TOP 10 Largest CARNIVOROUS DINOSAURS



TOP 10 Largest CARNIVOROUS DINOSAURS - Mega Top Tens Torvosaurus Gurneyi The newest species of megalosaur to date, Torvosaurus Gurneyi is indeed a monster. Though not the twelve meter, 6-7 ton animal it was thought to be based on a 160 cm maxilla, T. gurneyi is still an immense animal. Tipping the scales at 3.5 tons at average and a staggering 5 tons as a maximum, Torvosaurus has earned its place on this list Allosaurus Amplexus A giant species of Allosaur that was discovered in the 90's, this animal is commonly known as "Epanterias" amplexus. Most paleontologists consider this a nomen dubium, as it appears to just be a rather large species of Allosaurus. Just how big? well, scaling off of "Big Al"(Allosaurus Fragilis) yields ~14meters, 7 tons. But, this figure is a bit baseless and a more safe size estimation should be based off of the DINO allosaurids.. The only size figures given (apparently Stovall´s estimates) published anywhere are found below: lenght of 42ft (=12.80m), 6.25 tons(6.25 tonnes), height of 16ft (=4.88m in kangaroo pose) a gape of 4ft (1.22m) six inch (=15.2cm) teeth and eleven inch (27.8cm) foreclaws. By comparison Allosaurus was stated to reach only up to 29ft; 2 tons in weight Acrocanthosaurus Atokensis Slightly smaller then its later gigantic relatives, Acrocanthosaurus is still not an animal you'd want to meet in a dark alley. The largest individual, affectionately known as "fran" was an 11 meter, 6.65 ton beast. Slightly smaller individuals have been unearthed, though they are known fromless complete remains. Estimates for these two range from 10.5-11 meters TBL; 4-6 tons Therizinosaurus Cheloniformis The only plant eating theropod on this list, Therizinosaurus is a massive animal. Quite capable of self defense as well, sporting claws that could measure as much as 6 ft. It's appearance is quite bizarre- almost a potbellied, sluggish creature in overall stature. Perhaps this is due to its immense weight; T. cheoniformis tipped the scales at ~5.5 - 6 tons in TBW. Being so large almost certainly kept it safe from most predators - though the claws surely helped. Tyrannotitan Chubutensis Is it really a suprise most of this list comprises of Carcharodontosaurs? They were massive creatures, and Tyrannotitan was no exception. In Giganotosauridae - the subfamily that includes Giganotosaurus and MApusaurus; two other large bodied Theropods, Tyrannotitan is estimated to measure 12.5-13 meters in length, and, basing off of close relatives, would weigh in the ball park of 5-7 tons. Carcharodontosaurus Saharicus Ol' Carcharodontosaurus has been kicked around quite a bit on this list. Old estimates have stated it to be anywhere from 6-20 tons in weight, and well they were right-but in a way they probably didn't expect. Carcharodontosaurus appears to be overall more slender then previously thought, and a good deal longer. An overall TBL of 45-48 feet in length, but a meager 5-7 tons in weight have brought this Carcharodontosaur down slightly on this list, but still up there pretty high. Giganotosaurus Carolinii Giganotosaurus has always been in the top five largest predatory dinosaurs. It too has been kicked around though, and recent studies conducted in this decade have shown us something staggering. The holotype, once hailed as a 13 meter animal, has been shrunk down to 12.4 meters in length - a "Sue" sized animal. The second individua, based on scant skull remains, was said to be ~10% larger then the holotype. That would put it at 13.2 meters in length, with a proposed body weight of 7.5-8 tons. It's no wonder Giganotosaurus is still onc of the largest predators to ever walk our earth. Tyrannosaurus Rex One of the first large bodied predatory dinosaurs ever discovered, Tyrannosaurus has lways been heralded as the largest to ever walk our earth. However, several discovereies in the last twenty years have shown us something rather different. Have no fear- as you can see T. rex is still high up on this list. The largest individual to date, "Celeste" measured an impressive 13 meters in length, and weighed in at 8.5-9.5 tons in weight."Sue" once regarded the largest, measures 12.2 meters in length and weighs in at 7.4- 8 tons. Spinosaurus Aegyptiacus WHAT?!!you may be asking yourselves, and as i'm suspecting, i'm gonna have to support the hell out of this one to assure you Spinosaurus is still the largest predatory dinosaur to date. The new reconstruction courtesy of PAul Sereno's new finds suggests a semi quadrupedal gait. So, before i start in let me tell you that this new posture gives more surface area for weight to be distributed on S. Aegyptiacus' body. As for 3 ton estimates thrown around on this site because of the new finds, i submit to you ;BS. That's the weight that Sereno et. al gave for Suchomimus Tenerensis - an 11 meter spinosaur. Simple scaling yields ~ 12 tons for S. Aegyptiacus.

Comments

  1. 10 tyrannosaurus rex, 9 mapusaurus? But he literally said t rex was bigger it is a list small to big and t rex is the biggest tyrannosaurid. A theropod list from small to big would be more like this: utahraptor to therizinosaurus baryonyx carcharodontosaurus tyrannosaurus spinosaurus
  2. For those who think that spino only walks of fours, it walks in both two legs and four legs..
  3. I just had a feeling that Spinosaurus would be the largest.
  4. Finaly a top ten were I see that mapusaur is above t-rex I always New he was te biggest
  5. nigga
  6. Spinosaurus and Carchorodontosarus fighted as well because they live in the same place in the same time periods?
  7. SPINOSAURUS IS STILL THE BEST
  8. actually t-rex was taller then most of these
  9. Can you guys stop being complete assholes and just watch the fucking video? Even if you think this timeline is inaccurate, you can still learn a thing or two, because this video was made to serve educational purposes. Now take your complaints and shove them up your gaping anuses, because nobody cares except yourself.
  10. Top 1. Giganotosaruds
  11. i think its not oxalia its spinosaurus
  12. t rex should be 4th hes bigger than a mapu this isnt accurate
  13. Not accurate giga is smaller then spino
  14. WTH THERE WAS A TORVO PIC IN THERE XD
  15. Oxalaia is spinosaurus
  16. I don't give likes often but this one earned it IMO! The only critique I had was the pacing. If we simply were reading the text then it was spot on. But this had beautiful images that I would enjoy seeing for several seconds honestly.

    So a bit slower pace if great images are going to be used. If you did that you'd have it made. Good work.

    And oh yeah, kudos on the feathered pics! I'm fascinated to see these classic dinos depicted in this newer likely accurate way.

    Last edit, I saw some other vids of yours. Subscribed! Quality stuff mate
  17. you should update the spinausaurus because it walked on four legs because of its huge size and his legs adapted to staying in the water for longer time than walking on land which made him a really slow walker and caught only
    fishes and the 'supercroc' on occasions. Nice video thought keep it up
  18. Carnivores ROX herbivores sux
  19. 2:45 it's not a Chilantaisaurus .it's a Torvosaurus
  20. I would make a top 15 and put Shastasaurus at number 1


Additional Information:

Visibility: 340737

Duration: 6m 32s

Rating: 2048