• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

If Dinosaurs Weren’t Extinct, Would The Dinosauroid Walk Among Us?

May 9, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Imagine a world in which Chicxulub hadn’t put an end to The Age Of Dinosaurs: would mammals have risen? Would humans exist? Or would the dinosauroids rule the day?

Advertisement

The dinosauroid is a hypothetical animal that’s been suggested as a possible next step for a group of carnivorous dinosaurs. What could they have looked like? A model of such a creature at the Dinosaurland Fossil Museum in Lyme Regis has some thoughts:

Advertisement

“Almost certainly they would have walked upright on two legs (many of the meat eaters like Tyrannosaurus used only two legs for movement),” reads a description next to a dinosauroid model at the museum. “Probably, they would have become more intelligent with a larger brain (some groups like the Velociraptors were evolving this way before extinction). Perhaps the hands would have become more articulate. Would they have developed speech?”

The dinosauroid model in Lyme Regis

The dinosauroid model in Lyme Regis.

Image credit: IFLScience

It’s an appealing concept to fans of speculative zoology – a subgenre of science fiction and art movement that ponders where evolution could take us, and what hypothetical animals might arise. The idea of a dinosauroid first came around in the 1980s when Dale Russell, palaeontologist and artist, teamed up with a model maker named Ron Séguin.

Their vision for a dinosauroid evolved from a carnivorous dinosaur into an animal capable of tool use, one that walked upright and had thumbs. It was said to come from the troodontids, a group of Theropods that were already bipedal before the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction event. Would a bit more time have had them strutting like a human?



In truth, evolution has its limits. We see it in the size of Sauropods, a group that evolved to boast some of the biggest dinosaurs ever to walk the planet. That great size appeared all over the world, but the common denominator among the supergiants was that they were Sauropods, while other dinosaur groups didn’t – in the same amount of evolutionary time – grow to be so mighty.

a feathery bipedal troodontid looking a bit like a pheasant with dinosaur-like prowess

A life reconstruction of the troodontid Jianianhualong tengi by Julius T. Csotonyi.

A mini dinosaur group is unlikely to adopt a giant Sauropod body in the same way that a Theropod dinosaur is unlikely to end up looking like a human. Instead, suggests TetZoo palaeontologist Dr Darren Naish, they’d most likely have gone the way of bustards, big hawks, or ground hornbills.

Much of the human blueprint was written in at our early beginnings, back when we were broad primates with decent dexterity who didn’t yet have to worry about rent or social media. Sigh, the good old days.

Our path to the thumb-wielding egg heads we are today can be tracked in stages of our evolution. A path that the Troodontids are unlikely to have trodden no matter how much extra time they had. So, what was the thinking behind the dinosauroid idea?

Prior to the original model’s creation, the scientific community was piecing together details about the troodontids. Chiefly, that they had bigger brains compared to other dinosaurs, and may have been en route to becoming a dominant species had everything not blown up.

Advertisement

A two-legged goat was fairly influential, as it exhibited a shift in musculature and shallower chest after it was forced to walk on its two remaining limbs. Such a shift could’ve taken the barrel-chested troodontids in a similar direction, negating the need for a tail as they evolved the musculature and pelvic requirements for upright life. And as for that big brain assuring primate-like intelligence? Well, that’s a whole other can of worms.  

The dinosauroid is a curious estimation for a hypothetical animal, and one we can all enjoy in the knowledge that it is just that, hypothetical. If you’d like to see an alternative take on where the troodontids might have ended up, check out this awesome and – frankly – equally terrifying illustration by artist Nemo Ramjet that features in an article by Naish.

I think we can all agree we humans are richer for not having to compete for resources with that thing.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. ‘A family reunion’: Voices from Broadway on the return to the stage
  2. First drive of the Lucid Air reveals power and panache
  3. Flexible Elbows And Shoulders Helped Apes Not Fall Out Of Trees
  4. Intense Seismic Shakes Off Canada’s Coast May Be Forming New Seafloor

Source Link: If Dinosaurs Weren't Extinct, Would The Dinosauroid Walk Among Us?

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Stealing Baby Howler Monkeys Is Suddenly All The Rage Among Capuchins On Jicarón Island
  • Former US President Joe Biden Has “Grade Group 5” Prostate Cancer: Here’s What That Means
  • “Self-Boosting” Vaccines Trap Doses In Microparticles For Later Release Inside The Body
  • Supermassive Black Hole’s Storm Throws Gas “Bullets” At 30 Percent Of The Speed Of Light
  • Please Don’t Shave Off Your Eyelashes, People – You Need Them
  • Orcas Spotted Hanging Out With Pilot Whale Calves – What’s Going On?
  • Another One Of Colorado’s Reintroduced Wolves Has Died, Marking Fourth Death In 2025 Alone
  • This Disgusting-Smelling Tree Is Taking Over The US – And Some States Want It Gone
  • Unique Facial Tattoos Found On 800-Year-Old Andean Mummy Are Unlike Any Other Known
  • Famous Dark Streaks On Mars Might Not Be What We Were Hoping For
  • World First As US Surgeons Perform Successful Human Bladder Transplant
  • Think The Great Pyramid Of Giza Has Four Sides? Think Again
  • Why Are Car Tires Black If Rubber Is Naturally White?
  • China’s Terra-Cotta Warriors: What You Might Not Know
  • Do People Really Not Know What Paprika Is Made From?
  • There Is Something Odd Going On Inside The Moon, Watch These Snails Lay Eggs Through Their Necks, And Much More This Week
  • Inside Denisova Cave: The Meeting Point Of Neanderthals, Denisovans, And Us
  • What Is The 2-2-2 Rule And Can It Save Your Relationship?
  • Bat Cave Adventure Turns Hazardous: 12 Infected With Histoplasmosis
  • The Real Reasons We Don’t Eat Turkey Eggs
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version