Subject: Well...
Author:
Posted on: 2015-11-26 02:26:00 UTC

There is the frog DNA, and most likely some crocodile and monitor lizard as well: in one of the deleted scenes for the kitchen scene in the first film, one of the raptors had a snakelike tongue, so I'm guessing that there's some squamate DNA in there.

Personally, I liked the Ornithomimid Ground Sloth version of it-although granted, it was also the only one I was ever really exposed to growing up. However, there is another giant ornithomimid that's a bit more conservative in its appearance-it's called Beishanlong, and it's only a little bit smaller than Deinocheirus.

Wait, the London NHM has a pair?! So does the American Museum of Natural History in New York! I practically grew up in that museum, and I remember always bringing people to those arms and being smug when they couldn't guess what it was. Considering that they're the guys who were behind the expedition that found it, it's not that surprising, but I guess that it makes snese that it hasn't changed on my side of the ocean: the Museum only has so much space in the dinosaur hall. Another T. rex-sized animal definitely wouldn't be able to fit, although there is going to be an expansion soon that's gonna be big enough for a full-sized Dreadnoughtus skeleton, so maybe we'll see a restoration of the real-life Crocoduck as well.

Note: Is is weird that I take an abnormal amount of joy in the fact that there are now three different extinct animals that could be called Crocoducks? (Sigilmassasaurus/Spinosaurus, Deinocheirus, Anatosuchus) Suck it, Ray Comfort!

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