Tyrannosaurus Rex: Deconstructed and related media

Replay
Next Video
More Videos

Tyrannosaurus Rex: Deconstructed (1:25)

Known as the "king of the tyrant lizards," T-Rex was one of the largest carnivores of all time.

Watch Similar Videos

Related Videos (10)

  • Tyrannosaurus Rex: Deconstructed
    Tyrannosaurus Rex: Deconstructed

    Video Clip (1:25)

    Known as the "king of the tyrant lizards," T-Rex was one of the largest carnivores of all time.

    Video Clip (1:25)
  • Mammoth vs. Man
    Mammoth vs. Man

    Video Clip (3:54)

    Mammoths were the largest beasts to roam the planet since the dinosaurs, posing a formidable challenge for early human hunters.

    Video Clip (3:54)
  • Prehistoric Humans Cross the Atlantic
    Prehistoric Humans Cross the Atlantic

    Video Clip (3:56)

    Could the ice sheet and low sea levels of the last great Ice Age have helped early humans travel from Europe to North America around 10,000 B.C.?

    Video Clip (3:56)
  • Sabertooth Cat
    Sabertooth Cat

    Video Clip (3:35)

    The smilodon, or sabertooth cat, is the prehistoric ancestor of all big cats roaming the earth today and was one of the most feared predators of its time.

    Video Clip (3:35)
  • Early Humans Survive the Ice Age
    Early Humans Survive the Ice Age

    Video Clip (3:26)

    A 1,000 year-long ice age known as the Younger Dryas may have brought together different groups of prehistoric humans from across the Americas.

    Video Clip (3:26)
  • The First Americans
    The First Americans

    Video Clip (2:45)

    Paelo-Indians are believed to be the first humans to populate the Americas, around 10,000 B.C.

    Video Clip (2:45)
  • Cro Magnon Meets Neanderthal
    Cro Magnon Meets Neanderthal

    Video Clip (3:58)

    DNA evidence may prove whether Cro Magnon and Neanderthal interbreeding was possible and what traces might be left in the genome of modern humans.

    Video Clip (3:58)
  • Discovering Neanderthal
    Discovering Neanderthal

    Video Clip (4:03)

    A comparison of DNA from Neanderthals and humans reverses nearly 150 years of evolutionary theory that suggested a direct ancestry between the two species.

    Video Clip (4:03)
  • Homo Erectus
    Homo Erectus

    Video Clip (3:31)

    800,000 years ago, evolutionary adaptations set Homo Erectus on the road to becoming human and give them the advantage over their competitors.

    Video Clip (3:31)
  • Lucy's Giant Leap
    Lucy's Giant Leap

    Video Clip (2:42)

    Australopithecus Afarensis, or "Lucy," walks upright, the first step in the chain of human evolution.

    Video Clip (2:42)

Shop HISTORY