Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Sept 12, 2013 22:19:01 GMT 5
Yeah, I admit that if the Deinonychus manages to disembowel the leopard with those claws then it will pretty much win this.
|
|
Weasel
Junior Member
Posts: 160
|
Post by Weasel on May 24, 2014 6:38:17 GMT 5
Leopard wins
|
|
|
Post by Infinity Blade on May 24, 2014 7:07:34 GMT 5
Deinonychus wins. Weapons are too much.
|
|
Carcharodon
Junior Member
Allosauroidea Enthusiast
Posts: 211
|
Post by Carcharodon on May 24, 2014 20:43:32 GMT 5
Deinonychus wins, it has the weaponry advantage.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Apr 2, 2018 6:18:03 GMT 5
Deinonychus wins due to reasons above.
|
|
|
Post by dinosauria101 on Feb 9, 2019 20:09:06 GMT 5
Mismatch in favor of Deinonychus. I would even favor it over a jaguar, due to better weapons.
|
|
rock
Senior Member Rank 1
Posts: 1,586
|
Post by rock on Apr 23, 2019 2:50:14 GMT 5
Deinonychus wins , 7/10 times
|
|
rock
Senior Member Rank 1
Posts: 1,586
|
Post by rock on Apr 23, 2019 2:51:32 GMT 5
Mismatch in favor of Deinonychus. I would even favor it over a jaguar, due to better weapons. i disagree , i think a male jaguar would be strong enough to beat a Deinonychus , and by no means is this a mismatch , the leopard has very sharp claws and jaws that can slash the dinosaur to pieces
|
|
|
Post by dinosauria101 on Apr 23, 2019 3:00:49 GMT 5
How so? The new weight estimate is 111 kg (derived from a more accurate weight estimation method), which gives it a 16 percent size advantage over even the largest subspecies of jaguar, which averages 95 kg. Furthermore, African leopards, some of the largest (I think), average 55 kg. Half the mass of a more agile foe with better stamina and vastly superior weapons. Care to reconsider your viewpoint?
|
|
rock
Senior Member Rank 1
Posts: 1,586
|
Post by rock on Apr 23, 2019 5:11:57 GMT 5
How so? The new weight estimate is 111 kg (derived from a more accurate weight estimation method), which gives it a 16 percent size advantage over even the largest subspecies of jaguar, which averages 95 kg. Furthermore, African leopards, some of the largest (I think), average 55 kg. Half the mass of a more agile foe with better stamina and vastly superior weapons. Care to reconsider your viewpoint? the jaguar would win , he is larger , heavier , more robust and has a stronger bite force , he can kill the dinosaur with a few good bites , not to mention the deinonychus was quite fragile , and the jaguar is the opposite and is very muscular and sturdy animaliaenthusiasts.proboards.com/thread/1156/jaguar-deinonychusalso check this thread out
|
|
|
Post by dinosauria101 on Apr 23, 2019 6:13:51 GMT 5
No, it is not larger, in fact it's at a 16 percent size disadvantage. Deinonychus also had a deadlier bite (that could even damage bone), and was not very gracile. But I'll make my argument in your thread.
Edit: No, I can't make an argument in that thread. You do know the admin of that site quit, right?
|
|
rock
Senior Member Rank 1
Posts: 1,586
|
Post by rock on Apr 23, 2019 15:36:28 GMT 5
No, it is not larger, in fact it's at a 16 percent size disadvantage. Deinonychus also had a deadlier bite (that could even damage bone), and was not very gracile. But I'll make my argument in your thread. Edit: No, I can't make an argument in that thread. You do know the admin of that site quit, right? i just wanted to show you what the others thought though from a past thread . anyways i still think the jaguar takes this with mid diffculty. also jaguar takes down prey with a stronger bite force then its self , like caimans , but the Deinonychus from what i study had a simlar body structure to a modren day cougar . so i think the jaguar would take it . plus lets not forget , that pound for pound the jaguar is the strongest big cat and can take down usally something its own size or smaller
|
|