Titanoboa vs T.rex video

Hiphopananomus
MemberCompsognathusJuly 29, 20148579 Views33 RepliesFound this I think it's pretty cool.
"Somewhere on this island is the greatest predator that ever lived. Second greatest predator must take him down."Roland Tembo"
"Jurassic park: The Lost World"
That works with Titanoboa because it and pythons are both constrictors(one's just bigger than the other). But that doesn't work with T.rex. It has very few similarities to crocs.
But many times scientist compare its comon features like bite force or the toufghnes of the skin.
besides if the Titanoboa eats it it probably would explode
Didn't say it didn't have anything in common, just very few things. A strong bite and scaly skin are about as far as it would go.
PS- Don't know what the snake eating a Rex has anything to do about it, but OK.
You say Spino would beat Titanoboa because of its claws and its suited for water. Answer me this: What if Spino met Titanoboa on land?
Jack of all trades. Master of none
I'm just saying one more thing, then I'm done.
I feel like if a Spino met a Titanoboa in the water, the snake would be a lot more agile than the Spino. So, I don't think the Spino would exactly have a water advantage.
I'm done here. Cool video Hipho and sorry it turned into this ;)
Of course, it depends on who strikes first if I'm not mistaken.
Jack of all trades. Master of none
Ok, yeah lets just stop, nobody is going to win no point in continuing this.
"Somewhere on this island is the greatest predator that ever lived. Second greatest predator must take him down."Roland Tembo"
"Jurassic park: The Lost World"
Sorry, just have to...
thats fine, haha :)
"Somewhere on this island is the greatest predator that ever lived. Second greatest predator must take him down."Roland Tembo"
"Jurassic park: The Lost World"
Cat, Alligators in Florida regularly kill burmese pythons in their swamps. But, There have been cases of the opposite happening.
No animal, when put in interspecific or intraspecific conflict, wins 100% point of the time. Unless its something ridiculous(ant vs Ampicoelias, anyone?)
Titanoboa was hyped like no other, it's abilities and natural prowess inflated by the likes of the smithsonian museum and eccentric paleontologists, who's quotes were cherry picked to make it seem like they were saying one thing, when they were in fact saying the exact opposite.
Nature doesn't deceive us; it is we who deceive ourselves.