Walking with beasts

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Walking with Monsters | Walking With Wikis | Fandom powered by Wikia Prehistoric Animals In A Field, Prehistoric Dinosaur Battle Scene, Giant Prehistoric Bugs, Spinosaurus In Prehistoric Forest, Prehistoric Tree Meme, Dinosaur Era, Walking With Dinosaurs, Giant Animals, Prehistoric World

Walking with Monsters: Life Before Dinosaurs - broadcast in North America as Before the Dinosaurs: Walking with Monsters - is a three-part British documentary film series about life in the Paleozoic, bringing to life extinct arthropods, fish, amphibians, synapsids, and reptiles. It is narrated by Kenneth Branagh, and by Edward Gero in the American version. Using state-of-the-art visual effects, this prequel to Walking with Dinosaurs shows for example how a two-ton predatory fish came on…

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three wild animals are running in the grass

Hyaenodon was a carnivore which lived during the Eocene to Miocene epochs in the Northern Hemisphere. It is also an antagonist in Walking with Beasts (Land of Giants) Hyaenodon translates into "hyena tooth" even though the animal is nowhere near related to any feliforms, or any of the modern carnivores. However, they were more dangerous. One of the features that differentiate Hyaenodon from hyenas is size. The genus Hyaenodon has several species all ranging in size. The largest...

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an image of a dinosaur running in the wild

Diplodocus was a large sauropod dinosaur that lived in Late Jurassic North America. It could have reached a length of up to 27 metres or even beyond. They weighed between 11 and 15 or so tonnes. Diplodocus was the main dinosaur in Episode 2: Time of the Titans. The episode chronicles the journey of a young female from hatchling to adult. They face several dangers, including predation by Ornitholestes when less than a few minutes old as hatchlings, and when older, Allosaurus is shown...

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two large dinosaurs standing next to each other on top of a lush green field with trees in the background

Tried to make this a quick illustration. Done within 12hrs over two days. Illustration/fanart of the 'Walking with Dinosaurs' Utahraptor. Our understanding of the animal, especially its proportions, have vastly changed over the years since the documentary was aired. I decided to try and give it an update while staying true to the original design.

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an artist's rendering of a dinosaur with its mouth open and wings spread out

Dimetrodon was a pelycosaur, a non-therapsid synapsid genus that flourished during the Permian period, living between 295-265 MYA. Dimetrodon was an apex predator, among the largest of its day. It grew to up to 3½ meters (11 feet) in length and weighed 250 kilograms (550 lbs) (the size of a big cat). The name Dimetrodon means 'two measures of teeth', so named because it had a large skull with two different types of teeth (shearing teeth and sharp canine teeth), unlike reptiles...

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an image of a bird that is standing on one leg and looking to the side

And then, of course, there are the native predators.Walking with Beasts: Sabre Tooth Phorusrhacos, commonly known as a Terror Bird, was a large, flightless bird from the Pliocene to the Pleistocene. It was the top predator of its region until other predators from North America migrated to South America. Phorusrhacos was a large, carnivorous bird. It possessed a large beak which was hooked at the tip, like a modern eagle. At the top of its head was a small plumage of feathers. This...

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an image of a mammoth with the words walking with beasts on it's side

Walking with Beasts is an epic documentary series which takes a look at the animals and nature of the Cenozoic era, a time stretching back from 66 million years ago until present day. Some of the concepts it illustrates are the evolution of whales, horses, and humans.

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an elephant standing in the grass with its mouth open and it's head up

Deinotherium was a large proboscidean that lived from the Miocene to Pleistocene and an antagonist in Walking with Beasts (Next of Kin) Deinotherium was a large proboscidean mammal. It had the basic body plan like other elephants, except slightly larger and with curved tusks under its jaw. Unlike elephants, the tusks of Deinotherium were curved and pointed downwards. They also protruded from the tip of the lower jaw rather than the skull. It was once thought that Deinotherium had a...

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an image of two sharks in the water

Physogaleus is an extinct genus of prehistoric shark that lived in oceans worldwide from the Paleocene to Miocene epochs. Physogaleus is a moderately well known genus of sharks, and like all fossil sharks, are only known through fossilized teeth. Their teeth have been noted to be similar to that...

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