Recent research indicates that Jurassic Park's dinosaur sounds are not accurate. Scientists now believe dinosaurs made low-frequency rumbles or deep resonant sounds, rather than the dramatic roars ...
For most people, the sound of a dinosaur is unmistakable:a deep, guttural roar that shakes the earth. That idea, planted by Jurassic Park in 1993 and echoed in countless documentaries, toys, and theme ...
The duck-billed dinosaur Parasaurolophus is distinctive for its prominent crest, which some scientists have suggested served as a kind of resonating chamber to produce low-frequency sounds. Nobody ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. (WHTM) — No human has ever heard a dinosaur’s roar, so most people believe the iconic film series Jurassic Park and Jurassic World ...
The new "Jurassic World" movie trailer features growling, grunting and shrieking dinosaurs. These bellows may make for good entertainment at theaters, but do paleontologists actually know how ...
Popular understanding of dinosaur sounds is often inaccurate. Experts suggest dinosaurs likely made cooing or humming sounds. A study simulated Parasaurolophus sounds, describing them as otherworldly.
Picture, if you will, the mighty Tyrannosaurus rex. The odds are good what you envision has been brought to you in part by "Jurassic Park," a plastic toy or some other facet of pop culture. (Perhaps ...
While the roar of the mighty Tyrannosaurs rex in the Jurassic Park film franchise is pretty terrifying, it was actually created by Hollywood special effects wizards using the sounds of a baby elephant ...
So, uh, this is an uncomfortable one. You know the dinosaur sounds from Jurassic Park that framed the way you imagined every dinosaur ever? They were actually recordings of animals boning, or just ...
When Jurassic Park was released in 1993, moviegoers marveled at how the dinosaurs looked, but many of them never thought to marvel at what the dinosaurs sounded like. The mournful song of the ...