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Post by dinosauria101 on Feb 11, 2020 16:56:09 GMT 5
^Shouldn't this discussion go in the big sauropods thread?
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Post by Infinity Blade on Feb 11, 2020 17:22:40 GMT 5
No reason to. I’m making (or at least hypothesizing) one relatively bold notion about one very specific aspect regarding sauropod anatomy. I’m not concerned with the size of the largest sauropods here (which is what that thread is built for).
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all
Junior Member
Posts: 238
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Post by all on Jun 7, 2020 19:34:48 GMT 5
Since some were talking about sauropods I believe that the largest one has not been found yet. Or maybe it has been but the estimate of size is based on only on leg bone so it's size and structure is debatable.
I believe water bear can withstand high amount of radiation.
I believe occasionally Peregrine falcon can dive above speed of 400 km an hour.
I believe Tasmanian creature exists
I believe that there are birds that can dive straight down
I believe that there is or was snake of about 12-15 meters in Congo region of Africa in early twentieth century.
I believe that there are still unknown species of medium to large animals in remote areas of the world.
I believe that nonlinear long time potentiation can in theory be achieved by carbon based life form (Although I don't know exactly how it would happen)
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Post by DonaldCengXiongAzuma on Jun 8, 2020 12:16:13 GMT 5
A large male grizzly bear, Kodiak bear, and polar bear are stronger than any big cat both extinct and extant.
Bears vs felines at weight parity is debatable.
Vultures are the best ground scrappers out of all birds.
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all
Junior Member
Posts: 238
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Post by all on Jun 9, 2020 17:02:42 GMT 5
You don't put a cat into bear fight that is true.
But what about pound per pound
Bear would have an advantage over most if not all modern cats even pound per pound
But pound per pound against smilodon would be an even match. And American cave lion might even have little bit of an advantage
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