How to make a dinosaur


I really need the raptor suit. People would stop calling me a mild-mannered professor if I showed up at speaking engagements wearing one of those.

There is no need to speculate about exactly what they would call me…

Comments

  1. John B says

    You’d probably lose some of the effectiveness without the soundtrack blaring. You’d need some undergrads with a boom-box to proceed you into the room.

  2. says

    Somehow, I think you’d be playing into Kent Hovind’s hands on this one… On the other hand, the NEW Dr. Dino would be much more interesting.

  3. gg says

    Maybe it’s odd, but I really find myself liking humanity a lot when I watch a video like that. Lots of people, working together with state of the art technology, to put together beautiful (and presumably educational) dynamic art. I end up saying to myself, “Wow – that’s the way people should be acting all the time.”

  4. gg says

    Now I’m waiting for the DI version of this. An actor dressed as Noah wrestling a muppet dinosaur onto a balsa wood ark.

  5. Steve_C says

    That triceratops was the coolest!

    Imagine driving one of those through the AIG Musuem parking lot.

  6. says

    They are truly putting on a magnificent production. But sadly, they are doing “the stage version of Walking with Dinosaurs 1999”, rather than “an updated live action dinosaur show.” Hence some of the errors that were there in the original documentary are being repeated. Some of these errors–the lack of feathers on the dromaeosaurids, for instance–were due to limitations of the CGI at the time. Others–such as the incorrect position of the dromaeosaurid hands (palms inwards, guys! palms INWARDS)–were less excusable (especially as we consultants tried to get them to do it correctly…).

    But still, as I said, magnificent as a stage show!

  7. Dunkleosteus says

    I like everything except the raptor. His hands are deformed- and where are his feathers?

    Yeah. Look how it moves its tail: It must be broken since maniraptorian tails are stiff, yuck…

  8. gg says

    from the article David Livesay linked to:

    “Whether the bishop likes it or not, Turkana Boy is a distant relation of his,” Leakey, who founded the museum’s prehistory department, told The Associated Press. “The bishop is descended from the apes and these fossils tell how he evolved.”

    Is Leakey being a little imprecise, or just trying to pull the bishop’s chain? I thought that biologists were usually very specific in stating that humans and apes share a common ancestor, and that humans are not descended from apes.

  9. David Livesay says

    “The bishop is descended from the apes and these fossils tell how he evolved.”

    Is Leakey being a little imprecise, or just trying to pull the bishop’s chain? I thought that biologists were usually very specific in stating that humans and apes share a common ancestor, and that humans are not descended from apes.

    Maybe you’d have to know Bishop Adoyo to understand Leakey’s statement.

  10. says

    I used to have the model of joystick they’re using about 3/4 of the way through the clip…They break down after about 3 months of use.

  11. says

    “Is Leakey being a little imprecise, or just trying to pull the bishop’s chain? I thought that biologists were usually very specific in stating that humans and apes share a common ancestor, and that humans are not descended from apes.”

    Not only are we descended from Apes; we are Apes. We share common ancestry with many of the the apes that are not extinct such as gorillas, chimps, etc.

  12. craig says

    When I was watching this last night I got teary-eyed and very emotional about the raptor suit.

    Some people get to have the greatest jobs.

  13. jrochest says

    When I was watching this last night I got teary-eyed and very emotional about the raptor suit. Some people get to have the greatest jobs.

    And that, in a nutshell, is why I love this blog :)

    The sweet, sweet geekery of it all.

    And yes, the animated beasties are wonderful.

  14. MK says

    My apologies, this is off topic.

    PZ, I’m with you on Obama. Not impressed and don’t like his pandering to the religious.

    But if it’s true Edwards fired Amanda Marcotte and Melissa McEwan, he’s off my list as well!

    Do you know what the deal is?

    See TPM or Salon for news of this.

  15. Mena says

    Dinosaurs, feh. A nicely scaled Anomalocaris or Wiwaxia suit would be even better!
    No necks to do that seemingly mandatory head tilt thing though…

  16. David Livesay says

    Dinosaurs, feh. A nicely scaled Anomalocaris or Wiwaxia suit would be even better!

    Cambrian Park! It has a nice ring to it!

    Kind of hard to imagine a Land Rover being chased by an Opabinia though, but Michael Crichton could come up with something visually thrilling, if implausible.

  17. Crudely Wrott says

    I am definitely in agreement with gg, comment #10. But I don’t think it is odd at all for someone to take delight in productive, creative, challenging work that looks like a lot of fun. Having fun is a strong clue that whatever you are doing while being productive, imaginative, capable and motivated is just the sort of thing you are well suited to. What is instructive is that this is exactly the sort of stuff done by scientists, especially young ones. To my literal way of thinking there is no surprise here and there is a distinct reward that can be shared not only by young (and not so young, of course) scientists, but by those who merely understand a bit of what they are doing. Very democratic.

    But how ’bout them Dinosaurs! I would really dig building a robot that walks. I’ll get my tool box.

  18. David Marjanović says

    Is Leakey being a little imprecise, or just trying to pull the bishop’s chain? I thought that biologists were usually very specific in stating that humans and apes share a common ancestor, and that humans are not descended from apes.

    Well.

    Here’s the tree (keep in mind that the vertical axis is meaningless and the horizontal axis is not to any scale):

    ..,–New World monkeys
    ..|
    –|
    ..|..,–Old World monkeys
    ..|..|
    ..`–|
    …..|..,–gibbons
    …..|..|
    …..`–|…..,–Sumatra orang-utan
    ……..|..,–|
    ……..|..|..`–Borneo orang-utan
    ……..|..|
    ……..`–|…..,–Eastern gorilla
    ………..|..,–|
    ………..|..|..`–Western gorilla
    ………..`–|
    …………..|…..,–Bonobo
    …………..|..,–|
    …………..`–|..`–Chimpanzee
    ……………..|
    ……………..`–us

    Draw your own nomenclatural consequences. I’m comfortable with us being apes; this saves the word “apes” from being meaningless.

  19. David Marjanović says

    Is Leakey being a little imprecise, or just trying to pull the bishop’s chain? I thought that biologists were usually very specific in stating that humans and apes share a common ancestor, and that humans are not descended from apes.

    Well.

    Here’s the tree (keep in mind that the vertical axis is meaningless and the horizontal axis is not to any scale):

    ..,–New World monkeys
    ..|
    –|
    ..|..,–Old World monkeys
    ..|..|
    ..`–|
    …..|..,–gibbons
    …..|..|
    …..`–|…..,–Sumatra orang-utan
    ……..|..,–|
    ……..|..|..`–Borneo orang-utan
    ……..|..|
    ……..`–|…..,–Eastern gorilla
    ………..|..,–|
    ………..|..|..`–Western gorilla
    ………..`–|
    …………..|…..,–Bonobo
    …………..|..,–|
    …………..`–|..`–Chimpanzee
    ……………..|
    ……………..`–us

    Draw your own nomenclatural consequences. I’m comfortable with us being apes; this saves the word “apes” from being meaningless.

  20. gg says

    Thanks for the comments at 24, 27, and 35. I also have no problem with being an ape (or a monkey: hey, ‘Dance like a monkey’); I was curious as to what the accepted nomenclature is, since it seems that ‘I weren’t come from no ape!’ is the rallying cry of the creationists. I suspect Leakey was trying to say a little something about the bishop in question, as 24 suggested…

  21. says

    Incredible! I hope this show ends up coming the U.S. While I recognized the limitations of Walking With Dinosaurs, I also thought it was a beautiful look at what life was like back then.