Tyrant king
MemberCompsognathusSep-25-2014 4:43 PMthere is no order.
1.our old friend t.rex
dont let his arms fool you.with a bite of 6 to 10 tons behind 60 6 to 9 inch teeth. it was like getting sat on by a elephand with pikes on his butt. this could really do some damage!
2.saurophaganax hachet bite:
allosaurids have a neat lil jaw mechanism called the hatchet or axe bite. i estimate the bites to be twice the wieght of the allosaur, like a 2 ton allosaur would have a 4 ton hatchet bite. a 6 ton saurophaganax......ya crazy powerful and would causea ridiculis amount of damage.
3.deltadromeus/bahariasaurus:
tjese were fairly sleek, quick nimble predators capable of reaching speeds of up to 50 miles an hour! they had unusually long arms for a theropod and were quite powerful. that isnt the awesome part yet. it could kick. thats right it could kick. it has been said that a 1.5 ton deltadromeus could kick with a full force of 6 to 9 tons. kicks could decapitate or kill similarly sized beasts. bahariasaurus was about 5 to 6.5 tons in weight. so its kick would be awesomly powerful and possibly even more powerful then a saurophaganax axe bite or a t.rex bite!!!!!
4.dromeosaur killing claw:
a 30 pound raptor had a 5 inch killing claw a 1500 pound utahraptor and a 15 inch killing claw....nuff said
5.ceratosaurus overbite:
6 inch blades for teeth and a huge over bite are a lethal combonation. if it bites you it will leave a huge uneven mark with all of the bone exposed and the doctos be like what the hell happen to you?!?!?!?!
6.saurophaganax claws:
our buddy sauro is back and badder then ever and has another trick up his scaly sleeve. it is said that he has 16 inch long claws on his hands to destroy things it hated. they werent slender but thick and curved and were almosat surley used in combat and hunting.
7. therizenosaurus claws:
3 foot long claws arent just for pullin branches. they are for slicing and dicing apredators like tarbosaurus. a single swipe would decapitate a human. and cause massivs scarring on the tarbodsaur or whatever it faought.
8.sinornithosautus venom
what is cooler then a velociraptor and a rattlesnake? sinornithosautus that's who!!!! It was about three feet long. It lived with preds that could destroy it in seconds. So it needed venom to bring down big preys. It's venom probably was fast acting and would paralyze it's prey so it wouldn't run away. It is a velociraptor with venom!!!!!!! That's awesome!!!!!!
9. Gigantiraptor kick.
imagine a 15 foot tall 4 ton reptilioous featherd ostrich. ostriches kick with a force of 300 pounds per square inch. Now imagine that giganorapyor would kick with several tons of force easily.
Lord Vader
MemberTyrannosaurus RexSep-25-2014 5:11 PMInteresting, though I doubt the hatchet bite was THAT powerful.
Jack of all trades. Master of none
Lord Vader
MemberTyrannosaurus RexSep-25-2014 5:15 PMI doubt Delta would kick like that very often, and I highly doubt Bahariasaurus would kick like that at all.
Jack of all trades. Master of none
Lord Vader
MemberTyrannosaurus RexSep-25-2014 5:18 PMWith Delta, yes.
Jack of all trades. Master of none
Something Real
MemberTyrannosaurus RexSep-25-2014 7:07 PMTYRANT KING - Very neat! I liked the way in which you presented your information in an easy-going manner. Thank you ever so much for sharing this with us! :)
Rex Fan 684
MemberCompsognathusSep-26-2014 1:35 PMTop 10? There's only 7
Carnosaur
MemberCompsognathusSep-27-2014 1:17 PMlooks good to me. Sinonithosaurus' venomous bite is questionable at this point, as the paleontologists seemed to have misinterpreted some things..overall good list TK
Nature doesn't deceive us; it is we who deceive ourselves.
ankybeatsall2468
MemberCompsognathusDec-16-2014 11:20 AMgood list although I think spinous claws are pretty deadly too
ankybeatsall2468
MemberCompsognathusDec-16-2014 11:20 AMgood list although I think spinous claws are pretty deadly too
LeviathanTeratophoneusFerox
MemberCompsognathusDec-16-2014 8:14 PMThe list is unique, however I wish it was a tad bit more organized. :)
“Absence of proof is not proof of absence.”
― M. Crichton, The Lost World