sure he did, but my attention span had tripped out and I missed that. But that's, on some level, constraining blast radius and not having compliance and regulatory issues extending to every corner of your environment really frees you up to do things appropriately. But there are some things where you do need to care about this stuff, regardless of how small the surface area is.Kelly: Agreed. And I introduced the concept of the effort investment portfolio in the book, which is basically, that is where does it matter to invest effort and where can you kind of like, maybe save some resources up. I think one thing you touched on, though, is, we're really talking about isolation and I actually think people don't think about isolation in as detailed or maybe as expansively as they could. Because we want both temporal and logical and spatial isolation. What you talked about is, yeah, there are some cases where you want to isolate data, you want to isolate certain subsystems, and that could be containers, it could also be AWS security groups.It could take a bunch of different forms, it could be something like RLBox in WebAssembly land. But I think that's something that I really try to highlight in the book is, there's actually a huge opportunity for security engineers starting from the design of a system to really think about how can we infuse different forms of isolation to sustain resilience.Corey: It's interesting that you use the word investment. When fixing AWS bills for a living, I've learned over the last almost seven years now of doing this that cost and architecture and cloud are fundamentally the same thing. And resilience is something that comes with a very real cost, particularly when you start looking at what the architectural choices are. And one of the big reasons that I only ever work on a fixed-fee basis is because if I'm charging for a percentage of savings or something, it inspires me to say really uncomfortable things like, “Backups are for cowards.” And, “When was the last time you saw an entire AWS availability zone go down for so long that it mattered? You don't need to worry about that.” And it does cut off an awful lot of cost issues, at the price of making the environment more fragile.That's where one of the context thing starts to come in. I mean, in many cases, if AWS is having a bad day in a given region, well does your business need that workload to be functional? For my newsletter, I have a publication system that's single-homed out of the Oregon region. If that whole thing goes down for multiple days, I'm writing that week's issue by hand because I'm going to have something different to talk about anyway. For me, there is no value in making that investment. But for companies, there absolutely is, but there's also seems to be a lack of awareness around, how much is a reasonable investment in that area when do you start making that investment? And most critically, when do you stop?Kelly: I think that's a good point, and luckily, what's on my side is the fact that there's a lot of just profligate spending in cybersecurity and [laugh] that's really what I'm focused on is, how can we spend those investments better? And I actually think there's an opportunity in many cases to ditch a ton of cybersecurity tools and focus more on some of the stuff he talked about. I agree, by the way that I've seen some threat models where it's like, well, AWS, all regions go down. I'm like, at that point, we have, like, a severe, bigger-than-whatever-you're-thinking-about problem, right?Corey: Right. So, does your business continuity plan account for every one of your staff suddenly quitting on the spot because there's a whole bunch of companies with very expensive consulting, like, problems that I'm going to go work for a week and then buy a house in cash. It's one of those areas where, yeah, people are not going to care about your environment more than they are about their families and other things that are going on. Plan accordingly. People tend to get so carried away with these things with tabletop planning exercises. And then of course, they forget little things like I overwrote the database by dropping the wrong thing. Turns out that was production. [laugh]. Remembering for [a me 00:10:00] there.Kelly: Precisely. And a lot of the chaos experiments that I talk about in the book are a lot of those, like, let's validate some of those basics, right? That's actually some of the best investments you can make. Like, if you do have backups, I can totally see your argument about backups are for cowards, but if you do have them, like, maybe you conduct experiments to make sure that they're available when you need them, and the same thing, even on the [unintelligible 00:10:21] side—Corey: No one cares about backups, but everyone really cares about restores, suddenly, right after—Kelly: Yeah.Corey: —they really should have cared about backups.Kelly: Exactly. So, I think it's looking at those experiments where it's like, okay, you have these basic assumptions in place that you assume to be invariance or assume that they're going to bail you out if something goes wrong. Let's just verify. That's a great place to start because I can tell you—I know you've been to the RSA hall floor—how many cybersecurity teams are actually assessing the efficacy and actually experimenting to see if those tools really help them during incidents. It's pretty few.Corey: Oh, vendors do not want to do those analyses. They don't want you to do those analyses, either, and if you do, for God's sakes, shut up about it. They're trying to sell things here, mostly firewalls.Kelly: Yeah, cybersecurity vendors aren't necessarily happy about my book and what I talk about because I have almost this ruthless focus on evidence and [unintelligible 00:11:08] cybersecurity vendors kind of thrive on a lack of evidence. So.Corey: There's so much fear, uncertainty, and doubt in that space and I do feel for them. It's a hard market to sell in without having to talk about here's the thing that you're defending against. In my case, it's easy to sell the AWS bill is high because if I don't have to explain why more or less setting money on fire as a bad thing, I don't really know what to tell you. I'm going to go look for a slightly different customer profile. That's not really how it works in security, I'm sure there are better go-to-market approaches, but they're hard to find, at least, ones that work holistically.Kelly: There are. And one of my priorities with the book was to really enumerate how many opportunities there are to take software engineering practices that people already know, let's say something like type systems even, and how those can actually help sustain resilience. Even things like integration testing or infrastructure as code, there are a lot of opportunities just to extend what we already do for systems reliability to sustain resilience against things that aren't attacks and just make sure that, you know, we cover a few of those cases as well. A lot of it should be really natural to software engineering teams. Again, security vendors don't like that because it turns out software engineering teams don't particularly like security vendors.Corey: I hadn't noticed that. I do wonder, though, for those who are unaware, chaos engineering started off as breaking things on purpose, which I feel like one person had a really good story and thought about it super quickly when they were about to get fired. Like, “No, no, it's called Chaos Engineering.” Good for them. It's now a well-regarded discipline. But I've always heard of it in the context of reliability of, “Oh, you think your site is going to work if the database falls over? Let's push it over and see what happens.” How does that manifest in a security context?Kelly: So, I will clarify, I think that's a slight misconception. It's really about fixing things in production, and that's the end goal. I think we should not break things just to break them, right? But I'll give a simple example, which I know it's based on what Aaron Rinehart conducted at UnitedHealth Group, which is, okay, let's inject a misconfigured port as an experiment and see what happens, end-to-end. In their case, the firewall only detected the misconfigured port 60% of the time, so 60% of the time, it works every time.But it was actually the cloud, the very common, like, Cloud configuration management tool that caught the change and alerted responders. So, it's that kind of thing where we're still trying to verify those assumptions that we have about our systems and how they behave, again, end-to-end. In a lot of cases, again, with security tools, they are not behaving as we expect. But I still argue security is just a subset of software quality, so if we're experimenting to verify, again, our assumptions and observe system behavior, we're benefiting software quality, and security is just a subset of that. Think about C code, right? It's not like there's, like, a healthy memory corruption, so it's bad for both the quality and security reason.Corey: One problem that I've had in the security space for a while is—let's [unintelligible 00:14:05] on this to AWS for a second because that is the area in which I spend the most of my time, which probably explains a lot about my personality challenges. But the problem that I keep smacking into is if I go ahead and configure everything the way that I should according to best practices and the rest, I wind up with a firehose torrent of information in terms of CloudTrail logs, et cetera. And it's expensive in its own right. But then to sort through it or to do a lot of things in security, there are basically two options. I can either buy a vendor's product, which generally tends to start around $12,000 a year and goes up rapidly from there on my current $6,000 a year bill, so okay, twice as much as the infrastructure for security monitoring. Okay.Or alternately, find a bunch of different random scripts and tools on GitHub of wildly diverging quality and sort of hope for the best on that. It feels like there's nothing in between. And the reason I care about this is not because I'm cheap but because when you have an individual learner who is either a student or a career switcher or someone just trying to experiment with this, you want them to begin as you want them to go on, and things that are no money for an enterprise are all the money to them. They're going to learn to work with the tools that they can afford. That feels like it's a big security swing and a miss. Do you agree or disagree? What's the nuance I'm missing here?Kelly: No, I don't think there's nuance you're missing. I think security observability, for one, isn't a buzzword that particularly exists. I've been trying to make it a thing, but I'm solely one individual screaming into the void. But observability just hasn't been a thing. We haven't really focused on, okay, so what, like, we get data and what do we do with it?And I think, again, from a software engineering perspective, I think there's a lot we can do. One, we can just avoid duplicating efforts. We can treat observability, again, of any sort of issue as similar, whether that's an attack or a performance issue. I think this is another place where security, or any sort of chaos experiment, shines though because if you have an idea of here's an adverse scenario we care about, you can actually see how does it manifest in the logs and you can start to figure out, like, what signals do we actually need to be looking for, what signals mattered to be able to narrow it down. Which again, it involves time and effort, but also, I can attest when you're buying the security vendor tool and, in theory, absolving some of that time and effort, it's maybe, maybe not, because it can be hard to understand what the outcomes are or what the outputs are from the tool and it can also be very difficult to tune it and to be able to explain some of the outputs. It's kind of like trading upfront effort versus long-term overall overhead if that makes sense.Corey: It does. On that note, the title of your book includes the magic key phrase ‘sustaining resilience.' I have found that security effort and investment tends to resemble a fire drill in—Kelly: [laugh].Corey: —an awful lot of places, where, “We care very much about security,” says the company, right after they very clearly failed to care about security, and I know this because I'm reading getting an email about a breach that they've just sent me. And then there's a whole bunch of running around and hair-on-fire moments. But then there's a new shiny that always comes up, a new strategic priority, and it falls to the wayside again. What do you see the drives that sustained effort and focus on resilience in a security context?Kelly: I think it's really making sure you have a learning culture, which sounds very [unintelligible 00:17:30], but things again, like, experiments can help just because when you do simulate those adverse scenarios and you see how your system behaves, it's almost like running an incident and you can use that as very fresh, kind of, like collective memory. And I even strongly recommend starting off with prior incidents in simulating those, just to see like, hey, did the improvements we make actually help? If they didn't, that can be kind of another fire under the butt, so to speak, to continue investing. So, definitely in practice—and there's some case studies in the book—it can be really helpful just to kind of like sustain that memory and sustain that learning and keep things feeling a bit fresh. It's almost like prodding the nervous system a little, just so it doesn't go back to that complacent and convenient feeling.Corey: It's one of the hard problems because—I'm sure I'm going to get castigated for this by some of the listeners—but computers are easy, particularly compared to the people. There are deterministic ways to solve almost any computer problem, but people are always going to be a little bit different, and getting them to perform the same way today that they did yesterday is an exercise in frustration. Changing the culture, changing the approach and the attitude that people take toward a lot of these things feels, from my perspective, like, something of an impossible job. Cultural transformations are things that everyone talks about, but it's rare to see them succeed.Kelly: Yes, and that's actually something that I very strongly weaved throughout the book is that if your security solutions rely on human behavior, they're going to fail. We want to either reduce hazards or eliminate hazards by design as much as possible. So, my view is very much again, like, can you make processes more repeatable? That's going to help security. I definitely do not think that if anyone takes away from my book that they need to have, like, a thousand hours of training to change hearts and minds, then they have completely misunderstood most of the book.The idea is very much like, what are practices that we want for other outcomes anyway—again, reliability or faster time to market—and how can we harness those to also be improving resilience or security at the same time? It's very much trying to think about those opportunities rather than, you know, trying to drill into people's heads, like, “Thou shalt not,” or, “Thou shall.”Corey: Way back in 2018, you gave a keynote at some conference or another and you built the entire thing on the story of Jurassic Park, specifically Ian Malcolm as one of your favorite fictional heroes, and you tied it into security in a bunch of different ways. You hadn't written this book then unless the authorship process is way longer than I think it is. So, I'm curious to get your take on what Jurassic Park can teach us about software security.Kelly: Yes, so I talk about Jurassic Park as a reference throughout the book, frequently. I've loved that book since I was a very young child. Jurassic Park is a great example of a complex system gone wrong because you can't point to any one thing. Like there's Dennis Nedry, you know, messing up the power system, but then there's also the software was looking for a very specific count of dinosaurs and they didn't anticipate there could be more in the count. Like, there are so many different factors that influenced it, you can't actually blame just, like, human error or point fingers at one thing.That's a beautiful example of how things go wrong in our software systems because like you said, there's this human element and then there's also how the humans interact and how the software components interact. But with Jurassic Park, too, I think the great thing is dinosaurs are going to do dinosaur things like eating people, and there are also equivalents in software, like C code. C code is going to do C code things, right? It's not a memory safe language, so we shouldn't be surprised when something goes wrong. We need to prepare accordingly.Corey: “How could this happen? Again?” Yeah.Kelly: Right. At a certain point, it's like, there's probably no way to sufficiently introduce isolation for dinosaurs unless you put them in a bunker where no one can see them, and it's the same thing sometimes with things like C code. There's just no amount of effort you can invest, and you're just kind of investing for a really unclear and generally not fortuitous outcome. So, I like it as kind of this analogy to think about, okay, where do our effort investments make sense and where is it sometimes like, we really just do need to refactor because we're dealing with dinosaurs here.Corey: When I was a kid, that was one of my favorite books, too. The problem is, I didn't realize I was getting a glimpse of my future at a number of crappy startups that I worked at. Because you have John Hammond, who was the owner of the park talking constantly about how, “We spared no expense,” but then you look at what actually happened and he spared every frickin expense. You have one IT person who is so criminally underpaid that smuggling dinosaur embryos off the island becomes a viable strategy for this. He wound up, “Oh, we couldn't find the right DNA, so we're just going to, like, splice some other random stuff in there. It'll be fine.”Then you have the massive overconfidence because it sounds very much like he had this almost Muskian desire to fire anyone who disagreed with him, and yeah, there was a certain lack of investment that could have been made, despite loud protestations to the contrary. I'd say that he is the root cause, he is the proximate reason for the entire failure of the park. But I'm willing to entertain disagreement on that point.Kelly: I think there are other individuals, like Dr. Wu, if you recall, like, deciding to do the frog DNA and not thinking that maybe something could go wrong. I think there was a lot of overconfidence, which you're right, we do see a lot in software. So, I think that's actually another very important lesson is that incentives matter and incentives are very hard to change, kind of like what you talked about earlier. It doesn't mean that we shouldn't include incentives in our threat model.So like, in the book I talked about, our threat models should include things like maybe yeah, people are underpaid or there is a ton of pressure to deliver things quickly or, you know, do things as cheaply as possible. That should be just as much of our threat models as all of the technical stuff too.Corey: I think that there's a lot that was in that movie that was flat-out wrong. For example, one of the kids—I forget her name; it's been a long time—was logging in and said, “Oh, this is Unix. I know Unix.” And having learned Unix as my first basically professional operating system, “No, you don't. No one knows Unix. They get very confused at some point, the question is, just how far down what rabbit hole it is.”I feel so sorry for that kid. I hope she wound up seeking therapy when she was older to realize that, no, you don't actually know Unix. It's not that you're bad at computers, it's that Unix is user-hostile, actively so. Like, the raptors, like, that's the better metaphor when everything winds up shaking out.Kelly: Yeah. I don't disagree with that. The movie definitely takes many liberties. I think what's interesting, though, is that Michael Creighton, specifically, when he talks about writing the book—I don't know how many people know this—dinosaurs were just a mechanism. He knew people would want to read it in airport.What he cared about was communicating really the danger of complex systems and how if you don't respect them and respect that interactivity and that it can baffle and surprise us, like, things will go wrong. So, I actually find it kind of beautiful in a way that the dinosaurs were almost like an afterthought. What he really cared about was exactly what we deal with all the time in software, is when things go wrong with complexity.Corey: Like one of his other books, Airframe, talked about an air disaster. There's a bunch of contributing factors in the rest, and for some reason, that did not receive the wild acclaim that Jurassic Park did to become a cultural phenomenon that we're still talking about, what, 30 years later.Kelly: Right. Dinosaurs are very compelling.Corey: They really are. I have to ask though—this is the joy of having a kid who is almost six—what is your favorite dinosaur? Not a question most people get asked very often, but I am going to trot that one out.Kelly: No. Oh, that is such a good question. Maybe a Deinonychus.Corey: Oh, because they get so angry they spit and kill people? That's amazing.Kelly: Yeah. And I like that, kind of like, nimble, smarter one, and also the fact that most of the smaller ones allegedly had feathers, which I just love this idea of, like, feather-ful murder machines. I have the classic, like, nerd kid syndrome, though, where I read all these dinosaur names as a kid and I've never pronounced them out loud. So, I'm sure there are others—Corey: Yep.Kelly: —that I would just word salad. But honestly, it's hard to go wrong with choosing a favorite dinosaur.Corey: Oh, yeah. I'm sure some paleontologist is sitting out there in the field on the dig somewhere listening to this podcast, just getting very angry at our pronunciation and things. But for God's sake, I call the database Postgres-squeal. Get in line. There's a lot of that out there where looking at a complex system failures and different contributing factors and the rest makes stuff—that's what makes things interesting.I think that there's this the idea of a root cause is almost always incorrect. It's not, “Okay, who tripped over the buried landmine,” is not the interesting question. It's, “Who buried the thing?” What were all the things that wound up contributing to this? And you can't even frame it that way in the blaming context, just because you start doing that and people clam up, and good luck figuring out what really happened.Kelly: Exactly. That's so much of what the cybersecurity industry is focused on is how do we assign blame? And it's, you know, the marketing person clicked on a link. And it's like, they do that thousands of times, like a month, and the one time, suddenly, they were stupid for doing it? That doesn't sound right.So, I'm a big fan of, yes, vanquishing root cause, thinking about contributing factors, and in particular, in any sort of incident review, you have to think about, was there a designer process problem? You can't just think about the human behavior; you have to think about where are the opportunities for us to design things better, to make this secure way more of the default way.Corey: When you talk about resilience and reliability and big, notable outages, most forward-thinking companies are going to go and do a variety of incident reviews and disclosures around everything that happened to it, depending upon levels of trust and whether your NDA'ed or not, and how much gets public is going to vary from place to place. But from a security perspective, that feels like the sort of thing that companies will clam up about and never say a word.Kelly: Yes.Corey: Because I can wind up pouring a couple of drinks into people and get the real story of outages, or the AWS bill, but security stuff, they start to wonder if I'm a state actor, on some level. When you were building all of this, how did you wind up getting people to talk candidly and forthrightly about issues that if it became tied to them that they were talking to this in public would almost certainly have negative career impact for them?Kelly: Yes, so that's almost like a trade secret, I feel like. A lot of it is yes, over the years talking with people over, generally at a conference where you know, things are tipsy. I never want to betray confidentiality, to be clear, but certainly pattern-matching across people's stories.Corey: Yeah, we're both in positions where if even the hint of they can't be trusted enters the ecosystem, I think both of our careers explode and never recover. Like it's—Kelly: Exactly.Corey: —yeah. Oh, yeah. They play fast and loose with secrets is never the reputation you want as a professional.Kelly: No. No, definitely not. So, it's much more pattern matching and trying to generalize. But again, a lot of what can go wrong is not that different when you think about a developer being really tired and making a bunch of mistakes versus an attacker. A lot of times they're very much the same, so luckily there's commonality there.I do wish the security industry was more forthright and less clandestine because frankly, all of the public postmortems that are out there about performance issues are just such, such a boon for everyone else to improve what they're doing. So, that's a change I wish would happen.Corey: So, I have to ask, given that you talk about security, chaos engineering, and resilience-and of course, software and systems—all in the title of the O'Reilly book, who is the target audience for this? Is it folks who have the word security featured three times in their job title? Is it folks who are new to the space? What is your target audience start and stop?Kelly: Yes, so I have kept it pretty broad and it's anyone who works with software, but I'll talk about the software engineering audience because that is, honestly, probably out of anyone who I would love to read the book the most because I firmly believe that there's so much that software engineering teams can do to sustain resilience and security and they don't have to be security experts. So, I've tried to demystify security, make it much less arcane, even down to, like, how attackers, you know, they have their own development lifecycle. I try to demystify that, too. So, it's very much for any team, especially, like, platform engineering teams, SREs, to think about, hey, what are some of the things maybe I'm already doing that I can extend to cover, you know, the security cases as well? So, I would love for every software engineer to check it out to see, like, hey, what are the opportunities for me to just do things slightly differently and have these great security outcomes?Corey: I really want to thank you for taking the time to talk with me about how you view these things. If people want to learn more, where's the best place for them to find you?Kelly: Yes, I have all of the social media which is increasingly fragmented, [laugh] I feel like, but I also have my personal site, kellyshortridge.com. The official book site is securitychaoseng.com as well. But otherwise, find me on LinkedIn, Twitter, [Mastodon 00:30:22], Bluesky. I'm probably blanking on the others. There's probably already a new one while we've spoken.Corey: Blue-ski is how I insist on pronouncing it as well, while we're talking about—Kelly: Blue-ski?Corey: Funhouse pronunciation on things.Kelly: I like it.Corey: Excellent. And we will, of course, put links to all of those things in the [show notes 00:30:37]. Thank you so much for being so generous with your time. I really appreciate it.Kelly: Thank you for having me and being a fellow dinosaur nerd.Corey: [laugh]. Kelly Shortridge, Senior Principal Engineer at Fastly. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn, and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you've hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, along with an insulting comment about how our choice of dinosaurs is incorrect, then put the computer away and struggle to figure out how to open a door.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.

Dino Dome
Allosaurus vs Deinonychus teaser

Dino Dome

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2023 2:27


We hope you're enjoying the second season of Dino Dome! This week, returning winner Allosaurus must defend her title against the feathered raptor Deinonychus amid the secret tunnels and underground chambers of an Ancient Egyptian pyramid! Listen exclusively on the free ABC Kids listen app, or look for Kids listen on the ABC listen app.

Cabincast
Cabin(in the past)cast - Deinonychus: Your Dinosaurs Are Wrong #14

Cabincast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2023 32:53


Oliver and Tom are back with more TDAW! This week's dino really isn't very accurate... Check out the original video below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kFd5f75CN38&t=1s  

More Than Meets the Ear
Detour/Savage: That's a Big Pickle!

More Than Meets the Ear

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2023 134:29


Josh rants about Sideways, Trish demands to know everyone's favourite dinosaur, and Stuart makes references to pop culture from before everyone else was born. Also we occasionally talk about Transformers. Clips used are from: Transformers: Cybertron, produced by Entertainment One and GONZO Galaxy Force soundtrack by Megumi Ohashi The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy soundtrack by Paddy Kingsland "You Will Be Found" from Dear Evan Hansen by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, performed by Upper Room Theatre "Triceratops," "Deinonychus," "Ankylosaurus," and "Pteranodon" from Wee Sing Dinosaurs by Pamela Conn Beall and Susan Hagen Nipp "Ave Satani" from The Omen soundtrack by Jerry Goldsmith Pitch Meetings by Ryan George

Beyond Blathers
Deinonychus

Beyond Blathers

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2022 35:09


This week we're talking about deinonychus,  a dinosaur that you may never have heard of,  but which you would probably recognize! That's because this is the dinosaur that the creator of Jurassic Park based the book and film's famous velociraptors on. In this episode, we're finally shining a spotlight on this dinosaur that has been in the shadows for far too long!If you'd like to support the show, please check out our merch store over on Etsy where we sell stickers, sticker sheets, and postcards.Don't forget to subscribe and leave us a rating and review. To stay up to date and see our weekly episode illustrations, make sure to follow us on Instagram and Twitter. And don't forget to check out our TikTok!Beyond Blathers is hosted and produced by Olivia deBourcier and Sofia Osborne, with art by Olivia deBourcier and music by Max Hoosier. This podcast is not associated with Animal Crossing or Nintendo, we just love this game.

The Dictionary
#D64 (deice to deixis)

The Dictionary

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2022 30:34


I read from deice to deixis.     The invention of the deice machine by William Geer: https://www.adirondackalmanack.com/2019/05/william-c-geer-invented-plane-wing-deicing-device.html     Deinonychus was very closely related to Velociraptor and I would try to run away. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deinonychus     Here. Learn about deionization: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacitive_deionization https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/earth-and-planetary-sciences/deionization     The word of the episode is "deice".     Theme music from Tom Maslowski https://zestysol.com/     Merchandising! https://www.teepublic.com/user/spejampar     "The Dictionary - Letter A" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter B" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter C" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter D" on YouTube     Featured in a Top 10 Dictionary Podcasts list! https://blog.feedspot.com/dictionary_podcasts/     Backwards Talking on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmIujMwEDbgZUexyR90jaTEEVmAYcCzuq     dictionarypod@gmail.com https://www.facebook.com/thedictionarypod/ https://twitter.com/dictionarypod https://www.instagram.com/dictionarypod/ https://www.patreon.com/spejampar https://www.tiktok.com/@spejampar 917-727-5757

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast
A new tiny-armed, gigantic, megapredator

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2022 67:58


For links to every news story, all of the details we shared about Zapalasaurus, and our fun fact check out https://iknowdino.com/Zapalasaurus-Episode-408/Join us at www.patreon.com/iknowdino for dinosaur requests, bonus content, ad-free episodes, and more.Dinosaur of the day Zapalasaurus, a basal diplodocoid sauropod that lived in the Early Cretaceous in what is now Neuquén Province, Argentina.In dinosaur news this week:A new carcharodontosaurid with tiny arms, Meraxes gigas, helps show that all large-headed carnivores had relatively small armsGastroliths and Deinonychus teeth have been found associated with April the TenontosaurusScientists looked at the growth of the smallest (but not yet named) ornithopod that lived in what is now SpainAn opalized fossil may be a new dinosaur speciesThe Australian Opal Centre hosts an annual dinosaur fossil digUbirajara is being returned to BrazilPodokesaurus holyokensis became the official state dinosaur of MassachusettsDelaware has a state dinosaur, DryptosaurusThere are seven missing sculptures from Crystal Palace DinosaursLottie, the Triceratops statue from Louisville, Kentucky got a makeoverNBC is making a new natural history series show called Surviving EarthStephen Fry is hosting Dinosaur — with Stephen Fry, a four part series about dinosaurs in the Jurassic and CretaceousYou can play Dinosaur Fossil Hunter on SteamGames Radar published a list of the 10 best dinosaur games See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast
Another carnivore for Stromer's Riddle

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2022 57:07


For links to every news story, all of the details we shared about Magnosaurus, and our fun fact check out https://iknowdino.com/Magnosaurus-Episode-407/Join us at www.patreon.com/iknowdino for dinosaur requests, bonus content, ad-free episodes, and more.Dinosaur of the day Magnosaurus, A relatively small megalosauroid theropod that lived in the Middle Jurassic in what is now England.In dinosaur news this week:New sauropod Perijasaurus lapaz was discovered in ColombiaA new abelisaurid from the Bahariya Oasis adds yet another carnivorous group to the formationA sauropod was found in a backyard in PortugalThomas Carr and a team found fossils of T. rex, Triceratops, and Edmontosaurus on a 4-week expedition in the Badlands of MontanaA nearly complete juvenile hadrosaur with skin impressions was found in Dinosaur Provincial Park in CanadaThe Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences excavated three dinosaurs in Wyoming's Morrison Formation100 million-year-old dinosaur footprints were found in a restaurant in Sichuan province, China113 million year old dinosaur tracks were seen in Texas due to a severe droughtIn May, Hector the Deinonychus was auctioned off for $12.4 millionIn July, a Gorgosaurus skeleton was auctioned off for about $6 millionThe University of New Mexico opened a Natural History Science CenterPortland, Oregon had a cartoon dinosaur art exhibit this summerDinosaur Museum Altmühltal in Denkendorf, Germany had Little Al on displayThe Royal Tyrrell Museum launched the exhibit “Perspectives on the Art of Glen McIntosh”Hong Kong Science Museum opened “The Hong Kong Jockey Club Series: The Big Eight — Dinosaur Revelation” exhibitNew public science project Cretaceous Creatures lets 8th graders do real science with real fossils See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Jurassic Park Cast
Episode 25 - Version 4.4

Jurassic Park Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2022 82:00


Welcome to the Juras-Sick Park-Cast podcast, the Jurassic Park podcast about Michael Crichton's 1990 novel Jurassic Park, and also not about that, too.  Find the episode webpage at: Episode 25 - Version 4.4  In this episode, my terrific guest Kristoph Ochs returns to chat with me about:   COVID-19, extending sequels beyond their limits, SNALE, the new album, making music videos, the Shrek 2 Soundtrack, naming your kids, song title origins, geek rock, Cat in the Brain, Atom Age Vampire, creative restrictions, The Chronicles of Riddick, Tammy and the T-Rex, synopsis, charades, Denise Richards, Bernie Lomax, Paul Walker, Ellen Dubin, Terry Kiser, Sean Whalen, John Franklin, Stephen Segal, and when the next SNALE album will be out!   Plus dinosaur news about: "Osteology of Deinonychus antirrhopus, an unusual theropod from the Lower Cretaceous of Montana".  (1969) Nesting at extreme polar latitudes by non-avian dinosaurs Featuring the music of Snale https://snalerock.bandcamp.com/releases  Intro: T-Shirts.  Outro: Death of a Dream. The Text: This week's text is Version 4.4, spanning from pages 120 - 126.  Synopsis: Wu approaches Hammond to discuss restocking the park with Version 4.4. The dinosaurs are too fast, but he thinks he could tweak them so they meet the visitor's expectations, but Hammond isn't listening anymore, and dismisses him.  Discussions surround: The Dinosaurs, Re-create versus reconstruction, Park Management, and the Timeline.  Corrections: Side effects:  May cause you to enter into the Santa Clause, forcibly ripping you from your family to perform the ungodly actions of Santa Claus - That's karma: you should never have killed Santa! Find it on iTunes, on Spotify (click here!) or on Podbean (click here). Thank you! The Jura-Sick Park-cast is a part of the Spring Chickens banner of amateur intellectual properties including the Spring Chickens funny pages, Tomb of the Undead graphic novel, the Second Lapse graphic novelettes, The Infantry, and the worst of it all, the King St. Capers. You can find links to all that baggage in the show notes, or by visiting the schickens.blogpost.com or finding us on Facebook, at Facebook.com/SpringChickenCapers or me, I'm on twitter at @RogersRyan22 or email me at ryansrogers-at-gmail.com.  Thank you, dearly, for tuning in to the Juras-Sick Park-Cast, the Jurassic Park podcast where we talk about the novel Jurassic Park, and also not that, too. Until next time!  #JurassicPark #MichaelCrichton

Mars on Life
Hoarding Roasted Dinosaurs (121)

Mars on Life

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2022 91:58


Wide-ranging discussions? Have you heard this show before?? This week, Andrew and Ryan start off talking about the dwindling amount of water in Lake Mead and how this latest heat wave only intensifies the demand to address catastrophic climate change; when talking about deserts, it's easy to guess how "Natural Born Killers" is brought up. Then Sebastian joins them to unravel a viral TikTok video of Costco customers buying rotisserie chickens in bulk. Finally in a circular stream of consciousness, Ryan and Matt evolve the chicken discussion into a fanfare about dinosaurs (expect more of that discussion in a future bonus episode. These guys know their stuff, whether it's the Permian or Triassic Periods or the difference between a Deinonychus and a Utahraptor). Social media: Mars on Life: @marsonlifeshow on Twitter and Instagram Sebastian Schug: Seabass on YouTube Ryan Mancini: @mancinira (Twitter) and @manciniryan (Instagram) Andrew Martinez: @andrewomartinez (Twitter) Matt Fernandez: @matt_fern (Twitter) and @thewoodseyninja (Instagram) Artwork by Zachary Erberich (@zacharyerberichart) "Space X-plorers" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ "Del Rio Bravo" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mars-on-life-show/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mars-on-life-show/support

Laugh Again with Phil Callaway
Deinonychus and the Big Bang

Laugh Again with Phil Callaway

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2022 3:58


Listen to today's Laugh Again with Phil Callaway “Deinonychus and the Big Bang” Enjoy!

Jurassic Park Cast
Episode 16 - Malcolm

Jurassic Park Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2022 94:28


Welcome to the Juras-Sick Park-Cast podcast, the Jurassic Park podcast about Michael Crichton's 1990 novel Jurassic Park, and also not about that, too.  Find the episode webpage at: Episode 16 - Malcolm In this episode, my terrific guest Dr. David Hone chats with me about:  May Day, Victoria Day, high tea, Tea Cup Dinosaur hunters, excavating dinosaurs, Dr. Alan Grant, trace fossils, body fossils, eggs, fossil nomenclature, Computer Assisted Sonic Tomography fails, CAST process being non-viable, prospecting with drones, Velociraptor v. Deinonychus, making the best deductions, describing dinosaurs, Dilophosaurus, Tyrannosaurus, Stegosaurus, Man's Hubris and Science, West World and Andromeda Strain, Triceratops, sauropods, character backstories, Ian Malcolm, anti-technology paleontologists, the future of paleontology, photogrammetry, Eli Kish, AMNH 5027, tail vertebrae, Leaellynasaura, Crichton's research, pterosaurs, the Aviary, Cearadactylus, ornithocheirids, Bakker's Dinosaur Heresies, Dimorphodon and Jurassic World, Cryodrakon boreas,  www.DaveHone.gov.uk.  Plus dinosaur news about: Skeletal Adaptations of Ornitholestes, Struthiomimus, Tyrannosaurus The youngest dinosaur footprints from England and their palaeoenvironmental implications Featuring the music of Snale https://snalerock.bandcamp.com/releases  Intro: Supergroovy.  Outro: T-Shirts. The Text: This week's text is Malcolm, spanning from pages 71 – 76. Ian Malcolm introduces himself as a braggadocios, outspoken, and opinionated mathematician who's openly defiant of Hammond's island resort, believing whole-heartedly that Hammond has “a serious problem” (p. 73). Discussions surround: Feminism, timeline, Dodgson's man, calling all kids, and more! Side effects:  Pants becoming increasingly uncomfortable. Find it on iTunes, on Spotify (click here!) or on Podbean (click here). Thank you! The Jura-Sick Park-cast is a part of the Spring Chickens banner of amateur intellectual properties including the Spring Chickens funny pages, Tomb of the Undead graphic novel, the Second Lapse graphic novelettes, The Infantry, and the worst of it all, the King St. Capers. You can find links to all that baggage in the show notes, or by visiting the schickens.blogpost.com or finding us on Facebook, at Facebook.com/SpringChickenCapers or me, I'm on twitter at @RogersRyan22 or email me at ryansrogers-at-gmail.com.  Thank you, dearly, for tuning in to the Juras-Sick Park-Cast, the Jurassic Park podcast where we talk about the novel Jurassic Park, and also not that, too. Until next time!  #JurassicPark #MichaelCrichton

Screens of the Stone Age
Episode 28: Jurassic Park (1993)

Screens of the Stone Age

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2022 70:31


We were so preoccupied with whether or not we could we didn't stop to think if we should! On this episode we're joined by Dr. Elsa Panciroli to discuss Steven Spielberg's classic Jurassic Park (1993), even though it has nothing to do with the Stone Age. We all agree it is a perfect movie and possibly the best of all time, but we're still going to criticize its scientific accuracy, because that's what we do here. Follow Elsa on Twitter:https://twitter.com/gscienceladyand Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/elsapanciroli/Read Elsa's Books:Beasts Before Us: The Untold Story of Mammal Origins and Evolution (2021) https://www.bloomsbury.com/ca/beasts-before-us-9781472983978/The Earth: A Biography of Life (2022) https://www.nhbs.com/the-earth-a-biography-of-life-book Get in touch with us!Twitter: @SotSA_Podcast Facebook: @SotSAPodcastLetterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/sotsa/ Email: screensofthestoneage@gmail.com In this episode:The oldest DNA found so far: https://www.science.org/content/article/mammoth-molars-yield-oldest-dna-ever-sequencedAnimals that can change sex: https://www.treehugger.com/animals-can-change-their-sex-4869361How old is amber? https://nammu.com/eng/how-old-is-amber/Docodonta – Mesozoic mammals: https://fossil.fandom.com/wiki/Docodonta 3D-printed mummy voicebox: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O66mc-bDeXUThagomizer: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ThagomizerHerbivores aren't friendly: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/HerbivoresAreFriendlyInaccurate dinosaurs in Jurassic Park: https://screenrant.com/jurassic-park-completely-wrong-about-dinosaurs/Jurassic Park's Velociraptors were actually based on Deinonychus: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/you-say-velociraptor-i-say-deinonychus-33789870/Raptor Red (1996) by a guy named Bakker: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.ca/books/7633/raptor-red-by-robert-t-bakker/9780553575613

Screens of the Stone Age
Episode 28: Jurassic Park (1993)

Screens of the Stone Age

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2022 70:32


We were so preoccupied with whether or not we could we didn't stop to think if we should! On this episode we're joined by Dr. Elsa Panciroli to discuss Steven Spielberg's classic Jurassic Park (1993), even though it has nothing to do with the Stone Age. We all agree it is a perfect movie and possibly the best of all time, but we're still going to criticize its scientific accuracy, because that's what we do here. Follow Elsa on Twitter: https://twitter.com/gsciencelady and Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/elsapanciroli/ Read Elsa's Books: Beasts Before Us: The Untold Story of Mammal Origins and Evolution (2021) https://www.bloomsbury.com/ca/beasts-before-us-9781472983978/ The Earth: A Biography of Life (2022) https://www.nhbs.com/the-earth-a-biography-of-life-book Get in touch with us! Twitter: @SotSA_Podcast Facebook: @SotSAPodcast Letterboxd: https://letterboxd.com/sotsa/ Email: screensofthestoneage@gmail.com In this episode: The oldest DNA found so far: https://www.science.org/content/article/mammoth-molars-yield-oldest-dna-ever-sequenced Animals that can change sex: https://www.treehugger.com/animals-can-change-their-sex-4869361 How old is amber? https://nammu.com/eng/how-old-is-amber/ Docodonta – Mesozoic mammals: https://fossil.fandom.com/wiki/Docodonta 3D-printed mummy voicebox: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O66mc-bDeXU Thagomizer: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thagomizer Herbivores aren't friendly: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/HerbivoresAreFriendly Inaccurate dinosaurs in Jurassic Park: https://screenrant.com/jurassic-park-completely-wrong-about-dinosaurs/ Jurassic Park's Velociraptors were actually based on Deinonychus: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/you-say-velociraptor-i-say-deinonychus-33789870/ Raptor Red (1996) by a guy named Bakker: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.ca/books/7633/raptor-red-by-robert-t-bakker/9780553575613

Pshht Themes
Jurassic Park: Look at All the Blood!!

Pshht Themes

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2022 140:59


Erin and Brennan travel to Isla Nublar, an island off of Costa Rica, where "Dinosaurs Rule the Earth." There they find an incompetent theme park devoid of proper staffing, proper infrastructure, and proper safety protocols. We're talking a place with a massive law suit waiting to happen! Oh wait! That's right, they ARE being sued after a poor man was torn apart by a Velociraptor!! Sorry, to our paleontologist fans, we mean Deinonychus. We all know the story: people go to place filled with things that can eat you and they do. Luckily we have Jeff Goldblum's abs and weird growl-laugh to fight off the scary T-Rex that is closer than it appears. We have Dr. Grant being the Indiana Jones of dinos, Dr. Sattler unencumbered by fear, Lexy getting sneezed on, and poor little Tim (they're always named Tim or Timmy right?) almost getting killed by everything. So strap yourself in, or tie your seatbelts together, because when all is said and done, Life Finds a Way. 

Now You Know
Jurassic World: Dominion

Now You Know

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 4:02


Now You Know - Jurassic World: Dominion - Episode 77The iconic Jurassic Park franchise is returning with the sixth installment and third film of the Jurassic World trilogy. Created by Michael Crichton through his novels, the films were immortalized by Steven Speilberg through the groundbreaking 1993 film, Jurassic Park. Jurassic World Dominion is set to hit theaters this Friday the 10th of June. Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard will reprise their roles as the lead characters and will be joined by the cast from the original trilogy, Sam Neill, Jeff Goldblum, and Laura Dern. Actor Joseph Mazzello who played the young boy named Tim in the original film, fondly remembered for his love for dinosaurs, has hinted on social media through a cryptic tweet that he may return for the final film. The three landmark films of the franchise Jurassic World: Dominion, the final film, Jurassic World, the first film of the new era, and the original film Jurassic Park share a unique connection with their release dates. Jurassic World: Dominion will be released on June 10, just a day before Jurassic Park's release on the 11th of June in 1993, and just two days before Jurassic World's release on June 12 in 2015.Sam Neil confirmed in an episode of The Graham Norton Show that the legendary Giganotosaurus, which translates to giant southern lizard, will make its live-action debut in the film. It is one of the largest predators to have ever walked on land and is believed to be even bigger than the Tyrannosaurus Rex or T-Rex. It is from the late Cretaceous period and found its habitat in a region which is now Argentina.  A popular fan theory online indicates that the Ingen corporation may have found a way to clone extinct mammals as well. Eagle-eyed viewers have noticed that in Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom there was a collection of fossils in Lockwood Manor that belonged to the sabretooth tiger. A hint that they may have the technology to bring the extinct animal back to life. When Michael Crichton initially wrote the book, the scientific knowledge about the appearance of dinosaurs was limited. Thus, several dinos have not been accurately depicted in the films. For instance, the Velociraptors in the films were just slightly larger than modern-day chickens and even had feathers like the chickens in real life. The real name of the animals shown in the film is Deinonychus antirrhopus. These errors were addressed in the films as genetic anomalies caused due to mixing DNA from other animals that were used to create these dinos in a lab.The prologue footage released for Jurassic World: Dominion is set in the Mesozoic era and featured unaltered dinosaurs. It depicts the dinosaurs in their natural habitat and resembles how they should look based on the latest scientific evidence. However, the epic battle in the prologue scene, between two legendary predators the Tyrannosaurus Rex and the Giganotosaurus, would have never happened as there are several historical inaccuracies. Not only did the Tyrannosaurus Rex and Giganotosaurus belong to two different continents, but they also existed several million years apart. Well, that's the OTTplay Now You Know for today, until the next episode it's your host Nikhil signing out.Aaj kya dekhoge OTTplay se poochoWritten by Ryan Gomez

Viced Rhino: The Podcast
The Bible Says Fire Breathing Crocodiles Exist!

Viced Rhino: The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2022 20:06


David Rives talks about Dinosaurs. Naturally, this leads us to dragons and fire breathing crocodiles.Sources:“Soft Tissue” in Dinosaur Bones: What Does the Evidence Really Say?: https://bit.ly/3Ks2UrtHow Dinosaurs' Teeth Reveal What They Ate: https://bit.ly/3F5shyjVelociraptor: Facts About the 'Speedy Thief': https://bit.ly/3rWG84vThe Predatory Ecology of Deinonychus and the Origin of Flapping in Birds: https://bit.ly/36Y0KSMRadiocarbon in Dinosaur Fossils: Compatibility with an Age of Millions of Years: https://bit.ly/39kntJzOriginal Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7nXaNk06RMAll my various links can be found here:http://links.vicedrhino.com

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast
A new velociraptor relative with hornlets

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2022 48:30


For links to every news story, all of the details we shared about Tenontosaurus, and our fun fact check out https://iknowdino.com/Tenontosaurus-Episode-376/Join us at www.patreon.com/iknowdino for dinosaur requests, bonus content, ad-free episodes, and more.Dinosaur of the day Tenontosaurus, the ornithopod which is mostly known for being eaten by Deinonychus.In dinosaur news this week:A new raptor, Kuru kulla, was found in Mongolia with small hornlets above its eyesLess than ten complete, articulated, sauropod necks have been describedThe Cleveland Museum of Natural History is getting its own Dippy the DiplodocusA tracksite on a sheer cliff was recreated in VR so visitors can see itDwayne “The Rock” Johnson revealed he's a fan of Stan the T. rex, but bought a replica skull and not the original skeletonSupport our show and get our new Fighting Dinosaurs T-shirt and merch. The design features the real life moment of a fighting Velociraptor and Protoceratops just before they were fossilized together. Check it out and the amazing designs from our contest winners at bit.ly/iknowdinostoreSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast
A New raptor in Europe and a toothless theropod in Brazil

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2022 68:55


For links to every news story, all of the details we shared about Probactrosaurus, links from David Levering, and our fun fact check out https://iknowdino.com/Probactrosaurus-Episode-371/Join us at www.patreon.com/iknowdino for dinosaur requests, bonus content, ad-free episodes, and more.Dinosaur of the day Probactrosaurus, a hadrosauroid that lived in the Late Cretaceous in what is now Inner Mongolia, China.Interview with David Levering, Camps Director at the Fort Hays State University's Sternberg Museum of Natural History and creator of the Sternberg Museum of Natural History Online. Check out our video of the virtual museum at https://youtu.be/MCbdT3xOIBMIn dinosaur news this week:The first toothless ceratosaur from South America, Berthasaura leopoldinae, was found in Brazil sourceA new Deinonychus-sized raptor, Vectiraptor greeni, was found on the Isle of Wight sourceMarvel's Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur animated series has a new trailer sourceA new photo from Jurassic World: Dominion shows Owen Grady taming a Parasaurolophus in the snow sourceThis episode is brought to you by our patrons. We just released a bonus episode covering many more paleontological discoveries for all of our patrons. Head to Patreon.com/iknowdino to get access and help us keep making the show.Tell us what you think about our show in our 2021 Year End Survey! We want our show to be as enjoyable as possible, and your input will help us improve. Head to bit.ly/ikdsurvey21 to leave us your feedback.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Museo Del Desierto
Deinonychus

Museo Del Desierto

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2021 0:37


Audioguie 26

Museo Del Desierto
Deinonychus

Museo Del Desierto

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2021 0:38


Audiogía 26

Dinosaur George Kids - A Show for Kids Who Love Dinosaurs

It was one of the larger members of the raptor family and its discovery changed the way paleontologists looked at dinosaurs. Join us for a look at the dinosaurs named "Terrible Claw". 

Love in the Time of Chasmosaurs
Episode 8: The valley of Ely and the Dromaeosaur Sanctuary

Love in the Time of Chasmosaurs

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2021 64:28


In which we finally answer the age old question: Is the "P" in "pterosaur" silent? (no, it isn't). The LITC crew discuss one of history's most celebrated palaeoartists, the late Ely Kish, and her work for Dale Russell's An Oddyssey in Time. Some uf us are big fans, while others need some convincing... Jed Taylor discusses the trials and tribulations of the beginning palaeoartist whose work blew up out of nowhere, and guides us through his famous Dromaeosaur Sanctuary. Who is Ray Jurassic and where did he get those two Deinonychus?   Show notes at chasmosaurs.com

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast
A new Parasaurolophus-like crested dinosaur

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2021 76:25


For links to every news story, all of the details we shared about Amygdalodon, links from Nussaïbah & Emma, and our fun fact check out https://iknowdino.com/Amygdalodon-Episode-340/To get access to lots of patron only content check out https://www.patreon.com/iknowdinoDinosaur of the day Amygdalodon, the first sauropod ever described in Argentina.Interview with Nussaïbah Raja-Schoob and Emma Dunne, Together Emma (@emmadnn) and Nussaïbah (@mauritiantales) found a disconnect in where fossils were discovered and where the researchers were from. They were recently interviewed by the New York Times about decolonizing paleontology. Follow their work at paleoscientometrics.github.io/In dinosaur news this week:A new hadrosaur, Tlatolophus galorum, has a Parasaurolophus-like crestA man in Spain passed away after getting stuck in a Stegosaurus statueThe company Blue Origin recently sent some dinosaur fossils into spaceEromanga Natural History Museum in Queensland, Australia just opened their new reception and coffee shopThe T. Rex Discovery Centre is open again in Eastend, Saskatchewan, CanadaLiberty Science Center has the SUE: The T. rex Experience exhibit in Jersey City, New JerseyThe Austrian Mint has a new glow in the dark coin featuring Deinonychus fighting XenoceratopsA sauropod sculpture of over 6,000 corks named "Winasaur" was built in North Fork, New YorkThe mysterious sculptor who has been making dinosaurs out of twigs, twine, and bone in New Jersey has been revealedA South Carolina man pranked his friend by having strangers leave "dinosaur roars" in his voicemailThis episode is brought to you in part by BetterHelp which offers professional counseling done securely online. You can get 10% off your first month by visiting betterhelp.com/ikdThis episode is brought to you by Unidragon. Their beautiful wooden puzzles feature pieces which are each unique laser-cut shapes. Check out their dragon, owl, and other animal puzzles at Unidragon.com and use promo code dino for 10% off your purchase.

Jurassic Fans: A Rather Nerd Pod
Ingen Raptor, aka Deinonychus (HAITD - Velociraptor Edition Part 1)

Jurassic Fans: A Rather Nerd Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2021 29:59


As you ordered on Instagram, dear listeners, this week we're tackling the Velociraptor clone that Ingen has kindly produced. Was the real animal smart enough to open doors, hunt in packs and eat chocolate? Join us today to discuss the Raptor accuracy and hear our own shameful tales of what being chased by a feathery creature feels like. Find us on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/jurassicfansarathernerd/ and Éverton at https://www.instagram.com/evertons.paz/ Music in this audio - Song 02 Theme From Jurassic Park from Jur - Universal Pictures Film Music Album Jurassic Park Writers John Williams Remix by: Music by Approaching Nirvana http://youtube.com/user/approachingnirvana Song: Fade Away Listen to the song on Spotify: https://spoti.fi/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jurassicfansofficial/message

Encyclopedia Adam!
Coolest Cretaceous Dinosaurs!

Encyclopedia Adam!

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2021 13:12


Take a ride back to the Cretaceous to learn the coolest facts about Deinonychus, Microraptor, and T-Rex!  Awesome facts for kids by a kid! Eight-year-old Adam is an expert in dinosaurs and can't wait to travel back with you to this cool time period!

Trolls of the Two Tonne Bridges | D&D Podcast

The Battle of Malar's Throat intensifies as Raana wildshapes into a Deinonychus.   Join us every Tuesday.   Please subscribe, download and review us! https://linktr.ee/TotTTBpodcast   With great thanks and love, Trolls of the Two Tonne Bridges uses music and sound from the following artists:   3 Ghosts I 8 Ghosts I by Nine Inch Nails Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike license License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/us/   Volatile Reaction by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/5014-volatile-reaction License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/   Vanishing by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4578-vanishing License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/   City Overrun by Zombies by Michael Ghelfi YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/MichaelGhelfi Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/MichaelGhelfi   Zombies Attacking Door by Michael Ghelfi YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/MichaelGhelfi Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/MichaelGhelfi   Various by Tabletop Audio Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (All audio may have been edited for length or context)

Zoo de fósiles - Cienciaes.com
Deinonychus, la garra terrible.

Zoo de fósiles - Cienciaes.com

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2020


Hace unos 110 millones de años, en el Cretácico Inferior, vivía en los Estados Unidos Deinonychus, un dinosaurio depredador de hasta tres metros y medio de largo emparentado con el velocirraptor. Sus fósiles se han encontrado en los estados de Montana, Utah, Wyoming, Oklahoma y Maryland. Deinonychus vivía en bosques tropicales y subtropicales pantanosos, semejantes a los pantanos de la actual Luisiana. Allí habitaban también cocodrilos y dinosaurios, como el gran depredador Acrocanthosaurus y varias especies de herbívoros: el acorazado Sauropelta, el enorme Sauroposeidon y Tenontosaurus, del que ya hemos hablado en Zoo de fósiles. Michael Crichton se basó en este dinosaurio para crear los velocirraptores de su novela “Parque Jurásico”. Les cambió el nombre simplemente porque “velocirraptor” le parecía más dramático.

Cienciaes.com
Deinonychus, la garra terrible. - Zoo de fósiles

Cienciaes.com

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2020


Hace unos 110 millones de años, en el Cretácico Inferior, vivía en los Estados Unidos Deinonychus, un dinosaurio depredador de hasta tres metros y medio de largo emparentado con el velocirraptor. Sus fósiles se han encontrado en los estados de Montana, Utah, Wyoming, Oklahoma y Maryland. Deinonychus vivía en bosques tropicales y subtropicales pantanosos, semejantes a los pantanos de la actual Luisiana. Allí habitaban también cocodrilos y dinosaurios, como el gran depredador Acrocanthosaurus y varias especies de herbívoros: el acorazado Sauropelta, el enorme Sauroposeidon y Tenontosaurus, del que ya hemos hablado en Zoo de fósiles. Michael Crichton se basó en este dinosaurio para crear los velocirraptores de su novela “Parque Jurásico”. Les cambió el nombre simplemente porque “velocirraptor” le parecía más dramático.

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast
Alaskan raptors and Swiss sauropodomorphs

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2020 64:49


For links to every news story, all of the details we shared about Atrociraptor, links from Evan Johnson-Ransom, and our fun fact check out https://iknowdino.com/Atrociraptor-Episode-293/To get access to lots of patron only content check out https://www.patreon.com/iknowdinoDinosaur of the day Atrociraptor, a raptor about the size of Dromaeosaurus, but more closely related to its distant ancestor Deinonychus.Interview with Evan Johnson-Ransom, Master’s student & McNair Fellow studying under Eric Snively at Vertebrate Paleontology Research Labs at Oklahoma State University. Currently his research is focused on Tyrannosaurs. Follow him on twitter @EJR_PaleoIn dinosaur news this week:A new dromaeosaurid jaw piece from Alaska points to year round polar carnivoresA new sauropodomorph from northern Switzerland named SchleitheimiaSVP will be held virtually this yearScreenrant shared why Batman has a dinosaur in his caveThe Plant Riverside District is having a contest to name its Amphicoelias fraggillimus replicaGoogle recently launched augmented reality dinosaurs in their search

Lagrange Point
Episode 386 - T-rex, Raptors and Giant Squid go a hunting

Lagrange Point

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2020 17:04


How fast did T-Rex really go? Was it a sprinter or an endurance runner? Being chased by a T-Rex is scary, but you have to be ready for a marathon not a sprint. T-Rex's long legs helped it be efficient rather than speedy. Did raptors hunt in packs or just near each other? What links Komodo dragons and hunting raptors? Can we figure out if raptors hunted in packs by studying their teeth? Can Komodo dragons help bust Jurrassic Park myths? We also find out about an epic battle between Giant squid and a fish trapped for eternity as fossils. T. Alexander Dececchi, Aleksandra M. Mloszewska, Thomas R. Holtz, Michael B. Habib, Hans C. E. Larsson. The fast and the frugal: Divergent locomotory strategies drive limb lengthening in theropod dinosaurs. PLOS ONE, 2020; 15 (5): e0223698 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0223698 J.A. Frederickson, M.H. Engel, R.L. Cifelli. Ontogenetic dietary shifts in Deinonychus antirrhopus (Theropoda; Dromaeosauridae): Insights into the ecology and social behavior of raptorial dinosaurs through stable isotope analysis. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 2020; 109780 DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2020.109780 University of Plymouth. (2020, May 6). Fossil reveals evidence of 200-million-year-old 'squid' attack. ScienceDaily. Retrieved May 15, 2020 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/05/200506133625.htm

HölleHölleHölleCast
Episode 13 - DinoDinoDinoCast: Jurassic Park (feat. Kevin)

HölleHölleHölleCast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2020 110:27


In dieser zweiten Film Folge reden Paul, Jan und Freund der Show Kevin über einen weiteren Klassiker der Filmgeschichte: Jurassic Park. Schnallt euch an, es wird ein wilder Ritt. DAS Jeff Goldblum GIF https://tenor.com/view/lol-yay-awesome-wow-funny-gif-9167654 Raptor Größenvergleich: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deinonychus#/media/File:Dromaeosaurs.png Tips gegen Langeweile: Philosophy Tube: https://www.youtube.com/user/thephilosophytube Ska Tune Network: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCji2l5wcs6GoYJY1GgG_slQ Hbomberguy: https://www.youtube.com/user/hbomberguy Donoteat: https://www.youtube.com/user/donoteat01 Well There's Your Problem: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCPxHg4192hLDpTI2w7F9rPg Contrapoints: https://www.youtube.com/user/ContraPoints Folgt uns auf Twitter: https://twitter.com/HHHCast Jan: https://twitter.com/YungPatrickOne Paul: https://twitter.com/hat_recht Magnus: https://twitter.com/therealmagnusk Kommt außerdem auf den (englischsprachigen) Discord unter: leftists.eu

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast
Dinosaurs fossilized as opal

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2019 56:28


Dinosaur of the day Unenlagia, the Deinonychus-sized raptor from the Late Cretaceous of Argentina.Interview with Jenni Brammall, special projects coordinator at the Australian Opal Centre in Lightning Ridge, NSW. She manages the opalized fossil collections at AOC and is helping to organize construction of the massive new Australian Opal Centre building. Check out our video of the AOC or checkout their Facebook page.Our book 50 Dinosaur Tales is now available as an Audibook! It has all 50 of our dinosaur short stories from discoveries in the last 5 years. It also includes 100+ Other dinosaur discoveries in fact sheets. Get a copy or add it to your wishlist by going to bit.ly/50dinosaurtalesIn dinosaur news this week:The new theropod, Lajasvenator, was tiny for a carcharodontosauridHannah the ceratopsian is a Sytracosaurus albertensisDinosaur footprints have been found in the former Qing Dynasty imperial summer resortThe Jurassic World YouTube Channel has a new motion comic seriesTo get access to lots of patron only content check out https://www.patreon.com/iknowdinoFor links to every news story, all of the details we shared about Unenlagia, links from Jenni Brammall, and our fun fact check out https://iknowdino.com/Unenlagia-Episode-264/

Prehistoric Life
03 Deinonychus and protoceratops

Prehistoric Life

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2019 12:11


we talk about Deinonychus and Protoceratops

deinonychus protoceratops
FightWrite
FightWrite - Fighting a Real Deinonychus

FightWrite

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2019 20:52


On this episode we look at how your character deals with an actual Deinonychus.

Animorphology
Episode 18.5: No Comet, No Comment

Animorphology

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2019


In this episode:Dinosaurs!Gray has been confidently mispronouncing “deinonychus” for yearsIs this the best Rachel book?Revisiting the Band of Five rolesMore time travel philosophyOuter space provided broccoli and antsK.A. Applegate keeps up with scientific theoriesA song about Deinonychus

Campaign Notes Podcast
Episode 28-Prepare to Deinonychus

Campaign Notes Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2019 72:25


No Mr. Cod, I expect you to dei...nonychus.

House of Bob
House of Annihilation Chapter 19 [5E]

House of Bob

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2018 33:31


"Horrik's Upset (He's a Brave Man)"Having forged an uneasy alliance with Kozeph the Red Wizard and defeated a savage pack of Deinonychus, the party must take on their most fearsome foe yet: the King of FeathersAlbum Art: https://i.imgur.com/fg7cSWX.pngArtwork by @shaunmakesAudio Production by Astronomic AudioFeaturing:Shaun as The Dungeon MasterAlex as Horrik JonesCristina as DouglasDan as Leanni "Leanna" ServanaJake as Cranston ThorneSupport the Show:Patreon | EtsyContact Us:Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Discord | Email | hobcast.com“Twisted”, “Dragon and Toast”, “Minima”, “Constance”, “Zombie Chase”, “Artifact”, “Industrial Cinematic”, “Hidden Past”, “The Complex”, “Cortosis”, “Brittle Rille”Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast
Zuniceratops - Episode 206

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2018 86:58


Dinosaur of the day Zuniceratops, a ceratopsian that was discovered in New Mexico by an 8 year-old. Interview with Jingmai O'Connor, professor at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences who recently described the first ever fossilized dinosaur lung remains. In dinosaur news this week: A 130 million year old fossil from Hebei Province in China has been found The “Baofenglong fossil” recently went on display at Chongqing Yongchuan Museum Town Hall in China. An 80% complete 49 ft (15 m) long herbivore Residents near the Tumbler Ridge Museum voted to fund the museum with added attractions and services Most sauropod fossils are from adults. Dwarf sauropods have a younger distribution, but still mostly adults Several models of Yi qi extra wrist bone were proposed to find an orientation that may have worked with its patagial membranes Flight evolution can be categorized into 4 evolutionary phases: characters unrelated to flight, exapted traits, direct selection, and traits for longer flight duration Pterosaurs and maniraptorans couldn’t assume a bat-like pose Microraptor & Rahonavis could glide, Changyuraptor used it's tail for pitch control, but troodontids were too big (relative to their wings) to get off the ground Ichthyornis has a skull half way between Archaeopteryx and modern birds "Birds are the only group of animals that rival mammals in terms of brain size" Sauropod trackway “gauge” might not mean much A synchrotron of coprolite from an early dinosaur like Silesaurus opelensis showed lots of beetle remains including wings & beetle tibia Based on carbon-13 isotopes in Deinonychus and Tenontosaurus it appears that raptors were not pack hunters Thanks to guinea fowl walking through soft mud we are closer than ever to recreate how dinosaurs made their tracks The pectoralis of Archaeopteryx was smaller than modern birds, but may have still been large enough to achieve brief flight A study of Psittacosaurus braincases shows that 2 year-old brains elongate significantly (midbrain & olfactory tract/bulbs especially) Ugrunaaluk was smaller than its massive cousins like Edmontosaurus, possibly because of dwarfism from living in the arctic reaching about 18-19ft long A new ceratopsian was found in Grand staircase Escalante National Monument This episode is brought to you in part by TRX Dinosaurs, which makes beautiful and realistic dinosaur sculptures, puppets, and animatronics. You can see some amazing examples and works in progress on Instagram @trxdinosaurs And by Permia, makers of the coolest prehistoric clothing and collectibles this side of the Holocene! Their scientifically accurate t-shirts, hoodies, stickers, and figurines are available now. Get $5 off orders of $35 or more with the promo code IKNOWDINO To get access to lots of patron only content check out https://www.patreon.com/iknowdino For links to every news story, all of the details we shared about Zuniceratops, more links from Jingmai O'Connor, and our fun fact check out https://iknowdino.com/Zuniceratops-Episode-206/

Kid Friendly Dinosaur Fun Facts Podcast
Dinosaur Fun Fact of the Day - Episode 15 - Deinonychus

Kid Friendly Dinosaur Fun Facts Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2018 2:12


Facts About Deinonychus! Credits: Executive Producer: Chris Krimitsos Voice: Jimmy Murray "Upbeat Forever", "Winner Winner!" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Facts from Wikipedia Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License

Secret Dinosaur Cult
1. Deinonychus & Housemates: Museum of Filth

Secret Dinosaur Cult

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2018 60:41


Deinonychus & Housemates: Museum of FilthIn this first episode of Secret Dinosaur Cult, we discuss our experiences of living with housemates, the Deinonychus Antirrhopus and our daddy issues.Hosted by Sofie Hagen and Jodie Mitchell.Produced by Justine Hughes for Dying Alone Ltd.Jingle by Harriet Braine.Photo by Gavin Smart.Logo by Annaliese Nappa.Recorded at Phoenix Artist Club in London.Follow Secret Dinosaur Cult:Twitter: https://twitter.com/secretdinocultInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/secretdinosaurcult/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SecretDinosaurCult/And sign up for our newsletter at: https://www.secretdinosaurcult.com/newsletter/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

museum logo jingle filth housemates sofie hagen deinonychus secret dinosaur cult phoenix artist club
Aaron's World
Episode 19 - Deinonychus

Aaron's World

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2017 8:01


Aaron and INO hike to Raptor Ridge in search of the deadly Deinonychus and answer a question from Samantha. View full episode show notes at www.MyDogRocket.com

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast
Velociraptor - Episode 83

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2016 52:42


Interview with Geoff Jones, author of the adult thriller, The Dinosaur Four. Learn more about Geoff at his website, geoffjoneswriter.com. Montana has a new dinosaur, nicknamed "Big Monty", 18 ft tall dinosaur puppets roam Ann Arbor Michigan, new dinosaur museum exhibits, and Backyard Terrors a popular dinosaur attraction may get shut down if it can't meet zoning codes. Also our dinosaur of the day Velociraptor a small dromaeosaurid often confused with Deinonychus or Utahraptor (because of Jurassic Park). Visit http://www.IKnowDino.com for more information including a link to dinosaur sites near you. You can also visit https://www.patreon.com/iknowdino to get the inside scoop on I Know Dino

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast
Deinonychus - Episode 14

I Know Dino: The Big Dinosaur Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2015 45:39


Interview with paleo artist Matt Martyniuk, book publisher and founding member of the Dinosaur Wiki. Also dinosaur news, including the Kickstarter project for the webcomic Ninjasaur by Jason Horn and new animatronic dinosaurs at the Fukui Station in Japan. Also, dinosaur of the day Deinonychus, a raptor with a sickle like claw that is often mistaken for Velociraptor (including in Jurassic Park).   Visit http://www.IknowDino.com for more information including a link to dinosaur sites near you.

Past Time
Episode 8: Crocodiles are the Chomping Champions

Past Time

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2013 20:00


Fossils are the raw materials of paleontology, but if we want to know how an animal moved or ate, paleontologists, like Dr. Paul Gignac, need to study living animals, too. Dr. Gignac studies crocodylians, measuring their bite forces across species and as they grow up to figure out how the strongest bite in nature evolved. Using techniques drawn from mechanical engineering and physiology, Dr. Gignac discovered the relationship between body size and bite force in crocodiles, and developed equations to calculate those forces. Then he used these equations to calculate the bite forces of giant extinct crocodiles like Deinosuchus. He also studied the bite marks left by the sickle-clawed dinosaur Deinonychus to calculate dinosaur bite forces. There are so many questions to ask about extinct animals but there's also a lot left to learn about their living descendants! The lines between scientific disciplines get blurred and the questions just get more interesting in this episode of Past Time! The post Episode 8: Crocodiles are the Chomping Champions appeared first on Past Time Paleo.