• Captain Baka
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    584 days ago

    “Grüß Gott Frau Triceratops! Haben sie schon davon gehört, die Familie Tyrannosaurus ist letztens ausgestorben. Schrecklich oder? Man kann ja nur hoffen dass es uns nicht auch so geht nach diesem Asteroideneinschlag.”

    Dinosaurs - Ethyl Phillips

    • Diplomjodler
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      164 days ago

      Dieser Asteroideneinschlag ist doch nur ein Gerücht, das die Globalisten in die Welt gesetzt haben, um uns alle schwul zu machen!

      • Captain Baka
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        84 days ago

        Globalisten? Ich dachte die Techno-Nekromanten von Alpha Centauri?

  • @[email protected]
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    294 days ago

    ‘This post is a palaeontological disaster’ is a marvelous turn of phrase, and I intend to steal it for use at the first opportunity.

  • @[email protected]
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    194 days ago

    “This post is a paleontological disaster” is my favorite sentence of all I’ve read in this month and today’s the 30th! 😂❤️

  • @[email protected]
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    134 days ago

    Here’s half an hour of reconstructed dinosaur sounds.

    An ongoing study utilizing the most recent scientific data on dinosaur vocalizations. Sounds are produced by myself and digitally workshopped from modern non-syrinx based avian reptiles. Using skull and olfactory cavity proportions, one can attempt to recreate the flow of sound, frequency, and volume of each animal. Much study is required for each particular species, and often several phases are trashed due to general unlikelihood. The final results are based on acute representations of what sounds would be most comfortable and base-line for each animal. Video also includes other reptiles, even though they are much more difficult to produce accurately.

  • @leftzero
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    94 days ago

    We don’t even know what dinosaurs sound like

    Yes we do. They generally sound obnoxious as fuck.

    The ones from ~243 to 65 million years ago probably were just as annoying.

  • FuglyDuck
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    144 days ago

    The funny part about this is…

    We do know what some of them sounded like. (Well I forget which ones so, maybe they’re not Dino’s, but uh, yeah.) (also, big “maybe” attached. They took 3d scans of what they think are the vocal organs and ran air through a 3d printed version.)

    • NegativeNull
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      11
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      4 days ago

      That was an exaggerated bit in the Lost World movie, but vocalizations are mostly done with soft tissue, which isn’t fossilized.

      • FuglyDuck
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        54 days ago

        They found a fossilized Anklyosaurus larynx, which is what I 3d printed.

        I got the file from a chain of friends passing the STL along, and highly-scientifically printed it in TPU and ran some air through just for the fun of it.

        It sounded like a squeaky fart and was worth about of laughter and jokes. My nephew may have been at the age of fart jokes and not knowing when they were dead.

    • @[email protected]
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      94 days ago

      well almost, we don’t know what they sounded like but we can make pretty decent educated guesses at what they probably sounded like in general.

      For example parasaurolophus very definitely seems to have a resonating structure, like a trombone strapped to their face, so it’d be weird if they didn’t make some sort of trumpeting sounds.

      Another big one is that dinosaurs generally didn’t have anything like a voicebox or whatever the thing is that birds use to make their calls, so we can be quite confident that most dinosaurs didn’t make any bird-like noises, and they wouldn’t have been able to do stuff like roar either.

      Which leaves us with t.rex probably just having sounded somewhat like an alligator.

    • @[email protected]
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      44 days ago

      I think there was also something about taking modern bird sounds and pitching the accordingly to body size and the fossilized vocal structures? Too lazy to look it up right now though, might as well have dreamt it.

      • FuglyDuck
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        34 days ago

        They definitely 3d printed their larynx- I know this because they published the model and I printed it in TPU.

        It sounded like a squeaky fart. (But I’m guessing TPU is nothing like the appropriate material.)

  • @[email protected]
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    94 days ago

    I just read in a podcast that studying the effects of Helium in our throats helped us understand better the acoustics of our throats, and from there we also gained some understanding into how other animals, including dinossaurs, sound like.

  • @[email protected]
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    64 days ago

    The podcast twenty thousand hertz has a good episode on what dinos might’ve sounded like.