
lxlplictz
MemberCompsognathusAug-08-2014 8:06 PMHey there, i was wondering about how effective were spino's arms in a head to head combat? If we look at this pic, which is pretty reasonable, I dont see how its arms could slash out at a preadtor of equal size, unless they started huging!
Because I thought that most preadtors arms couldnt sviel that far up or something like that! What are your thoughts, I think im complety wrong though!
No, No! Thats great! I just wanted to know who said that. Like nat geo or history channel or something! :3
probably more something like 15 meters.
Nature doesn't deceive us; it is we who deceive ourselves.
What this graph shows is i'm guessing is:
12m long Tyranoosaurus Rex
12.4m long Carcharodontosaurus (grew a bit lager)
13-14m long Spinosaurus (sub-adult)
Do you have a source/article for Spino's Arm length? Or that it had a certain degree of reach? Unless this is a new find, this theory didn't make sense.
I guess Giga was shown instead of Carcha. But this just brings up more questions. Giga was certainly not shorter than Rex. Same goes for Carcho and a couple other Theropods.
So, what this discussion is about makes no sense, but a piscivorous biped weighing 11 tons does?
Jack of all trades. Master of none
Wait just a damn minute, you're guessing that Rex to be 12m, and the Spino to be 13-14 m. That makes no sense because Rex is only up to Spino's shoulder, and that would be at least a 3-4 m difference.
Jack of all trades. Master of none
Beats me PX. I wouldn't worry about it if I were you.
Jack of all trades. Master of none
Enough with the "Giganotosaurus was bigger then tyrannosaurus,and so were numerous other theropods" hyping bull. All of those creatures have had size deductions in one way or another, and this comparison shows Giga and rex were almost on parity size wise.
Scott Hartman had this to say on the issue:
"Ok, wading into the always contentious issue of who was the biggest (which on 'teh internetz' seems to loosely translate into "who was more awesome?") I'm presenting my analysis of the always popular Tyrannosaurus vs Giganotosaurus issue.
A few things worth noting:
1) It appears that the type specimen of Giganotosaurus is essentially the same size as Sue despite having a somewhat longer femur. This is sort of surprising, since T. rex is generally thought of as having longer legs (in reality Sue simply has a proportionately longer lower leg relative to her upper leg, not longer legs overall).
2) We really don't know which of the two was longer, as there is enough of a margin of error in restoring tail lengths that the margin of error could allow either one to eek out a "who's the longest" win here (we're ignoring other theropods for the time being). A good discussion on this topic can be found here: [link]
3) Sue almost certainly had a higher mass than the Giganotosaurus type specimen, as tyrannosaurs seem to have broader torsos for their size.
4) So...that large isolated Giganotosaurus jaw? It's not really clear how much bigger that individual is, because there isn't perfect linear scaling between it and the type specimen (the isolated jaw is proportionately a bit deeper). My "best fit" version appears above, and indicates an animal about 6.5% longer than the type. THat would result in an animal over 13 meters in length, and also one that would be heavier than Sue.
5) Yes, I know there are also fragments of even larger T. rex specimens. Unfortunately things like toe bones are even harder to try and scale up reliably, so I haven't attempted it (also I really would want to see the things first hand before I tried it).
6) So in conclusion, between the specimens that are well enough known to estimate reliably, Tyrannosaurus and Giganotosaurus are about the same length, and T. rex was probably a bit heavier. The big jawed Giganotosaurus appears to be from a larger animal, but the nature of fragmentary specimens being what it is you simply aren't going to get to know which species was "truly the biggest".
Sorry, the data just doesn't allow this sort of thing to be done conclusively at this point in time, no matter how much we wish it were otherwise." Link is down below.
Nature doesn't deceive us; it is we who deceive ourselves.
@Carnosaur
MUCPv-Ch1 estimates are widely considered around 12.5-13m long and weight around 6.5-13.3 tons
MUCPv-95 has a estimate of 13m-14m. As far as I know, it's Giga's biggest specimen.