I love this miniseries. Nigel is such a good actor here, and his enthusiasm for the natural world is truly infectious. The special effects are incredible for the time/budget, and some shots still look fantastic today. The soundtrack as well is amazing, Ben Bartlett really hit it out of the park as he always does. In case this essay hasn’t made it obvious, I love this program, and it really inspired a newfound appreciation in prehistoric marine life for me.
@HodgePodge7 Жыл бұрын
Exact same here. Thanks for watching!
@jurassicswine Жыл бұрын
@@HodgePodge7 I really love your reviews. And now that you reviewed all of the Walking With series… I wonder what’s next?
@HodgePodge7 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your kind words! I still need to do Walking with Monsters and from there, I have a few others in mind ;)
@jurassicswine Жыл бұрын
@@HodgePodge7 I forgot about Monsters whoops
@canonbehenna6128 ай бұрын
Hope forgotten bloodlines help him make a comeback
@daliborjovanovic51011 ай бұрын
The Triassic "coelurosaur" is actually easy to explain. Haines and co were still following the outdated notion that most small theropods, including coelophysids, are coelurosaurs. The Complete Guide to Prehistoric Life, which came out two years later (2005), still calls Coelophysis a coelurosaur. So yeah, this animal is just a hypothetical European coelophysid/very basal theropod.
@kylecollier756910 ай бұрын
I think the reason why we have saturated purple, green, and red filters for three of the seven deadly seas is to show the deadliest sea for their specific episode. Purple for the Devonian, Green for the Pliocene, and Red fittingly for the Cretaceous.
@beastmaster09348 ай бұрын
1:26:28 Apparently, there was actually meant to be a scene where the Xiphactinus that was circling Nigel was attacked by one of the Mosasaurs That’s probably what that scene in the intro was supposed to represent, and also why Nigel said “There’s still blood in the water”
@christophermartinez758 ай бұрын
Nigel mentioned in the Gaming Beaver video that he would still get emails from kids saying "You were cruel to that Tanystropheus!", and he that he "fancied Laura Dern" from Jurassic Park for a bit.😁😁
@anthonyt1t56 ай бұрын
Laura Dean was really hot back then imo
@KRDecade20092 ай бұрын
@@anthonyt1t5man likes what he sees lol
@AncientRealms1999 Жыл бұрын
Bloomin' brilliant video, up to your usual high standard of entertainment, education and in-depth analysis as always. Best BBC Sea Monsters review video on KZbin. Stellar work. Need I say more? 😂 Contender for my favourite Walking With alongside Beasts. Always had so much nostalgia for it and great memories of watching it. Everything is done so perfectly. Release the UK DVD damn it!
@purplehaze2358 Жыл бұрын
The last name of a man whose response to being called out for inaccurately reconstructing a prehistoric animal was spending literally over a decade pursuing the petty aim of out-doing the person that ridiculed him, resulting in long-lasting damage to the field of paleontology as a whole, was "Cope"? If that happened in a work of fiction, I would've called the writer a hack.
@juanpablocortes99611 ай бұрын
Apparently the megalodon's fin moving backwards was such a deal that the spanish version just played the shot backwards
@fraskf67656 ай бұрын
Is this a joke?
@Katie-yq2sc6 ай бұрын
This programme literally ignited my passion for dinosaurs and specifically prehistoric sea reptiles. I love Nigel Marven so so much and he really brings this show to life. I love the liopleurodon segment so much that I have that specific liopleurodon tattooed on my arm. My absolute dream would be for them to revisit these episodes and do new ones! A brilliant vid talking about my favourite show
@purplehaze2358 Жыл бұрын
To be fair, evidence of conflict between tylosaurs doesn't _necessarily_ exclude the possibility they could have behaved socially. Plenty of social animals have extensive evidence of inter-species conflict.
@nathanial8587Ай бұрын
yep, conflict between the family is always universal
@Yaroosss Жыл бұрын
Your videos are incredibly enjoyable, I get excited every time after seeing a notification from you.
@HodgePodge7 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your kind words! It really means a lot.
I looked up ‘Ancient Realms’ and that channel has some incredible music. If that is the friend you were referring to, let him know that I was disappointed that I couldn’t find him on Spotify because I don’t really listen to music on KZbin. Either way, thanks for the introduction to this channel :)
@speedracer20089 ай бұрын
Ancient Realms, Hodgepodge and The Arc Minister did a commentary of the 2001 adaptation of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's The Lost World. It's a lot of fun to listen to.
@UnwantedGhost1-anz25 Жыл бұрын
Is there ever a possibility that they'll remake this amazing nostalgic documentary with updated discoveries recently published? I'd love to see that.
@chaosthebaryonyx6344 Жыл бұрын
Let's goooo. Recently found your channel and the first new video is a banger
@trilobite3120 Жыл бұрын
1:29:22 Not to mention that at least two species of placoderm that reached around 4 metres, those being Dunkleosteus and Gorgonichthys, are known from the Cleveland Shale, as well as the smaller but still masaive Holdenius, plus the shark cousins Cladoselache and Ctenacanthus which reached sizes comparable to humans.
@_pan-tastic_282 ай бұрын
Looking back at this series having learned about so many more paleozoic species since my childhood makes for some really fun times recognizing unnamed background animals. I practically jumped out of my seat after realizing that the giant trilobite Nigel uses to lure in an orthocone nautiloid is most likely meant to be isotelus rex. Or that the small placoderm he fishes up to use as dunkleosteus bait is most likely meant to be some species of bothriolepis. Super nostalgic series, and is doubly fun having learned so much more about prehistory since the release of it. On a side note, someone online edited some of the Ordovician sunset shots to add in the planetary ring that was now known to be present during the period.
@1clay10110 ай бұрын
wow. what a great video! I greatly appreciate the amount of detail you go into here especially behind the scenes. its really great to learn so much about my favorite Dino doc from my childhood. :)
@tristynperez2445 Жыл бұрын
In the gaming beaver video where he interviewed Nigel Marven at one point Nigel said "they found suture lines in the tail so they new tanystropheus could drop it tail"
@samfish2550 Жыл бұрын
I will say I saw chased by sea monsters before walking with beasts and I'm pretty happy for it. The actual luring of the basilosaurus and everything else really was well executed when your going in blind. Plus it's light covering of basilosaurus set up whale killers more fleshed out portrayal of them.
@abranca387 ай бұрын
7:12 Has anyone tried printing that recreated time map? I personally think it would be a very cool thing to have
@TheThrivingTherapsid Жыл бұрын
Just one interesting comment: The name "The Ancient Mariner" should come from "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge in 1797-1798.
@trilobite3120 Жыл бұрын
If there was ever a remake of this, this would be my list: -Ordovician Winneshiek Shale (Or Trenton group) -Triassic Favret formation -Carboniferous Mammoth Cave -Jurassic Oxford Clay (unsure if this should be before or after Devonian) -Devonian Cleveland Shale -Early Permian Copacabana formation -Eocene Valley of the whales -Early Cretaceous Paja formation -Miocene Pisco formation -Cretaceous Niobrara Chalk
@richie_074010 ай бұрын
my list would be: 7. Silurian era waters with aecutiramus and pterygotus, maybe an appereance from brontoscorpio 6. Eocene era waters in egypt, with the many shark species and basilosauruses, particularly basilosaurus itself and cynthiacetus 5. Devonian era waters with threats from the giant lobe finned fish and dunkleosteus 4. Triassic era waters in the americas, threats included cymbospondylus youngorum, notosaurus, giant shonisaurus and shastasaurus 3. Jurassic Oxford clay, included in the threats were the (accurately downsized) liopleurodons, pliosaurus funkei, ichtyosaurus and various sharks 2. Miocene era waters in peru, threats including giant otodus sharks, various macroraptorial physeteroids like zygophyseter, and then theres the two clashing giants with megalodon on the shallower water and livyatan patrolling the open seas 1. cretacoeus era waters in the inland sea, plays out like the episode wanted it to be except that the science were updated and the appereance of both tylosaurus and mosasaurus hoffmani
@trilobite312010 ай бұрын
@@richie_0740 Very good list. For 7, the closest would be the Bertie group, but that doesn't have Brontoscorpio, only the significantly smaller Proscorpius (and Palaeophonus?). I also don't really know about any fossil beds with both Dunkleosteus and large sarcopterygiians, although the Milwaukee formation does contain both the large sarcopterygiian Onychodus and the decently large placoderm Eastmanosteus. The Zhuganpo Formation would probably be the closest match for your Triassic list, although the exact species would be different.
@stopwatchstudios96223 күн бұрын
Nigel Marvin and the camera crew are technically the first humans to ever exist
@danielmalinen633711 ай бұрын
In Finland, the series was called Walking With Dinosaurus: Sea Monsters and on Finnish television it was shown just under the title Walking With Dinosaurus, which caused a lot of confusion with the original WWD series.
@landenriley8442 Жыл бұрын
There is nothing more dangerous nor frightening than Hell's aquarium
@miquelescribanoivars5049 Жыл бұрын
*Laughs in Pacific during the Miocene*
@sangheiliwarrior86 Жыл бұрын
@@miquelescribanoivars5049 Why?
@miquelescribanoivars5049 Жыл бұрын
@@sangheiliwarrior86 Otodus megalodon, Otodus chubutensis, Livyatan melvillei, Hemipristis serra, Carcharodon hastalis/hubbeli, Alopias grandis, multiple species of Paraotodus, multiple species of Galeocerdo, Acrophyseter, Brygmophyseter, multiple species of Squalodontidae and Kentriodontidae, Pontolis, Acrophoca, Piscogavialis, Xiphichthyis... That's a list of macropredatory marine animal with weights of over 500 Kg and is probably incomplete. Still unconvinced?
@sangheiliwarrior86 Жыл бұрын
@@miquelescribanoivars5049 Didn't know megalodon and livyaran lived in the miocene
@Limedea4 ай бұрын
@@miquelescribanoivars5049 I can't find anything about Xiphichthyis😢
@trilobite3120 Жыл бұрын
40:10 I did wish the Devonian had a bit more build up like the Basilosaurus and Meg segments.
@Paralititan Жыл бұрын
I think what the Triassic segment in Sea Monsters, but also WWD suffers from is brevity. The film is trying to explain the origination of dinosaurs, pterosaurs and certain marine reptiles in one go (namely them all originating in "THE" Triassic). They don't have the time to go to multiple Triassic ages and areas and therefore cram everything into one episode. I think it's possible that is also where 230 MYA comes from, it's both too young to be Besano FM and too old to be home to early pterosaurs and coelophysoids (Middle to Late Norian). P.S. caudal autotomy in Tanystropheus is impossible. Animals which can perform autotomy have specialized caudal centra, which Tanystropheus doesn't have. The head shape is also updated, but they couldn't know that at the time.
@trilobite3120 Жыл бұрын
1:29:22 wasn't that a suction feeder of crustaceans or something? I can't quite remember.
@PaleoEdits8 ай бұрын
Took me way too long to discover your channel, wonderful review of my favourite Walking With sereis! You're very informative and relaxing to listen to.
@HodgePodge78 ай бұрын
Thank you so much, I'm a big fan of your videos too!
@PaleoEdits8 ай бұрын
@@HodgePodge7 Thanks man, that's cool to hear! :) By the way, if you do end up doing a review of Life On Our Planet, then would you please consider picking apart some of the earth history and extinction events? Most reviewers of LOOP seem to have ignored that aspect so far, or even go so far as to claim that "at least the extinction events were good". Just to give an example with some of the issues: during the end-Ordovician extinction they attributed the global dying on literal hypothermia rather than things like changing sea levels and subsequent loss of shallow reefs. Nor was the deep sea a safe haven as the showed claimed - far, far from it. Life also bounced back to a very similar ecological state in the early Silurian, but instead they make up this silly narrative that the extinction dethroned the great cephalopod "dynasty" in favour of the fish "dynasty". I couldn't think of a worse scenario to throw in that "dinosaur-kpg-mammal" story beat. The Devonian extinction(s!) was(were) also extremely wacky in the show, but I'll spare you the ramble.
@SpinoJP7 ай бұрын
Amazing review !! I'd also add the giant aquatic snakes Pterosphenus and Palaeophis, (both also known from Africa) to the Eocene segment, for their impressive lengths and peculiar ecology ! (Ps: thanks for featuring some of my work, it was a pleasant surprise!)
@newjojosupercutsandmore2489 Жыл бұрын
31:59 correct me if I’m wrong, but the tanystopheus is also oversized, no?
@Grimbago2 ай бұрын
Thank you for your hard work. Great video, felt really nostalgic.
@purplehaze2358 Жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure Chased by Sea Monsters is the reason I developed thalassophobia later in my life.
@JackassJunior627 Жыл бұрын
Can’t wait for you to wrap up the series with Walking with Monsters. Are we having to wait 2 years so it’s “20 years” after it’s airing, or will we experience it in 2024 at some point?
@minivan59088 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this, this show was such an important part of my childhood. I was obsessed
@heyitsdino32709 ай бұрын
Brilliant video
@greyideasthetheliopurodon46406 ай бұрын
45:31 the discovery channel version with Chris cook actually corrects this and clarifies that the Eocene will end with a mass extinction. In fact Cook says it several times throughout the segment.
@GemUnicornn Жыл бұрын
I am new to your content also love dinosaurs ! You should review some dinosaur games ! Path of titans is amazing and the isle and prehistoric kingdom ect would be so fun to see
@BigAl2-u7e Жыл бұрын
1:25:40 Just wanna say that evidence of intra-specific combat is not evidence that an animal was not social or didn't live in a group. I mean, just look at us. Humans fight all the time, and we kill our own species by the thousands each year. And when you look at solitary animals like tigers or snow leopards, individuals primarily avoid each other and stick to themselves. But there is probably more recorded cases of lions killing each other. So evidence of inter-specific combat could be argued as a sign of social behavior. Now, this doesn't necessarily mean that mosasaurs were 100% animals that lived in family structures but it is important to note that we shouldn't immediately declare an animal as solitary just because there is evidence of members fighting/killing their own kind.
@piecheese12149 ай бұрын
I named my dog after Nigel Marven.
@piecheese12149 ай бұрын
Also, Nigel is a horrible time traveler in this. He just leaves behind the lifeboat in the Ordovician when it gets swarmed by the sea scorpions, and he contaminates the water there with his blood, releasing microbes from the future!
@goyoelburro9 ай бұрын
Still one of my all time favorite TV docos. Even though it's out of date, I still like to listen to it while I drop off to sleep at times.
@Hannah-wc2bv Жыл бұрын
Another perfect video as always ❤
@siamzero94802 ай бұрын
1:28:55 I guess we are not talking about the humonguos Ichtyosaurs discovered years after the show
@tysmith65572 ай бұрын
Those lived in other areas than Switzerland. He might be just referring to the Besano Formation shown in the episode.
@speedracer2008 Жыл бұрын
Man, if they had done this show 5 years after its release, they could have featured Livyatan and O. megalodon as the dual nightmares Nigel has to deal with in the Miocene oceans.
@UnwantedGhost1-anz25 Жыл бұрын
Could saltwater crocodiles evolve into basically another "Thalattosuchus" millions of years in the future? 🤔
@canonbehenna612 Жыл бұрын
Yes if most whales and sharks go extinct
@trilobite3120 Жыл бұрын
15:08 Trilobites ate just about everything, not just detritus. Some were active carnivores, and there were even free swimming forms like Carolinites.
@trilobite3120 Жыл бұрын
39:44 I wouldn't be surprised if they were. I think it's a pretty common behaviour in fish.
@thabas7578 Жыл бұрын
Im anxious for the dinosaur planet review
@purplehaze2358 Жыл бұрын
I really do think the Walking with/Chased by series is hard carried by its soundtracks.
@tomwesterbergh488711 ай бұрын
Those wrong placed dinosaurs and pterodactyl might not be in the world place since Pangea was still a single landmass during the Triassic 🤔.
@giirator Жыл бұрын
Great video!
@ddddangerous71256 ай бұрын
we love a review as long as the show itself
@luziferj27892 ай бұрын
Sea Monsters was my most favorite documentary with Nigel. It was so well made, I remember it until today very very well.
@GemR3820 күн бұрын
Hey HodgePodge, I love your videos on the "Walking With" series. Do you think you'll ever do a review on the Walking With Monsters episodes? Would love to hear your take on them. I feel they are often forgotten or under appreciated and it's such a shame.
@thegreatprimevalshow Жыл бұрын
Take a drink every time Hodge mentions a prehistoric Whale that’s not in this show. 🍺🍷🥃 🍹
@knightofarkronia99687 ай бұрын
To be honest, I think that Dunkleosteus would actually be more dangerous to humans than Otodus megalodon, in large part BECAUSE the former was smaller than initially estimated, not in spite of it. Dunkleosteus would be more likely to consider humans a food source than megalodon, and usual methods for repelling sharks wouldn’t work on Dunkleosteus due to its armour-plating. Even its eyes had built in armour!
@tau-579429 күн бұрын
Most methods for repelling sharks aren't really effective against sharks, other than physical barriers there's pretty much nothing you could do to stop one that wants to eat you. But yes a dunkleosteus would only amplify those dangers.
@maxleroux11 ай бұрын
Have you ever heard of ABZÛ? It's an adventure game where you take on the role of a diver in a vast ocean, filled with marine life and submerged ancient ruins. In Chapter 6, you get to explore an undersea temple inhabited by various extinct sea animals from different time periods. I think it's supposed to be a metaphor for the afterlife or something like that. 🦈
@purplehaze2358 Жыл бұрын
Wasn't tanystropheus determined to not be a swimming animal in the strictest sense, instead acting like those storks which wait near bodies of water to feed on fish?
@trilobite3120 Жыл бұрын
13:24 I think that the current consensus is that they were more closely related to arachnids than to horse shoe crabs, being a sort of in-between group between the horse shoe crabs and arachnids.
@Gabriel_Pierne3 ай бұрын
You review Walking With Monsters in December 2025 ? 20 years after ?
@HodgePodge73 ай бұрын
;)
@xoxotyty9 ай бұрын
i love this series so much 😭 the concept of the series is so cool, the special effects are amazing, and nigel made little kid me dream about being a paleontologist
@IAmAGyroGamer3 ай бұрын
I was looking for the version of Sea Monsters with Christopher Cook as a narrator, and instantly found one full KZbin video of the show with CC lol.
@KadenSlinker11 ай бұрын
Could it be Tyrannosaurus mcraensis?
@daliborjovanovic51011 ай бұрын
Well, no. T. mcraensis wasn't named until 20 years after this series aired. Self-explanatory (and it's several million years younger than this segment anyway).
@thekingsclips137 Жыл бұрын
Ngl the cgi was amazing at the time. I went back a rewatched it on KZbin recently and I'm still kinda impressed
@Do27gg3 ай бұрын
Thing that scares me the most about going back in time isn’t the massive scary monsters, it’s the smaller ones, parasites, bugs etc that would be absolute destroy you
@ek9509 Жыл бұрын
25:47: I actually own that book, so, thanks for bringing it up.
@speedracer20089 ай бұрын
1:07:40 I think the Hybodus should be referred to as Asteracanthus. It fits the body plan current reconstructions of the latter taxon use and was present in the late Jurassic waters of England.
@sangheiliwarrior86 Жыл бұрын
I believe that the mosasaur chosen was tylosaurus because for a time, the now defunct genus "hainosaurus" was believed to be 15-17m long. I believe hainosaurus is now considered to be tylosaurus.
@trilobite3120 Жыл бұрын
35:14 The largest complete D. terrelli specimen was estimated at 3.9 metres and the largest was estimated at 4.1.
@TheSandwhichman108 Жыл бұрын
Anyone wish there was a mass market or collectable version of the time map made?
@freewillgeorge2 ай бұрын
Can you imagine the utter confusion on the Paleontologist's face when they find chainmaille dating to the Devonian XD
@ARCtheCartoonMasterАй бұрын
17:42 So basically, it’s the same fallacy as Gilbert’s opera referring to the emperor of Japan as “the Mikado”, which, technically speaking, refers more to the concept of the emperor’s authority and government than anything (similar to “Downing Street” and “the White House” for the UK and US, respectively).
@Timberwolf1393 ай бұрын
Honestly, with our new understanding of the Colossal Triassic Ichthyosaurs like Ichthyotitan and the Swiss Tyrant, I would bump the Triassic up to at least top 3, with either Miocene Peru and the Western Interior "Nope" Seaway. I would give an honorable mention to Panthalassa either during or just right after the Great Dying, anything you come across in that ocean is probably starving to death, but we do that with any ocean during a mass extinction.
@Mornings Жыл бұрын
I used to rent this from my local library all the time loved it way more than walking with dinosaurs lol
@seandowdsdowds44728 ай бұрын
Any link to Ancient realms Time Map Please
@lukem92310 ай бұрын
NIGEL MARVINNNNN THE GOATT
@trilobite3120 Жыл бұрын
11:46 Not exactly. Some similar looking relatives are known from then, like Limuloides, but they're still very different.
@snm_nendra Жыл бұрын
52:24 Recently scientist found out that megalodon have a longer length and a skinnier body form than the great white
@trilobite3120 Жыл бұрын
34:42 This is now under question as the paper describing it has a potentially inaccurate model of jaw movement.
@trilobite3120 Жыл бұрын
19:08 LOOP does depict it with more accurate behaviour, and the only thing the Sea Monsters version has over it is the pinhole eye (that I can tell).
@unicorntomboy97363 ай бұрын
I would love for a TV series like this to finally show Livyatan for the first time in all its glory, assuming there isn't one already. It feels like the closest thing we have to a real life Moby Dick
@thedarkmasterthedarkmasterАй бұрын
I do think them skipping the SIlurian, Carboniferous, and Permian was a shame. I can understand them skipping the Cambrian as it was mostly filled with smaller creatures
@greyideasthetheliopurodon46405 ай бұрын
Plesiosuchus is actually shorter than the Lio which could get up to 33 ft.
@Fallenangel_853 ай бұрын
"Danger" in the ocean is actually pretty hard to judge. Just judging by our oceans, the most dangerous things are Jellyfish and smaller venomous fish. The biggest hypercarnivors have killed zero people in the ocean (Orcas) and Sharks also don't hunt humans at all So the danger from big prehistoric predators would largely depend on how smart they are, less smart ones being more likely to "bite" an unknown creature that is the human. So it's best to forget most whales or whale like animals, also Sharks, as a significant danger.
@tau-579429 күн бұрын
Sharks definitely do hunt humans when the opportunity presents itself, not being their regular prey doesn't preclude us from being hunted.
@Fallenangel_8529 күн бұрын
@@tau-5794 there is literally no evidence that a Shark ever hunted a human, unlike other predators like Tigers You'll still be very unhappy to be mistaken for their prey or getting "tasted".
@tau-579429 күн бұрын
@Fallenangel_85 I'm sure that the hundreds of people killed and eaten by oceanic whitetips over the years were only "tested" consistently and aggressively, and that they really only meant to take a small bite as they dragged those struggling people into deeper water to continue "testing" their meat. Sharks are dangerous no matter what you tell yourself, it's idiotic to assert that every attack that happens is merely an accident or that they are something you should feel safe around. These are predators about as smart as dogs, with incredibly sharp vision, smell, and electroreception, they can tell the difference between a seal and a human just like a sea turtle. Most sharks don't intentionally put humans as a part of their diet but they are still opportunistic predators which can and will eat somebody if there's a good time to do so.
@trilobite3120 Жыл бұрын
34:58 And a peice of the spinal column and the base of a fin.
@tm43977 Жыл бұрын
First of all Walking with dinosaurs haven't feature mosasaurus and hesperornis and walking with beasts Haven't put Arsinotherium megalodon and odobenocetops on it And the ordivician and Devonian for walking with monsters seven most dangerous sea in Prehistoric times
@kylecollier7569 Жыл бұрын
I'm pretty certain he knows that... Not to sound insulting.
@Preyquil59Ай бұрын
7:22 is that a dinosaurs
@TheSandwhichman108 Жыл бұрын
That recon dive showed why being the camera man makes you impervious to hard.
@speedracer200811 ай бұрын
Dakosaurus could have been a threat for Nigel to deal with in the Jurassic seas.
@b_radbrad88995 ай бұрын
I used to have the book I swear, I remember it being timeline order and the finale being with the Megalodon and not in the cretaceous like in the original show. But maybe that’s my American copy and from what I remember.
@HodgePodge75 ай бұрын
Your memory does not deceive you! I also have the book and it is in timeline order.
@b_radbrad88995 ай бұрын
@@HodgePodge7 why does the book have an in timeline order and not episode order?
@b_radbrad88995 ай бұрын
@@HodgePodge7 I rewatched the land scene in episode 2 and you were right! It uses fnaf ambiance! I thought it was cap
@brandonnguyen2754 Жыл бұрын
Please review giant monsters with Jeff corwin.
@JPOG7TV8 ай бұрын
Its kind of hilarious that while this is meant to be educational, the whole Chased by Dinosaurs series is moslty prehistoric creatures getting jumped by Nigel Marven.
@VicariousReality7 Жыл бұрын
10:10 Military police police the military, not you
@maozilla9149 Жыл бұрын
nice
@jimmideerichards95543 ай бұрын
Nigel you are telling fibs 😂😂😂😂 you got my subscribe 😂😂😂
@RomanHistoryFan476AD11 ай бұрын
I would have to put Modern day Earth's oceans (maybe before Human industrial or civilisation) ahead of the Ordovician, due to the fact even today in our Ocean's we got many Animals who would be considered more dangerous than those found in Ordovician. I would put the Pliocene above the Devonian due to the fact during the Devonian even the biggest predators where still only within Great White shark size for The Dunk for example. while the plate jaws are a threat, at some point the sheer Size of Megalodon, Levitan and the other super sized sharks and raptorial Whales just make the Devonian pale in comparison. So I would have to put the Pliocene above Devonian, especially since we seem to know more 'threats' that existed in the Pliocene than we do in the Devonian.
@dragonzilla6482 Жыл бұрын
Sea Monsters is the best spin off to the Walking with Series way better then Cavemen.
@canonbehenna61210 ай бұрын
And the terrible movie
@dragonzilla648210 ай бұрын
@@canonbehenna612 You mean Walking with Dinosaurs the 3D movie
@canonbehenna61210 ай бұрын
@@dragonzilla6482 correct that film ripped off the original trilogy
@dragonzilla648210 ай бұрын
@@canonbehenna612 More than ripped off, it insulted the whole series not only that but it also made Pachyrhinosaurus my least favourite Dinosaur.
@MayheM_728 ай бұрын
I remember watching this. I thought it was fun and interesting, but did think of it as 100% scientifically accurate.
@dionysusleon20332 ай бұрын
I liked following nigel around and when he got sneezed on. It was so silly. X3 lil me got a real kick outta that