Tyrannosaurus vs. Giganotosaurus
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Tyrannosaurus vs. Giganotosaurus
Which one would win in a one on one fight?
Keep in mind that a Tyrannosaurus has a bite force of a least 2,900 pounds of force (that was the amout from just a feeding mark), which is greater than any known animal.
Keep in mind that a Tyrannosaurus has a bite force of a least 2,900 pounds of force (that was the amout from just a feeding mark), which is greater than any known animal.
Last edited by Kintaro on 2003-02-07 01:42pm, edited 12 times in total.
Gigantasauraus winning against a T Rex in Jurassic Park III was a contrived piece of shit that made me hate that movie from that scene onward. T-Rex is king - Hail to the King baby!!!
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That was a Spinosaurus, which is even worse!Stravo wrote:Gigantasauraus winning against a T Rex in Jurassic Park III was a contrived piece of shit that made me hate that movie from that scene onward. T-Rex is king - Hail to the King baby!!!
Last edited by Kintaro on 2003-02-07 01:43pm, edited 4 times in total.
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This is probably a pretty evenly matched fight, unless there's some critical bit of information about Gigantasauraus that I'm missing (he's so recently discovered none of my references mention him). It would probably come down to the skill, experience, and luck of the individual animals. I think T-Rex might have better short-burst speed, just judging by the build of the legs and lower torso, which might give him the advantage, though it's possible Gigantasauraus might have had fractionally more raw power (not really enough to make a difference, though).
On a side note, the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia has mounted a cast of a Gigantasauraus directly over the front desk, so while you're paying for your ticket, there's a set of 6 inch teeth practically at eye level. Very nifty.
On a side note, the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia has mounted a cast of a Gigantasauraus directly over the front desk, so while you're paying for your ticket, there's a set of 6 inch teeth practically at eye level. Very nifty.
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That was Jack Horner's doing. He's got a bug up his ass about Rex being a scavenger and nothing else, and he was the technical advisor on that movie. Spinosaurus wouldn't stand a chance against a healthy adult Tyrannosaurus.Stravo wrote:Gigantasauraus winning against a T Rex in Jurassic Park III was a contrived piece of shit that made me hate that movie from that scene onward. T-Rex is king - Hail to the King baby!!!
Any city gets what it admires, will pay for, and, ultimately, deserves…We want and deserve tin-can architecture in a tinhorn culture. And we will probably be judged not by the monuments we build but by those we have destroyed.--Ada Louise Huxtable, "Farewell to Penn Station", New York Times editorial, 30 October 1963
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What's funny about that is wasn't a character based on him in Jurassic Park II that got eaten by one of the T-Rex's in the waterfall scene?RedImperator wrote:That was Jack Horner's doing. He's got a bug up his ass about Rex being a scavenger and nothing else, and he was the technical advisor on that movie. Spinosaurus wouldn't stand a chance against a healthy adult Tyrannosaurus.Stravo wrote:Gigantasauraus winning against a T Rex in Jurassic Park III was a contrived piece of shit that made me hate that movie from that scene onward. T-Rex is king - Hail to the King baby!!!
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No, that character was based on Bob Bakker (who I beleve was the technical advisor on JP II). Bakker and Horner are the two men most responsible for resurrecting dinosaurs' image in the latter half of the 20th century. Horner discovered the big Maiasaur nesting grounds in Montana that proved at least some species cared for their young, and Bakker worked with John Ostrom at Yale to basically trash all the theories that said dinosaurs were nothing but lumbering, overgrown lizards. Allen Grant's character was based on Horner in the original JP novel and movie.Stravo wrote:What's funny about that is wasn't a character based on him in Jurassic Park II that got eaten by one of the T-Rex's in the waterfall scene?RedImperator wrote:That was Jack Horner's doing. He's got a bug up his ass about Rex being a scavenger and nothing else, and he was the technical advisor on that movie. Spinosaurus wouldn't stand a chance against a healthy adult Tyrannosaurus.Stravo wrote:Gigantasauraus winning against a T Rex in Jurassic Park III was a contrived piece of shit that made me hate that movie from that scene onward. T-Rex is king - Hail to the King baby!!!
EDIT: Fun fact: Technically, Bob Bakker is credited with describing the type specimen for Homo sapiens. It seems Linneaus overlooked finding and describing a type specimen for humans when he created his classification system. Edward Drinker Cope, the co-founder of modern American palentology (and, incedently, the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia), requested in his will that he be made the type specimen and donated his skeleton to science, but because he some sort of bone damage from disease, they refused to do so. His body was kept in storage at the University of Pennsylvania. Nobody ever got around to doing it, and finally in I think 1992, Bob Bakker, who idolized Cope, actually got his hands on Cope's skull thanks to a pair of National Geographic journalists who were doing a story on palentologists and finally wrote a description and submitted it to whoever's in charge of these things. So technically, the type specimen for humanity is Edward Drinker Cope, described in the early 1990s by Bob Bakker, and humanity's native habitat is.....Philadelphia (so suck it, New York! You might have your "championships" and "functional economy" and might not be "a moribund post-industrial wasteland", but WE'RE the home of the species. Nyah).
Last edited by RedImperator on 2003-02-06 01:51pm, edited 1 time in total.
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No, Giganotosaurus was discovered '94 or '95. I don't remember Godzilla's enemies having a name like that after the discovery date.
Last edited by Kintaro on 2003-02-06 03:01pm, edited 1 time in total.
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If the T-Rex is supposed to be a scavenger then why is it believed that they have bad eyesight and can for the most part only detect movement? or was that a BS brainbug from JP ?
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Hey, let's not go comparing the man to Darkstar now. Horner has privately admitted he's partially doing this just to jerk people's chains and keep them thinking. His work with ornithopods and their social structure was revolutionary--he's the reason why almost nobody thinks dinosaurs were like turtles who abandon their young as soon as the eggs are laid.Kintaro wrote:And Dr. Horner (the equivalent to Darkstar in the T. rex: predator or scavenger debate) says that the Spinosaurus is the ultimate predator
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JP brainbug. I'm not sure if that was just a plot device or some theory that was in vogue at the time. I don't know of anyone who thinks T-Rex could only detect movement.Death from the Sea wrote:If the T-Rex is supposed to be a scavenger then why is it believed that they have bad eyesight and can for the most part only detect movement? or was that a BS brainbug from JP ?
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Interestingly enough, most of the wounds we've found on Rexes were from...other Rexes. Clearly, they weren't opposed to fighting each other. At least one Rex skeleton is believed to have wounds acquired while mating (a broken tail)!Kintaro wrote:Also, check out the bone scares on T. rex to find out what kinds of injuries this animal can take and survive, like broken necks
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Thanks RedI and Kintaro. now I know, and .... well you know the rest...
I do think that T-Rex would wipe the floor with the Gigantisauraus. Much like the T-Rex did at the end of JP with the velociraptors.
I do think that T-Rex would wipe the floor with the Gigantisauraus. Much like the T-Rex did at the end of JP with the velociraptors.
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