• @[email protected]
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      51 year ago

      I mean, that is not how it works. Also, crocodiles don’t look like any dinosaur I can think of?

      Classification is based on genetic relationships, not looks, so bats aren’t birds, for example.

    • @Pipoca
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      31 year ago

      Crocodiles are clearly dinosaurs while birds have diverged so much they can only reasonably be called descendents of dinosaurs and nothing more. You can look at them and tell.

      Based on what?

        • @Pipoca
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          1 year ago

          Various extinct crocodiles like Poposaurus were initially confused with dinosaurs due to some convergent evolution.

          But modern crocs lack a lot of distinctive dinosaur traits, like having their legs directly under them.

          More to the point, though, look at this fossil of caihong juji and tell me it doesn’t look more like a bird than a crocodile. Through a minor geologic miracle, the feathers were even preserved! It even seems like they were probably quite colorful.

    • @unnecessarygoat
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      31 year ago

      Crocodiles are vastly different in appearance to any dinosaur that has been discovered

        • @Pipoca
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          41 year ago

          Look at t-rex’s bird-like hips and feet. Compare them to the sprawling legs of a croc. Posture- wise, it looks way more like an ostrich than a croc.

          And yeah, T-rex was almost certainly scaly, but evolved from feathered dinosaurs. Other earlier species in tyrannosauroidea like yutyrannus huali and dilong paradoxus had feathers.

            • @Pipoca
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              21 year ago

              Jurassic Park came out literally 30 years ago.

              Feather fossilization requires almost perfect conditions. There’s a few locations where most of the fossil evidence of dinosaur feathers come from, and those fossils started to be found a few years after the movie came out. Feathered dinosaurs had been suggested long before Jurassic Park, but the evidence back then wasn’t great.

              More to the point, though, Jurassic Park was a mixture of the best science at the time and deliberate artistic license. Jack Horner, a paleontologist who worked with Spielberg in it, said “My job was to get a little science into Jurassic Park, but not ruin it”.

              For example, most of the dinos in the movie have muted colors, because Spielberg thought that colorful dinosaurs weren’t scary. Modern films have deliberately kept the look and feel of the original as an artistic choice.

        • @unnecessarygoat
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          01 year ago

          Not really. even for dinosaurs that are famous for being crocodile-like, its quite hard to see the resemblance