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This category include documentaries, television programs etcetera about prehistoric life.This include life before man's writing of history, and is composed, not only by dinosaurs (for example), but a lot of other prehistoric forms of life, like extinct mammals, amphibians, birds, plants and much more.
Amazing Dinoworld is a paleontology-related series and features digital renderings of dinosaurs. [2] [3] [4] While CuriosityStream drove the storytelling of the series, NHK worked on the series' visual art. [1] Salvatorre Vecchio is the narrator for the series. [5]
Attenborough and the Giant Dinosaur (also known as Raising the Dinosaur Giant) is a 2016 British nature documentary programme made for BBC Television, first shown in the UK on BBC One on 24 January 2016, [1] and in the US on 17 February 2016 on PBS. [2]
Although Dinosaur Revolution was the first dinosaur documentary to feature a darker, edgier, more serious and violent adult atmospheric tone and the first to have been targeted towards a 13 and 14 year old audience, it served as a reimagining of the comic book series Age of Reptiles. [citation needed]
Jurassic World Live Tour is a live arena show. Twenty-four dinosaurs are included in the show with seven species in total. [3] These dinosaurs include a 43-foot long [4] T. rex that weighs 8,000 lbs., [5] Blue, the Velociraptor from the Jurassic World franchise, and Pteranodons that will swoop down and pick performers up during the show.
Megalosaurus was a theropod, a class of dinosaurs that were ancestrally carnivorous, bipedal and characterized by hollow, bird-like bones and three toes with claws. Think T-Rex and Velociraptor.
For documentaries about avian dinosaurs see Category:Documentary films about birds. Pages in category "Documentary films about dinosaurs" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total.
Dinosaurs Alive! is a 2007 IMAX documentary produced by Giant Screen Films about various dinosaurs that inhabited the Earth between 251 and 65 Ma.The documentary features animals from the Triassic period of New Mexico to the Cretaceous period of Mongolia, as well as the American Museum of Natural History's research on both periods.