Wednesday, November 18, 2009

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If there is an excellent series of documentaries that talk about the world of dinosaurs and be known worldwide, that's "Walking with Dinosaurs ." This documentary series was a great innovation by the BBC as he showed the animals as they might have lived, as is believed to have lived after so many years of study of fossils, instead of showing paleontologists and scientists talking about it .

I leave a review I found in speaking of the series and shows a list of contents of the chapters:

Original Title: Walking with Dinosaurs
Year: 1999
Duration: 6 episodes of 30 '
Country: United Kingdom
Director: John Lynch
Guion: Andrew Wilks
Producer: BBC

Synopsis:
The series created a new line in the documentary about dinosaurs. Instead of basing the footage in the usual succession of scenes and interviews with paleontologists excavations and museums, episodes of Walking with Dinosaurs documentaries are developed as common wildlife, take an animal as protagonist and showing their daily interaction with the environment, prey, predators and other living things around him. Several locations in New Caledonia, United States, Chile and Australia, among others, were selected to recreate the Mesozoic ecosystems in Europe, America and Antarctica due to its flora similar to those common in each of the periods shown. As for animals, most were rebuilt and animated by computer, although in some cases it was decided to build animatronics (especially for close-ups) and very rarely were used "Animal" actors "to give life to their primitive relatives (if the pan tuatara and Maluku). At any time, animators and writers relied on the advice of experts in dinosaurs as Peter Dodson, Peter Larson and James Farlow, which can be seen in the Making of explaining why the Diplodocus could not lift the neck beyond their shoulders or what is giving that does not appear in any of the popular series fights between Tyrannosaurus rex and a horned dinosaur.

Information:
1. NEW BLOOD
220 million years ago, Late Triassic, Arizona. Dinosaurs are still a group of emerging, very diversified and not very abundant, but it begins to displace other more primitive animals such as cynodonts, dicynodonts and basal archosaurs. Animals displayed:

Coelophysis (dinosaur theropod)
Peteinosaurus (pterosaur)
happy (dicynodonts)
Plateosaurus (dinosaur prosauropod)
Postosuchus (archosaur basal)
Thrinaxodon (cynodont)
Dipnoo unidentified.
Dragonfly (real life).

Shooting location: New Caledonia


2. THE AGE OF THE TITANS
152 million years ago, Upper Jurassic, Colorado, USA. Continents begin to separate, the sea is gaining ground and the weather gets wetter. Gigantic deserts have been replaced by massive Triassic conifer forests and meadows of ferns, dominated by a variety of dinosaurs.

Allosaurus (theropod)
Anurognathus (pterosaur)
Brachiosaurus (dinosaur sauropod)
Diplodocus (Sauropod)
Ornitholestes (theropod)
Stegosaurus (dinosaur ornithischian)
dragonflies and other insects

Shooting location: California (Redwood National Park ), Chile, Tasmania, New Zealand


3. CRUEL SEA
149 million years ago, Jurassic top, Oxfordshire, England. Europe is reduced to an archipelago with thousands of islands and islets separated by marine waters warm, shallow, rich coral reefs and marine life in general. Dinosaurs are not the dominant life form, but marine reptiles of all kinds of types and sizes.

Cryptoclidus (plesiosaur)
Eustreptospondylus (theropod)
Hybodus (shark)
Liopleurodon (pliosaur)
Ophthalmosaurus (ichthyosaur)
Rhamphorhynchus (pterosaur)
bony fish, squid, ammonites, horseshoe crabs, insects

Shooting location: Bahamas, New Caledonia


SKY 4.GIGANTES
127 million years ago, Early Cretaceous, Atlantic Ocean and its shores. The continents are moving slowly fragmenting to positions vaguely similar to today. The young Atlantic continues to grow, while diversifying pterosaurs ever and start to become common emerging groups like birds and flowering plants. Great herds of iguanodons dominate land area, while ornitoqueiros, a group of giant pterosaurs, make long migrations between Europe and South America.

Iberomesornis (early bird)
ottingeri Iguanodon (ornithischian)
Iguanodon bernissartensis (ornithischian)
Ornithocheirus (pterosaur)
Polacanthus (ornithischian)
Tapejara (pterosaur)
Utahraptor (identified as Velociraptor) (theropod)
Plesioliopleurodon (pliosaur)
Saurophthirus (parasite)
Several unidentified Pterosaurs, mosquitoes, butterflies

Shooting location: Tasmania, New Zealand

5. SPIRITS OF THE FOREST OF ICE
106 million years ago, Early Cretaceous, Antarctica. Still attached to Australia, New Zealand and South America, Antarctica has a seasonal climate with winter frost, but much warmer than today. In the forests of Nothofagus and Podocarpaceae live migratory animals, sedentary dinosaurs adapted to cold winters and some relics of the past, such as amphibians laberintodontes.

"Allosaurus" robustus (theropod)
Koolasuchus (amphibian laberintodonto)
Leaellynasaura (ornithischian)
Muttaburrasaurus (ornithischian)
Steropodon (mammal monotreme)
sphenodontians
unidentified
Shooting location: Tasmania, New Zealand

6. DEATH OF A DYNASTY
65 million years ago, Upper Cretaceous, Montana. Disappear inland seas, the Atlantic reaches half its current extent multiple continents collide causing volcanic eruptions and new mountain ranges and the weather begins to turn colder, dry and seasonal. Gone are most of the pterosaurs and some groups of dinosaurs, but others are in full swing. Suddenly, a meteor strikes Earth and causes a mass extinction that killed the dinosaurs except for some groups of birds.

Anathothite (ornithischian)
Ankylosaurus (ornithischian)
Deinosuchus (crocodile)
Didelphodon (marsupial mammal)
Dromaeosaurus (theropod)
Quetzalcoatlus (pterosaur)
Torosaurus (ornithischian)
Triceratops (ornithischian)
Tyrannosaurus (theropod)
Hipsilofodóntido unidentified ("Parksosaurus?)
Dinilysia (snake)

Shooting location: Chile, New Zealand















Source: Documental.hostzi.com

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