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utahraptor skeletal

Started by spinosaurus1, March 30, 2017, 06:45:25 PM

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spinosaurus1

Scott Hartman has now released the utahraptor skeletal, and it seems to been built like a Sherman tank



Simon

#1
 :o :o :o :o :o

WOW.  Now THAT was a RAPTOR.  Can you imagine a pack of those things descending upon its prey?  They were capable of taking down prey much larger than themselves. (I only question the tail - wouldn't it have been thicker - especially at the base?)

Alpha Predator of the mid-Cretaceous North America!

*Cue Phil Collins "Illegal Alien" song* :  "Its no fun, being an I-GUA-NO-DO-OON!!"  (*BOOM*  RACK ME!! I'm OUT!)

;D ;D ;D ;D

Simon


stargatedalek

Quote from: Simon on March 30, 2017, 07:22:12 PM
(I only question the tail - wouldn't it have been thicker - especially at the base?)
It certainly would have been, generally best to take Hartman's soft tissue with some salt.

Patrx

Certainly an intimidating profile! Here's Hartman's blog post on the matter:
http://www.skeletaldrawing.com/home/at-long-last-utahraptor

spinosaurus1



making a anatomy drawing of the skeletal. this thing really was a Sherman tank of dromaeosaurids

Halichoeres

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Tyto_Theropod

#7
Well, I definitely wouldn't want to mess with that thing! It's almost as if this branch of Dromaeosauridae were going the same way as Tyrannosauroidea and back-tracking from light, birdlike builds to something more akin to 'Carnosaurs'. Perhaps this big birb was filling a gap in the ecosystem at a time and place where animals such as Siats and the Carchardontosauridae were not present? AFAIK, remains of these animals aren't known until later strata in the Cedar Mountain Formation.
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Dinoguy2

Quote from: stargatedalek on March 30, 2017, 07:33:04 PM
Quote from: Simon on March 30, 2017, 07:22:12 PM
(I only question the tail - wouldn't it have been thicker - especially at the base?)
It certainly would have been, generally best to take Hartman's soft tissue with some salt.

I dunno, the newly revealed soft tissue outline around Anchiornis' tail is just as thin and probably what Hartman based this on. I do think that such a larger, beefier animal should probably have at least a slightly beefier tail than Anchiornis though.
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