The structure of their skulls also resembles those of elephants, so it’s possible they also had long trunks.
This is an old theory that is no longer supported by most paleontologists AFAIK. Trunks require specific musculature, more blood vessels, and more nerves than a regular nose does, and those things leave evidence in the structure of the facial bones.
I’m no scientist and I’ve never seen one in real life, but I can promise you penguins do not have trunks iirc
I can’t believe people care about dumb shit like someone’s height in fields where it doesn’t actually matter. That 5’1" little brown woman in office with her finger on the big red button is always going to be much more of an actual objective threat than some 6’11" massive chungus of a dude with no real charisma to speak of.
Hell, just give the little brown woman a gun and pit her against Big Chungus on the street and see who comes out on top.
People who analyze each other’s body condition and size and prioritize it for everyone other people do are such worthless fucking knuckledraggers.
Yeah, I just realized this is the wrong thread :P It’s okay, I moved it. Sorries
Does anyone know if this is something that was actually possible? Like, how sure are we they looked one way and not the other?
Of course it’s possible. It’s highly improbable due to weight, of course, but it’s not impossible.
There’s a lot of information that was not recorded in fossil, and we have very few fossil recorded, compared to how many animals of a species lived. How we reconstruct existinct animals keeps on changing with every new information, so it’s always cool to challenge the way we view a creature.
Nope, sauropods were already right up against the limit of what’s physically possible for a land animal on Earth. If they were that chonky they would have been too heavy and would have overheated just from their body heat.
Actually, they preferred bullet trains and cable cars, dependent on distance.
“Every reconstruction involves some level of inference and speculation to literally ‘flesh out’ details not preserved in the fossil record,” Celeskey explains. “In the process of creating paleoart, artists and the researchers have discussions about how to fill in these missing pieces, which helps everyone involved to think about how they are interpreting the actual evidence at hand.” From a NatGeo article I found
“I asked around the office and everyone agreed that giving the t-Rex wings looked dope”
Is that a long neck between your shoulders or are you just happy to be a skeleton?