T-rex vs pliosaur – BBC

Paleobiologist Dr. Andre Rowe is a world leading expert in 3D visualisation of fossils. First thoughts – this thing is absolutely massive, and I will also add that the level of preservation is amazing. There’s this common misconception that fossilisation is just this really common thing that we get these complete

Skulls all the time, and that’s certainly not the case. This is actually a one in a million, maybe one in a billion type specimen here. Using the latest technology, Andre is carrying out the world’s first surface scan of a pliosaur skull. So right now we’re capturing basically hundreds of thousands of images

All at once, it’s essentially putting together a big 3D jigsaw puzzle. The end result is a really nice looking 3D model, which we can use for biomechanics, studying the anatomy. I think we’ll be able to unlock a lot of mysteries about what these sea monsters were doing.

And I’m really excited to see where it takes us. Once the scan has been finalised, I meet Andre at the University of Bristol to discuss his findings. Has he seen anything in the skull structure that shows our sea monster had the power of a truly deadly predator?

There’s some massive openings back here along the jawline, and that’s good for muscles to attach and bulge out. There’d be a muscle go running through there. Yes, we have the pterygoid muscle group, which is in a lot of big dinosaurs, and it’s integral to having a really strong bite.

And we’ve hypothesized that this particular pliosaur is kind of the apex predator in the Jurassic ecosystems that was living in. In the seas? Yes. Does the skull give you any information about what the animal’s prey might have been? The animal would have been so massive that I think it would have been able

To prey effectively on anything that was unfortunate enough to be in its space. A popular hypothesis is that these animals are actually ripping off the limbs of other animals to disable them from swimming away. And then kind of going in for a kill. So this is really the top predator?

Yes, I have very little doubt, just judging from how massive that skull is, I don’t see what could have possibly hurt it. How would it compare with T-Rex? I imagine it would be pretty comparable. And they were kind of both the respective apex predators in their ecosystems.

So I have no doubt that this was sort of like an underwater T-Rex, if you will. Okay. Let me ask you the million dollar question. In a battle between T-Rex and our pliosaur, who’s going to win? As much as it pains me and brings a tear to my eye to admit it,

I think my T-Rex is going to lose this fight. And then millions of years later, an American paleontologist will envision the scene and break down into tears.

T-rex vs pliosaur, who would win? 🤔

Sir David Attenborough investigates the discovery of a lifetime: the giant skull of a prehistoric sea monster, known as a pliosaur – the Tyrannosaurus rex of the seas!

#AttenboroughandtheGiantSeaMonster #iPlayer

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9 comments
  1. I get why the question is asked because people genuinely would ask this or at least think it. However, the scenario is flawed since there is no way that this is a fair fight since one lived on land and the other in the seas… where the battle were to happen would be the deciding factor of victory. So this question doesn’t really serve any scientific or useful purpose… David Attenborough is great tho.

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