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Post by thesporerex on Apr 12, 2014 10:23:52 GMT 5
I support Deinonychus, its deimensionally larger and has larger claws has a more flesh tearing bite which would give it the upperhand in this senario imo.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Apr 2, 2018 1:02:20 GMT 5
Cougar wins, but at parity Deinonychus wins.
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Post by dinosauria101 on Feb 12, 2019 3:46:03 GMT 5
Mismatch in favor of Deinonychus, it's now 100 kg and we need a larger cat.
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dromaeosauridae117
Junior Member Rank 1
Paleontology student. Biology, chemistry, geology enthusiast.
Posts: 52
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Post by dromaeosauridae117 on Aug 3, 2019 7:55:37 GMT 5
Mismatch in favor of Deinonychus, it's now 100 kg and we need a larger cat. Deinonychus is now 100kg? That equates to 220 pounds, much higher than previous estimates. Can you provide a source stating deinonychus’ mass to be 100kg? I would love for that.
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Post by dinosauria101 on Aug 3, 2019 9:00:06 GMT 5
Mismatch in favor of Deinonychus, it's now 100 kg and we need a larger cat. Deinonychus is now 100kg? That equates to 220 pounds, much higher than previous estimates. Can you provide a source stating deinonychus’ mass to be 100kg? I would love for that. Here: besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/2041-210X.12226It's more up to date than the 78 kg methology
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Post by creature386 on Aug 3, 2019 13:57:50 GMT 5
I know that I argued against using the maximum for the cougar, but if it would otherwise be a mismatch and we don't want to abandon this thread, I guess we can use a specimen from the upper weight range (which happens to be 100 kg, too).
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Post by dinosauria101 on Aug 3, 2019 14:50:40 GMT 5
Probably not as one sided, but I'd still favor the dinosaur. It has a larger head, larger claws, is likely more agile, and has more stamina
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