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Were Dinosaurs skilled Ballerinas and Sensitive Lovers?

27 october 2022

Were Dinosaurs skilled Ballerinas and Sensitive Lovers?

Were Dinosaurs skilled Ballerinas and Sensitive Lovers?

It is almost impossible to imagine dinosaurs pirouetting along the sides of lakes. Can you see them bouncing on their toes whilst each being the size of 5 elephants?  Steven Spielberg would never have thought of stuffing the terrifying Tyrannosaurus Rex into satin pointe toes as the beast roared through Jurassic Park.  Although, contrary to his vicious flesh-tearing public image, T-Rex was believed to have been a sensitive lover.  He possibly charmed his soul mate and could even have performed the earliest version of Swan Lake, playing Seigfried to her Odette.

She must have been a brave ‘lucky girl’ to cope with his poor dental hygiene.

Sani Pass Tours However, our children’s favourite dinosaur Barney, shuffles from side to side on very firm flat feet.  Perhaps he originated from a whimsical, musical family who had diminutive relatives called Miss Piggy and Kermit the Frog.

Dinosaurs did walk on their toes.

Expert opinion states that approximately 200 million years ago most dinosaurs did walk on their toes.  The reason why Theropods, which include most of the flesh-eating group, stormed around on their back toes was because this gave them a longer stride and more Lesotho Private Tours .

When my son was little, he asked me if prehistoric animals had roamed the earth when I was a child?  Even though he considered me almost a fossil, my dignity was saved by the fact that there were definitely no people around 200 million years ago.  However, the rare footprints have been left to tell stories of these enormous animals’ agility and speed.

The first time I saw some of these footprints the hair on my arms stood on end.

We had spent a long morning asking locals if they knew where we could find the site of a print from a large carnivorous Dinosaur Footprints.  This had been reported in the media.  We eventually located a sunny lady who pointed up into the air, then re-adjusted and swung her arm towards the top of a small but steep mountain.

I was particularly keen to locate these prints as paleontologists in 2017 compared them to T-Rex specifying that they were made by a Theropod called Kayentapus

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