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{{quote|"''Imagine you could travel back in time, to a time long before man.''"|Kenneth Branagh, the show's [[Narrator]].}}
{{quote|"''Imagine you could travel back in time, to a time long before man.''"|Kenneth Branagh, the show's [[Narrator]].}}


''Walking with Dinosaurs'' (1999) is a [[BBC]] [[Speculative Documentary]] series focusing on... well... dinosaurs, using state-of-the-art CGI to recreate Mesozoic life. It was narrated by [[Kenneth Branagh]].
''Walking with Dinosaurs'' (1999) is a [[BBC]] [[Speculative Documentary]] series focusing on... well... dinosaurs, using then-state-of-the-art CGI to recreate Mesozoic life. It was narrated by [[Kenneth Branagh]].


It received several equally successful continuations, specials, and spin-offs:
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==== It received several equally succesful continuations, specials, and spin-offs: ====


* ''The Ballad of Big Al'' (2000), which tries to recreate the possible life of a [[Real Life]] ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Allosaurus]]'', named ''[[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|Big Al]]''.
* ''The Ballad of Big Al'' (2000), which tries to recreate the possible life of a [[Real Life]] ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Allosaurus]]'', named ''[[Exactly What It Says on the Tin|Big Al]]''.
* ''Walking with Beasts'' (2001), focusing on mammal evolution which came after the dinosaurs in the Paleogene, Neogene, and Quaternary Periods.
* ''Walking with Beasts'' (2001), focusing on mammal evolution which came after the dinosaurs in the Paleogene, Neogene, and Quaternary Periods.
* ''Chased by Dinosaurs'' (2002), two specials focusing on two striking dinosaurs, the gigantic ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Argentinosaurus]]'' and the odd ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life - Birdlike Theropods|Therizinosaurus]]''. This was the first in the ''Walking with...'' series to feature a visible presenter (in this case, Nigel Marven).
* ''Chased by Dinosaurs'' (2002), two specials focusing on two striking dinosaurs, the gigantic ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Argentinosaurus]]'' and the odd ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birdlike Theropods|Therizinosaurus]]''. This was the first in the ''Walking with...'' series to feature a visible presenter (in this case, Nigel Marven).
* ''Prehistoric Planet'' (2002), a revised version of the ''Walking With Dinosaurs'' and ''Walking With Beasts'' documentaries, aimed at a younger audience and narrated by [[Ben Stiller]].
* ''Prehistoric Planet'' (2002), a revised version of the ''Walking With Dinosaurs'' and ''Walking With Beasts'' documentaries, aimed at a younger audience and narrated by [[Ben Stiller]].
* ''Sea Monsters'' (2003), focusing on dangerous prehistoric marine wildlife, from "the seventh most dangerous sea ever" up to "the first" one. This also featured Nigel Marven.
* ''Sea Monsters'' (2003), focusing on dangerous prehistoric marine wildlife, from "the seventh most dangerous sea ever" up to "the first" one. This also featured Nigel Marven.
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See also its [[Walking with Dinosaurs/Rule of Cool|Rule of Cool]], [[Science Marches On/Walking With Dinosaurs|Science Marches On]] and [[Walking with Dinosaurs/Stock Dinosaurs|Stock Dinosaurs]] pages.
See also its [[Walking with Dinosaurs/Rule of Cool|Rule of Cool]], [[Science Marches On/Walking With Dinosaurs|Science Marches On]] and [[Walking with Dinosaurs/Stock Dinosaurs|Stock Dinosaurs]] pages.
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{{tropelist}}
=== General tropes used throughout the franchise: ===
==General tropes used throughout the franchise:==
* [[Anachronism Stew]]: Almost every animal had either gone extinct or not evolved by the time they're shown, mostly in Dinosaurs and Beasts.
* [[Anachronism Stew]]: Almost every animal had either gone extinct or not evolved by the time they're shown, mostly in Dinosaurs and Beasts.
* [[Author Vocabulary Calendar]]: The narrator describes quite a lot of things as "lethal."
* [[Author Vocabulary Calendar]]: The narrator describes quite a lot of things as "lethal."
* [[Badass]]: Where to begin? There's at least one per setting!
* [[Badass]]: Where to begin? There's [[Badass/Western Animation/Walking With Dinosaurs|at least one per setting!]]
* [[Camera Abuse]]: Almost [[Once an Episode]], especially in Beasts.
* [[Camera Abuse]]: Almost [[Once an Episode]], especially in Beasts.
* [[Carnivore Confusion]]: The "predation is just a fact of life" approach, as most predators are treated as any documentary animals should be treated, not as villains. There are a few exceptions though, mainly in the two spinoffs ending with "Monsters".
* [[Carnivore Confusion]]: The "predation is just a fact of life" approach, as most predators are treated as any documentary animals should be treated, not as villains. There are a few exceptions though, mainly in the two spinoffs ending with "Monsters".
* [[Downer Ending]]: A given, since every animal featured in the program goes extinct eventually.
* [[Downer Ending]]: A given, since every animal featured in the program goes extinct eventually.
* [[Everything's Even Worse with Sharks]]: Subverted mostly, as sharks in the series can't hold a candle to larger predators like ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Dunkleosteus]]'', ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Hyneria]]'' and ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Basilosaurus]]''.
* [[Everything's Even Worse with Sharks]]: Subverted mostly, as sharks in the series can't hold a candle to larger predators like ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Dunkleosteus]]'', ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Hyneria]]'' and ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Basilosaurus]]''.
* [[Good Bad Translation]]: The Italian and Spanish versions. For example, the Spanish changes ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Utahraptor]]'' to ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Velociraptor]]'', ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Diplodocus]]'' to ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Hadrosaurs|Saurolophus]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Postosuchus]]'' to a postosuchid,<ref> If you want to get techincal, it should be "rauisuchid"</ref> and ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Megaloceras]]'' to ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Megalosaurus]]''!
* [[Good Bad Translation]]: The Italian and Spanish versions. For example, the Spanish changes ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Utahraptor]]'' to ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Velociraptor]]'', ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Diplodocus]]'' to ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Hadrosaurs|Saurolophus]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Postosuchus]]'' to a postosuchid,<ref> If you want to get techincal, it should be "rauisuchid"</ref> and ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Megaloceras]]'' to ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Megalosaurus]]''!
** The Hungarian translation, too.
** The Hungarian translation, too.
* [[Never Smile At a Crocodile]]: ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Postosuchus]]'' and ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Deinosuchus]]'' in ''Walking with Dinosaurs'' and ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Sarcosuchus]]'' in ''Chased by Dinosaurs''. [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Phytosaurs]] and ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Proterosuchus]]'' are not a close crocodile relatives, but fill the same role in the accompanying book ''Walking with Dinosaurs: A Natural History'' and in the TV series ''Walking with Monsters'', respectively.
* [[Never Smile At a Crocodile]]: ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Postosuchus]]'' and ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Deinosuchus]]'' in ''Walking with Dinosaurs'' and ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Sarcosuchus]]'' in ''Chased by Dinosaurs''. [[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Phytosaurs]] and ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Proterosuchus]]'' are not a close crocodile relatives, but fill the same role in the accompanying book ''Walking with Dinosaurs: A Natural History'' and in the TV series ''Walking with Monsters'', respectively.
** ''Deinosuchus'' gets only a cameo appearance in ''Walking with Dinosaurs'' the TV series, but its [[Badass|badassery]] is emphasized in the accompanying book, where it's stated that it's even capable of killing a ''Tyrannosaurus'' getting too close to the water {{spoiler|and later a group of them scares the female ''Tyrannosaurus'' away from freshly killed ''Anatotitan''.}}
** ''Deinosuchus'' gets only a cameo appearance in ''Walking with Dinosaurs'' the TV series, but its [[Badass|badassery]] is emphasized in the accompanying book, where it's stated that it's even capable of killing a ''Tyrannosaurus'' getting too close to the water {{spoiler|and later a group of them scares the female ''Tyrannosaurus'' away from freshly killed ''Anatotitan''.}}
* [[Noisy Nature]]: And HOW! All animals in the whole series make continuously sounds of every kind from roars to bellows, screechs, and so on (a major example of the strong [[Rule of Cool]] that characterize this series). The most incredible example is perhaps the early "amphibian" ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Hynerpeton]]'' which ''makes belch-like sounds without a pause'' and apparently without any good reason.... despite being a very archaic vertebrate, and thus very ''unlikely'' to utter any loud cry.
* [[Noisy Nature]]: And HOW! All animals in the whole series make continuously sounds of every kind from roars to bellows, screechs, and so on (a major example of the strong [[Rule of Cool]] that characterize this series). The most incredible example is perhaps the early "amphibian" ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Hynerpeton]]'' which ''makes belch-like sounds without a pause'' and apparently without any good reason.... despite being a very archaic vertebrate, and thus very ''unlikely'' to utter any loud cry.
** Another example: giant arthropods like the scorpion ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Brontoscorpio]]'' and the millipede ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Arthropleura]]'' ''making creaking sounds when walking'' and even when they're ''moulting their exoskeleton''. This kind of sound is heard also during the "Evolution takes over" moments in WWM (just like an horror movie...)
** Another example: giant arthropods like the scorpion ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Brontoscorpio]]'' and the millipede ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Arthropleura]]'' ''making creaking sounds when walking'' and even when they're ''moulting their exoskeleton''. This kind of sound is heard also during the "Evolution takes over" moments in WWM (just like an horror movie...)
* [[Roger Rabbit Effect]]: Some CGI animals share a scene or two with live-acted ones (including ancient humans), but this is used more greatly for comedic effect in all the various ''Making of'' specials.
* [[Roger Rabbit Effect]]: Some CGI animals share a scene or two with live-acted ones (including ancient humans), but this is used more greatly for comedic effect in all the various ''Making of'' specials.
* [[Rule of Cool]]: Several examples throughout the series, especially about speculative animal behaviour. Another example is the fact that only the most spectacular animals of each taxonomic group are usually portrayed in almost all the shows of the series, despite they were probably less common in their environments that their smaller relatives (like what happens among modern animals as well). However, we can see many small-sized prehistoric animals too. Still another example is that many animals are more or less ''oversized'' in the program: the two most striking examples are the swimming ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]'' and the flying ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Ornithocheirus]]''.
* [[Rule of Cool]]: Several examples throughout the series, especially about speculative animal behaviour. Another example is the fact that only the most spectacular animals of each taxonomic group are usually portrayed in almost all the shows of the series, despite they were probably less common in their environments that their smaller relatives (like what happens among modern animals as well). However, we can see many small-sized prehistoric animals too. Still another example is that many animals are more or less ''oversized'' in the program: the two most striking examples are the swimming ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]'' and the flying ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Ornithocheirus]]''.
** Since the list of examples from this trope is ''really'' large, please [[Walking with Dinosaurs/Rule of Cool|go here]] to see them.
** Since the list of examples from this trope is ''really'' large, please [[Walking with Dinosaurs/Rule of Cool|go here]] to see them.
* [[Science Marches On]]: Many new discoveries have been made after this series, which changed our perception about prehistoric wildlife. These discoveries regard animal behaviour, taxonomy, or other issues. See [[Science Marches On/Walking With Dinosaurs|here]] for examples.
* [[Science Marches On]]: Many new discoveries have been made after this series, which changed our perception about prehistoric wildlife. These discoveries regard animal behaviour, taxonomy, or other issues. See [[Science Marches On/Walking With Dinosaurs|here]] for examples.
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* [[Stock Dinosaurs]]: Lots, but a few new additions and subversion as well. For every stock dinosaur used, there's one or more creatures that have never been heard of in mass media before--or, substitution for an appropriate relative. Again, see [[Walking with Dinosaurs/Stock Dinosaurs|here]] for a exhaustive list of examples.
* [[Stock Dinosaurs]]: Lots, but a few new additions and subversion as well. For every stock dinosaur used, there's one or more creatures that have never been heard of in mass media before--or, substitution for an appropriate relative. Again, see [[Walking with Dinosaurs/Stock Dinosaurs|here]] for a exhaustive list of examples.


=== ''Walking with Dinosaurs'' provides examples of: ===


== ''Walking with Dinosaurs'' provides examples of: ==
* [[Adaptation Expansion]]: The accompanying book ''Walking with Dinosaurs: A Natural History'' contains a lot of additional information about geography of the world dinosaurs lived in, elaborates on some speculative concepts only briefly mentioned in the TV series, and introduces new ones. The book even introduced some creatures that weren't shown in the TV series.
* [[Adaptation Expansion]]: The accompanying book ''Walking with Dinosaurs: A Natural History'' contains a lot of additional information about geography of the world dinosaurs lived in, elaborates on some speculative concepts only briefly mentioned in the TV series, and introduces new ones. The book even introduced some creatures that weren't shown in the TV series.
* [[All There in the Manual]]: More than a few species not named in the TV show appear in the aforementioned book.
* [[All There in the Manual]]: More than a few species not named in the TV show appear in the aforementioned book.
* [[Always a Bigger Fish]]: Happens on several occasions. [[Your Mileage May Vary|Perhaps]] the most memorable of which was the huge marine reptile ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]'' snatching the medium-sized carnivorous dinosaur ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Large Theropods|Eustreptospondylus]]'' from shore.
* [[Always a Bigger Fish]]: Happens on several occasions. [[Your Mileage May Vary|Perhaps]] the most memorable of which was the huge marine reptile ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]'' snatching the medium-sized carnivorous dinosaur ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Large Theropods|Eustreptospondylus]]'' from shore.
** Also an example of [[Somewhere a Palaeontologist Is Crying|another trope]] since ''Liopleurodon'' was probably closer to 4.5-6.5 meters rather than the absurd 25 meters noted in the episode.
** Also an example of [[Somewhere a Palaeontologist Is Crying|another trope]] since ''Liopleurodon'' was probably closer to 4.5-6.5 meters rather than the absurd 25 meters noted in the episode.
* [[Ape Shall Never Kill Ape]]: Averted, quite a few species kill members of their own kind. The small carnivorous dinosaur ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Coelophysis]]'' is an ''[[Eats Babies|excellent example]]''. The [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|cynodonts]] (the ancestors of mammals) make another example.
* [[Ape Shall Never Kill Ape]]: Averted, quite a few species kill members of their own kind. The small carnivorous dinosaur ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Coelophysis]]'' is an ''[[Eats Babies|excellent example]]''. The [[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|cynodonts]] (the ancestors of mammals) make another example.
** The ''Coelophysis'' example is due to the classic (but now [[Science Marches On|mostly discredited]]) interpretation of what appeared to be remains of young ''Coelophysis'' in the ribcage of some adults of the same species, it's not an invention of the show; while the Cynodont one ''is'' invented.
** The ''Coelophysis'' example is due to the classic (but now [[Science Marches On|mostly discredited]]) interpretation of what appeared to be remains of young ''Coelophysis'' in the ribcage of some adults of the same species, it's not an invention of the show; while the Cynodont one ''is'' invented.
* [[Apocalypse Wow]]: The meteor impact scene in "Death of a Dynasty" is pretty awesome, and much more realistically shown than most other portraits in other documentaries, with the correct sequence of events: first the light, then the earth tremor, then the dust cloud and wind-storms, finally the melted rocks from the sky.
* [[Apocalypse Wow]]: The meteor impact scene in "Death of a Dynasty" is pretty awesome, and much more realistically shown than most other portraits in other documentaries, with the correct sequence of events: first the light, then the earth tremor, then the dust cloud and wind-storms, finally the melted rocks from the sky.
* [[Art Evolution]]: If you count the two shows as being related, then compare the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|T. rex]]'' in the [http://i33.tinypic.com/91jv43.jpg original series] and the ones in ''[http://www.dinosoria.com/cinema/bbc_02.jpg Prehistoric Park]'' (the same thing about the "[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|sabretooth cat]]").
* [[Art Evolution]]: If you count the two shows as being related, then compare the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|T. rex]]'' in the [http://i33.tinypic.com/91jv43.jpg original series] and the ones in ''[http://www.dinosoria.com/cinema/bbc_02.jpg Prehistoric Park]'' (the same thing about the "[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|sabretooth cat]]").
* [[Australian Wildlife]]: One ''Walking with Dinosaurs'' episode centers on Australian wildlife during the Late Cretaceous, the small plant-eating dinosaur ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Hadrosaur Predecessors|Leaellynasaura]]'', the larger plant-eating dinosaur ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Hadrosaur Predecessors|Muttaburrasaurus]]'', the large Temnospondyl Labyrinthodont ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Koolasuchus]]'', the monotreme mammal ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Steropodon]]'', an unnamed [[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|pterosaur]] and [[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|carnosaur]] (known only from fragmentary remains), and a weta (a large flightless insect, representatives of which are still alive today).
* [[Australian Wildlife]]: One ''Walking with Dinosaurs'' episode centers on Australian wildlife during the Late Cretaceous, the small plant-eating dinosaur ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Hadrosaur Predecessors|Leaellynasaura]]'', the larger plant-eating dinosaur ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Hadrosaur Predecessors|Muttaburrasaurus]]'', the large Temnospondyl Labyrinthodont ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Koolasuchus]]'', the monotreme mammal ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Steropodon]]'', an unnamed [[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|pterosaur]] and [[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|carnosaur]] (known only from fragmentary remains), and a weta (a large flightless insect, representatives of which are still alive today).
* [[Beware My Stinger Tail]]: ''Stegosaurus'' and ''Ankylosaurus''.
* [[Beware My Stinger Tail]]: ''Stegosaurus'' and ''Ankylosaurus''.
* [[Big Damn Heroes]]: In ''Walking with Dinosaurs'', the young ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Diplodocus]]'' is attacked by an ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Allosaurus]]'' and is saved when another ''Diplodocus'' knocks the ''Allosaurus'' down with its tail.
* [[Big Damn Heroes]]: In ''Walking with Dinosaurs'', the young ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Diplodocus]]'' is attacked by an ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Allosaurus]]'' and is saved when another ''Diplodocus'' knocks the ''Allosaurus'' down with its tail.
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* [[Book Ends]]: The ending to the last episode of ''Walking With Monsters'' echoes the end of the first episode of ''Walking With Dinosaurs''. [[Crowning Music of Awesome|It even has the same music.]]
* [[Book Ends]]: The ending to the last episode of ''Walking With Monsters'' echoes the end of the first episode of ''Walking With Dinosaurs''. [[Crowning Music of Awesome|It even has the same music.]]
* [[Darker and Edgier]]: The book is far more brutal than the television series.
* [[Darker and Edgier]]: The book is far more brutal than the television series.
* [[Eats Babies]]: The ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Coelophysis]]'', [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|cynodonts]], ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Allosaurus]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Didelphodon]]'', andc[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life - Birdlike Theropods|Hell Creek dromaeosaurids]] all get to feed on babies and juveniles. In some cases, [[I Am a Humanitarian|those of their own kind]]. (Or even ''their own''.)
* [[Eats Babies]]: The ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Coelophysis]]'', [[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|cynodonts]], ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Allosaurus]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Didelphodon]]'', andc[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birdlike Theropods|Hell Creek dromaeosaurids]] all get to feed on babies and juveniles. In some cases, [[I Am a Humanitarian|those of their own kind]]. (Or even ''their own''.)
* [[Everything's Better with Dinosaurs]]: The developers originally wanted to do a show about ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|prehistoric mammals]]''. They only got money for one about ''dinosaurs''. Once the dinosaurs series was finished (and a success) they could accomplish their original goal.
* [[Everything's Better with Dinosaurs]]: The developers originally wanted to do a show about ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|prehistoric mammals]]''. They only got money for one about ''dinosaurs''. Once the dinosaurs series was finished (and a success) they could accomplish their original goal.
* [[Everything's Squishier with Cephalopods]]: The [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|ammonites]] from Cruel Sea.
* [[Everything's Squishier with Cephalopods]]: The [[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|ammonites]] from Cruel Sea.
* [[Feathered Fiend]]: The primitive bird ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Birds|Iberomesornis]]'' in ''Giant of the Skies'' fit the [[Zerg Rush]] type of this.
* [[Feathered Fiend]]: The primitive bird ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birds|Iberomesornis]]'' in ''Giant of the Skies'' fit the [[Zerg Rush]] type of this.
** Technically also ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Small Theropods|Ornitholestes]]'', ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Utahraptor]]'', and the [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life - Birdlike Theropods|Late Cretaceous dromaeosaurids]], even though many of them were depicted as [[Science Marches On|unfeathered]] or [[Somewhere a Paleontologist Is Crying|only sparsely feathered]].
** Technically also ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Other Small Theropods|Ornitholestes]]'', ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Utahraptor]]'', and the [[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birdlike Theropods|Late Cretaceous dromaeosaurids]], even though many of them were depicted as [[Science Marches On|unfeathered]] or [[Somewhere a Paleontologist Is Crying|only sparsely feathered]].
* [[Follow the Leader]]: After ''Walking With Dinosaurs'', there came a whole onslaught of documentaries with CGI dinosaurs. ''[[When Dinosaurs Roamed America]]'', ''[[Dinosaur Planet]]'', and ''[[Jurassic Fight Club]]'', to name a few.<ref>The latter show gave the [[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|allosaurs]] and ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Utahraptor]]'' identical color schemes to the original show.</ref>
* [[Follow the Leader]]: After ''Walking With Dinosaurs'', there came a whole onslaught of documentaries with CGI dinosaurs. ''[[When Dinosaurs Roamed America]]'', ''[[Dinosaur Planet]]'', and ''[[Jurassic Fight Club]]'', to name a few.<ref>The latter show gave the [[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|allosaurs]] and ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Utahraptor]]'' identical color schemes to the original show.</ref>
** Every post-WWD toy of ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]'' has been given the colour scheme it had in WWD.
** Every post-WWD toy of ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]'' has been given the colour scheme it had in WWD.
* [[Foregone Conclusion]]: The dinosaurs did go extinct and the episode is called "Death of a Dynasty" after all.
* [[Foregone Conclusion]]: The dinosaurs did go extinct and the episode is called "Death of a Dynasty" after all.
** The death of the old ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Ornithocheirus]]''. The first thing we see is his body, and rest of the episode [[How We Got Here|shows his last journey before he died]].
** The death of the old ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Ornithocheirus]]''. The first thing we see is his body, and rest of the episode [[How We Got Here|shows his last journey before he died]].
* [[Gasshole]]: One of the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Diplodocus]]'' is heard farting during the digestion of plant matter, while the narrator says "[[Crowning Moment of Funny|The activity in its gut produces a lot of excess gas]]".
* [[Gasshole]]: One of the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Diplodocus]]'' is heard farting during the digestion of plant matter, while the narrator says "[[Crowning Moment of Funny|The activity in its gut produces a lot of excess gas]]".
* [[Giant Flyer]]: Several giant [[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|pterosaurs]] (the correct name instead of "pterodactyl"). From the first series, both ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Ornithocheirus]]'' (oversized) and ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Quetzalcoatlus]]'' (not oversized) had a wingspan of 45 feet.
* [[Giant Flyer]]: Several giant [[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|pterosaurs]] (the correct name instead of "pterodactyl"). From the first series, both ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Ornithocheirus]]'' (oversized) and ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Quetzalcoatlus]]'' (not oversized) had a wingspan of 45 feet.
* [[Hiroshima as a Unit of Measure]]: The meteor at the end of the Cretaceous. It explodes with a power of 300.000.000 Hiroshima bombs.
* [[Hiroshima as a Unit of Measure]]: The meteor at the end of the Cretaceous. It explodes with a power of 300.000.000 Hiroshima bombs.
* [[Hemisphere Bias]]: The end of ''Dinosaurs'', where Montana somehow transforms into the ''African savanna''.
* [[Hemisphere Bias]]: The end of ''Dinosaurs'', where Montana somehow transforms into the ''African savanna''.
* [[Infant Immortality]]: Averted on a ''grand'' scale.
* [[Infant Immortality]]: Averted on a ''grand'' scale.
** New Blood contained the deaths of {{spoiler|all the [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|cynodont]] young (One by being eaten by the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Coelophysis]]'', the rest eaten by their ''own parents'' in the uncut UK Broadcast/DVD), and cannibalism strikes the ''Coelophysis'' as well}}
** New Blood contained the deaths of {{spoiler|all the [[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|cynodont]] young (One by being eaten by the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Coelophysis]]'', the rest eaten by their ''own parents'' in the uncut UK Broadcast/DVD), and cannibalism strikes the ''Coelophysis'' as well}}
** "Time of the Titans" obviously with all the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Diplodocus]]'' youngsters (called "sauropodlets" in the show). So many are alive at the beginning but as the episode goes on {{spoiler|most of them die off. In the series only 2 or even 3 survive everything to join a herd, if you read the book ''only ONE survived''}}
** "Time of the Titans" obviously with all the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Diplodocus]]'' youngsters (called "sauropodlets" in the show). So many are alive at the beginning but as the episode goes on {{spoiler|most of them die off. In the series only 2 or even 3 survive everything to join a herd, if you read the book ''only ONE survived''}}
** "Cruel Sea" just might be the only part of the series {{spoiler|(Except for "Giant of the Skies", which didn't contain much young characters. That focused on old mortality if anything...)}} where this trope is put into use. As although there may have been implied deaths of the young ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Opthalmosaurus]]'' (a fish-like marine reptile belonging to the ichthyosaur group), the main one manages to avoid death by storms, sharks, and drowning.
** "Cruel Sea" just might be the only part of the series {{spoiler|(Except for "Giant of the Skies", which didn't contain much young characters. That focused on old mortality if anything...)}} where this trope is put into use. As although there may have been implied deaths of the young ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Opthalmosaurus]]'' (a fish-like marine reptile belonging to the ichthyosaur group), the main one manages to avoid death by storms, sharks, and drowning.
*** Unless you count the very, very graphic instance of [[Death by Childbirth]], which does have a dead little baby ''Ophthalmosaurus''.
*** Unless you count the very, very graphic instance of [[Death by Childbirth]], which does have a dead little baby ''Ophthalmosaurus''.
** "Spirits of the Ice Forest" has young that are mostly implied to have died in the book, mentioning that although many of the ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Hadrosaur Predecessors|Leaellynasaura]]'' clan mate and lay eggs usually the only young that will survive is the Dominant Pair's children. (''Leaellynasaura'' was a tiny bipedal herbivorous dinosaur from Cretaceous Australia)
** "Spirits of the Ice Forest" has young that are mostly implied to have died in the book, mentioning that although many of the ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Hadrosaur Predecessors|Leaellynasaura]]'' clan mate and lay eggs usually the only young that will survive is the Dominant Pair's children. (''Leaellynasaura'' was a tiny bipedal herbivorous dinosaur from Cretaceous Australia)
** "Death of a Dynasty" has, (besides the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Tyrannosaurus]]'' young killed by the meteor at the end anyway) the ''Triceratops''-like ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Ceratopsids|Torosaurus]]'' young killed by [[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|dromaeosaurids]] (commonly known as "raptors") and an implied death of a picked on ''Tyrannosaurus''. And if it counts: the small mammal ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Didelphodon]]'' eating the eggs.
** "Death of a Dynasty" has, (besides the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Tyrannosaurus]]'' young killed by the meteor at the end anyway) the ''Triceratops''-like ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Ceratopsids|Torosaurus]]'' young killed by [[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|dromaeosaurids]] (commonly known as "raptors") and an implied death of a picked on ''Tyrannosaurus''. And if it counts: the small mammal ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Didelphodon]]'' eating the eggs.
*** In the original cut the female tyrannosaur gets in heat because a leak of volcanic gas kills her first litter of eggs before they hatch. Then two ''Didelphodon'' come and [[Squick|try to eat the almost-formed tyrannosaur embryos]].
*** In the original cut the female tyrannosaur gets in heat because a leak of volcanic gas kills her first litter of eggs before they hatch. Then two ''Didelphodon'' come and [[Squick|try to eat the almost-formed tyrannosaur embryos]].
* [[Land Down Under]]: Cretaceous Australia spends half the year frozen solid, with no sunlight whatsoever during that period.
* [[Land Down Under]]: Cretaceous Australia spends half the year frozen solid, with no sunlight whatsoever during that period.
* [[The Magic Goes Away]]: ''Death of a Dynasty''.
* [[The Magic Goes Away]]: ''Death of a Dynasty''.
* [[Mama Bear]]: The female ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Tyrannosaurus]]''. Deconstructed, as her valiant attempt to scare an Ankylosaurus away from her infants ends up killing her.
* [[Mama Bear]]: The female ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Tyrannosaurus]]''. Deconstructed, as her valiant attempt to scare an Ankylosaurus away from her infants ends up killing her.
** The female ''Tyrannosaurus'' also displays the trait in the live arena show, when she scares away a ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Ceratopsids|Torosaurus]]'' and an ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Ankylosaurus]]'' that are harrassing her baby.
** The female ''Tyrannosaurus'' also displays the trait in the live arena show, when she scares away a ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Ceratopsids|Torosaurus]]'' and an ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Ankylosaurus]]'' that are harrassing her baby.
* [[Misplaced Wildlife]]: European dinosaurs ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Plateosaurus]]'', and ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Ankylosaurs|Polacanthus]]'' and the equally European pterosaurs ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Peteinosaurus]]'' and ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Anurognathus]]'', all placed in North America in the show. And the "giant raptors" [[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|'''Utah'''raptors]] placed in Europe.
* [[Misplaced Wildlife]]: European dinosaurs ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Plateosaurus]]'', and ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Ankylosaurs|Polacanthus]]'' and the equally European pterosaurs ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Peteinosaurus]]'' and ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Anurognathus]]'', all placed in North America in the show. And the "giant raptors" [[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|'''Utah'''raptors]] placed in Europe.
* [[Mood Whiplash]]: In the arena show, the mother ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Tyrannosaurus]]'' scares away the ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Ceratopsids|Torosaurus]]'' and ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Ankylosaurus]]'' harrassing her baby. The mother and her baby then share a cute little moment where she goes around roaring at the audience and he tries to mimic her, with underwhelming results. They nuzzle a bit, and then the comet hits.
* [[Mood Whiplash]]: In the arena show, the mother ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Tyrannosaurus]]'' scares away the ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Ceratopsids|Torosaurus]]'' and ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Ankylosaurus]]'' harrassing her baby. The mother and her baby then share a cute little moment where she goes around roaring at the audience and he tries to mimic her, with underwhelming results. They nuzzle a bit, and then the comet hits.
* [[Narrator]]: [[Kenneth Branagh]]. He was dubbed over for some releases, (e.g. the US).
* [[Narrator]]: [[Kenneth Branagh]]. He was dubbed over for some releases, (e.g. the US).
* [[No Fourth Wall]]: Nigel Marven repeatedly addresses the audience.
* [[No Fourth Wall]]: Nigel Marven repeatedly addresses the audience.
* [[No-Holds-Barred Beatdown]]: {{spoiler|The fight between female ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Tyrannosaurus'' and ''Ankylosaurus]]'' ends up this way in the book that accompanied the TV series.}}
* [[No-Holds-Barred Beatdown]]: {{spoiler|The fight between female ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Tyrannosaurus'' and ''Ankylosaurus]]'' ends up this way in the book that accompanied the TV series.}}
* [[Palette Swap]]: Similar looking animals (like ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Utahraptor]]'' and ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life - Birdlike Theropods|Dromaeosaurus]]'', various ornithopods) were just these. Certain animals (like large theropods and ornithopods) only got new heads. You can tell, because many creatures have the exact same folds and blood vessels on their skin. Then, there is ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Plesiopleurodon]]'', which is just [[Stock Footage]] of ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]'' from the previous episode, only tinted lighter.
* [[Palette Swap]]: Similar looking animals (like ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Utahraptor]]'' and ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birdlike Theropods|Dromaeosaurus]]'', various ornithopods) were just these. Certain animals (like large theropods and ornithopods) only got new heads. You can tell, because many creatures have the exact same folds and blood vessels on their skin. Then, there is ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Plesiopleurodon]]'', which is just [[Stock Footage]] of ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]'' from the previous episode, only tinted lighter.
* [[Papa Wolf]]: The male [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|cynodont]]. Until the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Coelophysis]]'' discover the burrow and he [[Nightmare Fuel|decides that the young aren't worth defending anymore]], at least...
* [[Papa Wolf]]: The male [[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|cynodont]]. Until the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Coelophysis]]'' discover the burrow and he [[Nightmare Fuel|decides that the young aren't worth defending anymore]], at least...
* [[Prehistoric Monster]]: Gorgeously averted, ''perhaps'' except only for ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]'', which still behaves like a real animal, but is presented in a sinister light. The portrait of ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|T. rex]]'' is of particular note: they appear more good mothers and playful youngsters than scary killers.
* [[Prehistoric Monster]]: Gorgeously averted, ''perhaps'' except only for ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]'', which still behaves like a real animal, but is presented in a sinister light. The portrait of ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|T. rex]]'' is of particular note: they appear more good mothers and playful youngsters than scary killers.
* [[Raptor Attack]]: Scaly raptors appear.
* [[Raptor Attack]]: Scaly raptors appear.
* [[Real Is Brown]]: Averted, although most other artwork makes dinosaurs with boring, green/grey colours, here they are often brightly coloured with stripes, spots and patterns, like reptiles and birds are today.
* [[Real Is Brown]]: Averted, although most other artwork makes dinosaurs with boring, green/grey colours, here they are often brightly coloured with stripes, spots and patterns, like reptiles and birds are today.
* [[Red Herring]]: ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Large Theropods|Eustreptospondylus]]'' being shown during the opening narration of ''Cruel Sea'', with Kenneth Branagh talking about "the most fearsome predator of the Jurassic" that "is watching his prey". Only a few moments later it becomes obvious that {{spoiler|this narration ''wasn't'' about ''Eustreptospondylus'', but instead about ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]''}}
* [[Red Herring]]: ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Large Theropods|Eustreptospondylus]]'' being shown during the opening narration of ''Cruel Sea'', with Kenneth Branagh talking about "the most fearsome predator of the Jurassic" that "is watching his prey". Only a few moments later it becomes obvious that {{spoiler|this narration ''wasn't'' about ''Eustreptospondylus'', but instead about ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]''}}
** This is ruined in [[Good Bad Translation|Italian dub]]: here the narrator says {{spoiler|"Eustreptospondylus, the most fearsome predator of the Jurassic..." (sigh)}}
** This is ruined in [[Good Bad Translation|Italian dub]]: here the narrator says {{spoiler|"Eustreptospondylus, the most fearsome predator of the Jurassic..." (sigh)}}
* [[Rocks Fall, Everyone Dies]]: Guess what.
* [[Rocks Fall, Everyone Dies]]: Guess what.
* [[Sea Monster]]: The entire third episode, ''Cruel Sea'', though a giant ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Plesiopleurodon]]'' also appears in ''Giant of the Skies'' for one shot.
* [[Sea Monster]]: The entire third episode, ''Cruel Sea'', though a giant ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Plesiopleurodon]]'' also appears in ''Giant of the Skies'' for one shot.
* [[Seldom-Seen Species]]:
* [[Seldom-Seen Species]]:
** '''New Blood:''' ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Postosuchus]]'', ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Plateosaurus]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Placerias'', ''Peteinosaurus]]'', ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Coelophysis]]''
** '''New Blood:''' ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Postosuchus]]'', ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Plateosaurus]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Placerias'', ''Peteinosaurus]]'', ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Coelophysis]]''
** '''Time of the Titans:''' ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Small Theropods|Ornitholestes]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Anurognathus]]''
** '''Time of the Titans:''' ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Other Small Theropods|Ornitholestes]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Anurognathus]]''
** '''Cruel Sea:''' ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Ophthalmosaurus'', ''Liopleurodon]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Large Theropods|Eustreptospondylus]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Cryptoclidus]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Hybodus'', ''Perisphinctes]]''
** '''Cruel Sea:''' ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Ophthalmosaurus'', ''Liopleurodon]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Large Theropods|Eustreptospondylus]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Cryptoclidus]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Hybodus'', ''Perisphinctes]]''
** '''Giant of the Skies:''' ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Ornithocheirus'', ''Tupandactylus'' (still called ''Tapejara'' here)]], ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Ankylosaurs|Polacanthus]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Birds|Iberomesornis]]''
** '''Giant of the Skies:''' ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Ornithocheirus'', ''Tupandactylus'' (still called ''Tapejara'' here)]], ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Ankylosaurs|Polacanthus]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birds|Iberomesornis]]''
** '''Spirits of the Ice Forest:''' ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Hadrosaur Predecessors|Leaellynasaura'', ''Muttaburrasaurus]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Koolasuchus]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Steropodon]]''
** '''Spirits of the Ice Forest:''' ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Hadrosaur Predecessors|Leaellynasaura'', ''Muttaburrasaurus]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Koolasuchus]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Steropodon]]''
** '''Death of a Dynasty:''' ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Ceratopsids|Torosaurus]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life - Birdlike Theropods|Dromaeosaurus]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Didelphodon]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Deinosuchus'', ''Dinilysia]]''<ref> The scarcity of the first two in popular culture is somewhat [[Justified Trope|justified]] due to [[Science Marches On|science marching on]].</ref>
** '''Death of a Dynasty:''' ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Ceratopsids|Torosaurus]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birdlike Theropods|Dromaeosaurus]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Didelphodon]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Deinosuchus'', ''Dinilysia]]''<ref> The scarcity of the first two in popular culture is somewhat [[Justified Trope|justified]] due to [[Science Marches On|science marching on]].</ref>
** '''Walking With Dinosaurs: The Arena Spectacular:''' ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Primitive Dinosaurs|Liliensternus]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Ornithocheirus]]'', ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Plateosaurus]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Ceratopsids|Torosaurus]]''
** '''Walking With Dinosaurs: The Arena Spectacular:''' ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Primitive Dinosaurs|Liliensternus]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Ornithocheirus]]'', ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Plateosaurus]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Ceratopsids|Torosaurus]]''
* [[Shoot the Shaggy Dog]]: "Giant of the Skies".
* [[Shoot the Shaggy Dog]]: "Giant of the Skies".
* [[Shown Their Work]]: The production team went on great lengths to avoid [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|grasses]] during the shooting of ''Walking with Dinosaurs''. [[Science Marches On|Then we found out it first appeared in the Cretaceous...]]
* [[Shown Their Work]]: The production team went on great lengths to avoid [[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|grasses]] during the shooting of ''Walking with Dinosaurs''. [[Science Marches On|Then we found out it first appeared in the Cretaceous...]]
** [[Word of God]] says that in the Cretaceous, grass only existed in India. India was never shown in any incarnation of WWD.
** [[Word of God]] says that in the Cretaceous, grass only existed in India. India was never shown in any incarnation of WWD.
* [[Somewhere a Palaeontologist Is Crying]]: Mostly averted, but still, there are plenty of mess-ups.
* [[Somewhere a Palaeontologist Is Crying]]: Mostly averted, but still, there are plenty of mess-ups.
** Apparently some paleontologists strongly criticized the scene from the first episode of ''Walking with Dinosaurs'' where ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Postosuchus]]'' was shown urinating in a way more similar to that of mammals than that of reptiles and birds, despite it was an ancient relative of both crocs and dinos - so strongly in fact, that one of the series' scientific consultants, Prof. Michael Benton, [http://palaeo.gly.bris.ac.uk/Essays/WWD/default.html decided to address their criticism]. The relevant bit: "Another category of WWD-haters, the fact checkers, began compiling lists of errors in the first week. These were gleefully circulated on the e-mail lists. For example, in the first programme, ''Postosuchus'' urinates copiously. There is no doubt that it does so in the programme, and this was a moment that my children relished. However, of course, birds and crocodiles, the closest living relatives of the dinosaurs, do not urinate; they shed their waste chemicals as more solid uric acid. Equally, though, we can’t prove that ''Postosuchus'' did not urinate like this: copious urination is the primitive state for tetrapods (seen in fishes, amphibians, turtles, and mammals), and it might have been retained by some basal archosaurs."
** Apparently some paleontologists strongly criticized the scene from the first episode of ''Walking with Dinosaurs'' where ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Postosuchus]]'' was shown urinating in a way more similar to that of mammals than that of reptiles and birds, despite it was an ancient relative of both crocs and dinos - so strongly in fact, that one of the series' scientific consultants, Prof. Michael Benton, [https://web.archive.org/web/20120829030149/http://palaeo.gly.bris.ac.uk/Essays/WWD/default.html decided to address their criticism]. The relevant bit: "Another category of WWD-haters, the fact checkers, began compiling lists of errors in the first week. These were gleefully circulated on the e-mail lists. For example, in the first programme, ''Postosuchus'' urinates copiously. There is no doubt that it does so in the programme, and this was a moment that my children relished. However, of course, birds and crocodiles, the closest living relatives of the dinosaurs, do not urinate; they shed their waste chemicals as more solid uric acid. Equally, though, we can’t prove that ''Postosuchus'' did not urinate like this: copious urination is the primitive state for tetrapods (seen in fishes, amphibians, turtles, and mammals), and it might have been retained by some basal archosaurs."
*** This combines the twin arts of whining and digging oneself deeper into a hole. His argument is similar to "well. we can't prove for certain that ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|T. rex]]'' didn't breathe fire, so there's nothing wrong with having it do so in our documentary." Also note that excreting uric acid uses less water than excreting urea, which gives doing so a selective advantage in dry environments like deserts. Guess where New Blood is set? That's right, the biome least conducive to a urea-excreting reptile.
*** This combines the twin arts of whining and digging oneself deeper into a hole. His argument is similar to "well. we can't prove for certain that ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|T. rex]]'' didn't breathe fire, so there's nothing wrong with having it do so in our documentary." Also note that excreting uric acid uses less water than excreting urea, which gives doing so a selective advantage in dry environments like deserts. Guess where New Blood is set? That's right, the biome least conducive to a urea-excreting reptile.
** Also, [[wikipedia:Darren Naish|Dr. Darren Naish]] is known to ''strongly'' [http://scienceblogs.com/tetrapodzoology/2009/05/100_years_of_tyrannosaurus_rex.php#comment-1647519 dislike] the WWD reconstruction of ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Tyrannosaurus]]''.
** Also, [[wikipedia:Darren Naish|Dr. Darren Naish]] is known to ''strongly'' [https://web.archive.org/web/20120508135128/http://scienceblogs.com/tetrapodzoology/2009/05/100_years_of_tyrannosaurus_rex.php#comment-1647519 dislike] the WWD reconstruction of ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Tyrannosaurus]]''.
** Scaly raptors weren't to the paleontologists' liking even back then.
** Scaly raptors weren't to the paleontologists' liking even back then.
** Reusing models meant that some correct anatomical details that got carried over from one animal to the other suddenly turned erroneous. Case in point: the thumbs on hadrosaurs.
** Reusing models meant that some correct anatomical details that got carried over from one animal to the other suddenly turned erroneous. Case in point: the thumbs on hadrosaurs.
Line 120: Line 120:
* [[Tail Slap]]: An adult ''Diplodocus'' saves a younger one from an ''Allosaurus'' this way.
* [[Tail Slap]]: An adult ''Diplodocus'' saves a younger one from an ''Allosaurus'' this way.
* [[Taxonomic Term Confusion]]: Branagh refers to the [[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|sauropods]] as "a great family of dinosaurs" in the original WWD. "Infraorder" would be more appropriate.
* [[Taxonomic Term Confusion]]: Branagh refers to the [[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|sauropods]] as "a great family of dinosaurs" in the original WWD. "Infraorder" would be more appropriate.
* [[Tyrannosaurus Rex]]: Not just ''rex'', but its Asian relative ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Large Theropods|Tarbosaurus]]'' shows up as well.
* [[Tyrannosaurus Rex]]: Not just ''rex'', but its Asian relative ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Large Theropods|Tarbosaurus]]'' shows up as well.
* [[The Worf Effect]]: A good way to show that an animal is a [[Badass]] is have it drive off, beat up, or ''kill'' the top predator of the episode, as was the case with ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Stegosaurus]]'' (to ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Allosaurus]]'') and ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Ankylosaurus]]'' (to ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Tyrannosaurus]]'').
* [[The Worf Effect]]: A good way to show that an animal is a [[Badass]] is have it drive off, beat up, or ''kill'' the top predator of the episode, as was the case with ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Stegosaurus]]'' (to ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Allosaurus]]'') and ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Ankylosaurus]]'' (to ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Tyrannosaurus]]'').
** If the animal is another predator, another way is to have it [[Always a Bigger Fish|prey on or scare away]] another stereotypically dangerous predator such as a theropod or shark. Most famously done with ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]''; and then the several [[Everything's Even Worse with Sharks]] examples of course (see above).
** If the animal is another predator, another way is to have it [[Always a Bigger Fish|prey on or scare away]] another stereotypically dangerous predator such as a theropod or shark. Most famously done with ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Liopleurodon]]''; and then the several [[Everything's Even Worse with Sharks]] examples of course (see above).
* [[Zerg Rush]]: The ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Coelophysis]]'' against the dying ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Postosuchus]]''.
* [[Zerg Rush]]: The ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Coelophysis]]'' against the dying ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Postosuchus]]''.
** A defensive variant is used by ''[[Feathered Fiend|Ibero]][[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Birds|mesornis]]'' on the old ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Ornithocheirus]]''.
** A defensive variant is used by ''[[Feathered Fiend|Ibero]][[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birds|mesornis]]'' on the old ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Ornithocheirus]]''.



=== ''The Ballad of Big Al provides examples of:'' ===
== ''The Ballad of Big Al provides examples of:'' ==
* [[Art Evolution]]: Compare the new ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Allosaurus]]'' model to the old one from ''Time of the Titans''.
* [[Art Evolution]]: Compare the new ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Allosaurus]]'' model to the old one from ''Time of the Titans''.
* [[Crossing the Desert|Crossing The Salt Plain]]
* [[Crossing the Desert|Crossing The Salt Plain]]
* [[Infant Immortality]]: One of Al's baby siblings is killed.
* [[Infant Immortality]]: One of Al's baby siblings is killed.
* [[Prehistoric Monster]]: Perhaps the most notable aversion in the entire series is Big Al the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Allosaurus]]'', {{spoiler|whose unlucky fate made many viewers sad}}.
* [[Prehistoric Monster]]: Perhaps the most notable aversion in the entire series is Big Al the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Allosaurus]]'', {{spoiler|whose unlucky fate made many viewers sad}}.
* [[Seldom-Seen Species]]: ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Hadrosaurs|Dryosaurus]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Small Theropods|Ornitholestes]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Anurognathus'' and ''Othnielia]]''.
* [[Seldom-Seen Species]]: ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Hadrosaurs|Dryosaurus]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Other Small Theropods|Ornitholestes]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Anurognathus'' and ''Othnielia]]''.
* [[Shoot the Shaggy Dog]]: Technically, {{spoiler|Big Al himself.}}
* [[Shoot the Shaggy Dog]]: Technically, {{spoiler|Big Al himself.}}
* [[Shown Their Work]]: The second part of the special, which deals with how we learned all this stuff about Al and ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Allosaurus]]'' in general.
* [[Shown Their Work]]: The second part of the special, which deals with how we learned all this stuff about Al and ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Allosaurus]]'' in general.


=== ''Walking with Beasts'' provides examples of: ===


== ''Walking with Beasts'' provides examples of: ==
* [[Ape Shall Never Kill Ape]]: Averted again, as an invading ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' kills another ''Smilodon'''s cubs, behaviour based on modern lions.
* [[Ape Shall Never Kill Ape]]: Averted again, as an invading ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' kills another ''Smilodon'''s cubs, behaviour based on modern lions.
* [[Beware My Stinger Tail]]: ''Doedicurus''.
* [[Beware My Stinger Tail]]: ''Doedicurus''.
* [[Big Damn Heroes]]: A ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' cub is chased by a pair of ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Birds|Phorushracos]]'' at the beginning of the ''Saber Tooth'' episode, but then Half-Tooth appears out of nowhere and scares the Terror Birds away just when they're about to eat the cub.
* [[Big Damn Heroes]]: A ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' cub is chased by a pair of ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birds|Phorushracos]]'' at the beginning of the ''Saber Tooth'' episode, but then Half-Tooth appears out of nowhere and scares the Terror Birds away just when they're about to eat the cub.
* [[Dumb Muscle]]: ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Megatherium]]''.
* [[Dumb Muscle]]: ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Megatherium]]''.
* [[Eats Babies]]: The [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|giant ants]] and ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Basilosaurus]]''. The ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Hyaenodon]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Birds|Phorusrhacos]]'', and [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|cave lion]] try to, but fail.
* [[Eats Babies]]: The [[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|giant ants]] and ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Basilosaurus]]''. The ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Hyaenodon]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birds|Phorusrhacos]]'', and [[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|cave lion]] try to, but fail.
* [[Everything's Better with Monkeys]]: ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Godinotia'' and ''Apidium]]'' may be subversions, as they either serve to get killed or only have very minor roles that don't influence the plot. ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Australopithecus]]'' fare better, as they get a full episode devoted to them.
* [[Everything's Better with Monkeys]]: ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Godinotia'' and ''Apidium]]'' may be subversions, as they either serve to get killed or only have very minor roles that don't influence the plot. ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Australopithecus]]'' fare better, as they get a full episode devoted to them.
* [[Feathered Fiend]]: ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Birds|Phorusrhacos]]'' and ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Birds|Gastornis]]''.
* [[Feathered Fiend]]: ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birds|Phorusrhacos]]'' and ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birds|Gastornis]]''.
* [[Full Boar Action]]: The [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|entelodonts]], even though strictly speaking they aren't pigs.
* [[Full Boar Action]]: The [[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|entelodonts]], even though strictly speaking they aren't pigs.
* [[Hemisphere Bias]]: The last episode ends with a pull-out from the United Kingdom (due to the last scene being a pull-out from the Oxford University Museum of Natural History.)
* [[Hemisphere Bias]]: The last episode ends with a pull-out from the United Kingdom (due to the last scene being a pull-out from the Oxford University Museum of Natural History.)
* [[Infant Immortality]]: Averted again. The ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Birds|Gastornis]]'' chick gets eaten by [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|giant ants]], some ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' cubs are killed by other ''Smilodon''s, a good many ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Dorudon]]'' calves are eaten by ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Basilosaurus]]'', a [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|brontothere]] calf is shown dead, some baby [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|bear dogs]] are killed in a flood, and a baby ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Macrauchenia]]'' gets downed by a [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Birds|terror bird]]. In the book, the latter is replaced by a ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Hippidion]]'' calf. Also, while it doesn't happen in the program or the book, there exists a promo image which shows a ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Hyaenodon]]'' dragging a dead [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|indricothere]] calf.
* [[Infant Immortality]]: Averted again. The ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birds|Gastornis]]'' chick gets eaten by [[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|giant ants]], some ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' cubs are killed by other ''Smilodon''s, a good many ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Dorudon]]'' calves are eaten by ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Basilosaurus]]'', a [[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|brontothere]] calf is shown dead, some baby [[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|bear dogs]] are killed in a flood, and a baby ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Macrauchenia]]'' gets downed by a [[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birds|terror bird]]. In the book, the latter is replaced by a ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Hippidion]]'' calf. Also, while it doesn't happen in the program or the book, there exists a promo image which shows a ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Hyaenodon]]'' dragging a dead [[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|indricothere]] calf.
* [[Killer Rabbit]]: It turns out, the elephant-sized sloth ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Megatherium]]'' can kill a ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' with a swipe of its claws.
* [[Killer Rabbit]]: It turns out, the elephant-sized sloth ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Megatherium]]'' can kill a ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' with a swipe of its claws.
* [[Mama Bear]]: The [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|brontothere]] and [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|indricothere]].
* [[Mama Bear]]: The [[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|brontothere]] and [[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|indricothere]].
* [[Mega Neko]]: ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' and ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Dinofelis]]''.
* [[Mega Neko]]: ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' and ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Dinofelis]]''.
* [[Misplaced Wildlife]]: The only example is the Indian ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Ambulocetus]]'' being put in Germany, though it gets a weak [[Hand Wave]].
* [[Misplaced Wildlife]]: The only example is the Indian ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Ambulocetus]]'' being put in Germany, though it gets a weak [[Hand Wave]].
* [[Prehistoric Monster]]: Averted again, though the [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|entelodonts]] are portrayed as, and are also said to be, mean bullies, though not quite in a villainous manner.
* [[Prehistoric Monster]]: Averted again, though the [[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|entelodonts]] are portrayed as, and are also said to be, mean bullies, though not quite in a villainous manner.
* [[Rhino Rampage]]: The [[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|woolly rhino]].
* [[Rhino Rampage]]: The [[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|woolly rhino]].
* [[Carnivore Confusion|Scavengers Are Mean]]: One example in Beasts: The pig-relatives [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|entelodonts]] are portrayed ''as scary as possible'', with enormously wide mouths, always-screeching behaviour, and described as "the Hogs from Hell" which do nothing else but bullying other animals; while true WWB predators like ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' tend to receive a more neutral portrait.
* [[Carnivore Confusion|Scavengers Are Mean]]: One example in Beasts: The pig-relatives [[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|entelodonts]] are portrayed ''as scary as possible'', with enormously wide mouths, always-screeching behaviour, and described as "the Hogs from Hell" which do nothing else but bullying other animals; while true WWB predators like ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' tend to receive a more neutral portrait.
* [[Sea Monster]]: ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Basilosaurus]]''.
* [[Sea Monster]]: ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Basilosaurus]]''.
* [[Seldom-Seen Species]]:
* [[Seldom-Seen Species]]:
** '''New Dawn:''' ''Leptictidium'', ''Gastornis'', ''Ambulocetus'', ''Propalaeotherium'', ''Godinotia'', ''Titanomyrma''
** '''New Dawn:''' ''Leptictidium'', ''Gastornis'', ''Ambulocetus'', ''Propalaeotherium'', ''Godinotia'', ''Titanomyrma''
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** Damn, it's subverted practically [[Once an Episode]] in ''Beasts''.
** Damn, it's subverted practically [[Once an Episode]] in ''Beasts''.
* [[Spared by the Adaptation]]: The second ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' brother is fatally wounded in the original episode, but in the corresponding chapter of the book, he just runs away.
* [[Spared by the Adaptation]]: The second ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' brother is fatally wounded in the original episode, but in the corresponding chapter of the book, he just runs away.
* [[The Worf Effect]]: In ''Land of Giants'', a mob of [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|entelodonts]] have this on a lone ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Hyaenodon]]'', but a lone entelodont is then scared away by the indricothere calf. Meanwhile in the book, it's a pair of ''Hyaenodon'' that drive off a single entelodont.
* [[The Worf Effect]]: In ''Land of Giants'', a mob of [[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|entelodonts]] have this on a lone ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Hyaenodon]]'', but a lone entelodont is then scared away by the indricothere calf. Meanwhile in the book, it's a pair of ''Hyaenodon'' that drive off a single entelodont.
** In the episode ''Saber Tooth'', a ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Megatherium]]'' shatters the dominance of the antagonistic ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' brothers by killing one of them, and later on Half-Tooth ([[The Hero]]) completes the effect by killing the remaining brother.
** In the episode ''Saber Tooth'', a ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Megatherium]]'' shatters the dominance of the antagonistic ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Smilodon]]'' brothers by killing one of them, and later on Half-Tooth ([[The Hero]]) completes the effect by killing the remaining brother.
** Also happens to the ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Dinofelis]]'', as the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Australopithecus]]'' realize that by attacking it as a group, they can scare it away.
** Also happens to the ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Dinofelis]]'', as the ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Australopithecus]]'' realize that by attacking it as a group, they can scare it away.
* [[What Could Have Been]]: Among the proposed episode ideas for ''WWB'' was one based around the Riversleigh fossil site from Australia. They chose to abandon it, as they already had enough stories planned.
* [[What Could Have Been]]: Among the proposed episode ideas for ''WWB'' was one based around the Riversleigh fossil site from Australia. They chose to abandon it, as they already had enough stories planned.
* [[Zerg Rush]]: Most gruesomly, [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|giant ants]] against the ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Birds|Gastornis]]'' chick.
* [[Zerg Rush]]: Most gruesomly, [[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|giant ants]] against the ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birds|Gastornis]]'' chick.


=== ''Chased by Dinosaurs'' provides examples of: ===


== ''Chased by Dinosaurs'' provides examples of: ==
* [[Feathered Fiend]]: ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Velociraptor]]'', ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life - Birdlike Theropods|Mononykus]]'', and ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life - Birdlike Theropods|Therizinosaurus]]'', though in the program, only ''Mononykus'' is depicted with feathers.
* [[Feathered Fiend]]: ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Velociraptor]]'', ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birdlike Theropods|Mononykus]]'', and ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birdlike Theropods|Therizinosaurus]]'', though in the program, only ''Mononykus'' is depicted with feathers.
* [[Giant Flyer]]: ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Pteranodon]]''.
* [[Giant Flyer]]: ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Pteranodon]]''.
* [[Killer Rabbit]]: The herbivorous theropod [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life - Birdlike Theropods|Therizinosaurus]], which honestly looks like a giant goose-but, as [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Large Theropods|Tarbosaurus]] finds out, this giant goose has giant claws.
* [[Killer Rabbit]]: The herbivorous theropod [[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birdlike Theropods|Therizinosaurus]], which honestly looks like a giant goose-but, as [[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Large Theropods|Tarbosaurus]] finds out, this giant goose has giant claws.
* [[Misplaced Wildlife]]: ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Velociraptor]]'' being put in the rainforest instead of the desert. It can, however, be [[Justified Trope|justified]] or [[Hand Wave|handwaved]], as the forest is located ''right'' next to the desert.
* [[Misplaced Wildlife]]: ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|Velociraptor]]'' being put in the rainforest instead of the desert. It can, however, be [[Justified Trope|justified]] or [[Hand Wave|handwaved]], as the forest is located ''right'' next to the desert.
** A more severe case is perhaps the African ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Sarcosuchus]]'' appearing in South America.
** A more severe case is perhaps the African ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Sarcosuchus]]'' appearing in South America.
** ''Pteranodon'' in South America? Doubles as [[Anachronism Stew]].
** ''Pteranodon'' in South America? Doubles as [[Anachronism Stew]].
* [[Palette Swap]]: Thankfully averted by the [[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|iguanodonts]] and the ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Large Theropods|Tarbosaurus]]'', as these received new animation models (or at least new details) instead of being straight reuses of almost identical models from the original series.
* [[Palette Swap]]: Thankfully averted by the [[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|iguanodonts]] and the ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Large Theropods|Tarbosaurus]]'', as these received new animation models (or at least new details) instead of being straight reuses of almost identical models from the original series.
* [[Seldom-Seen Species]]:
* [[Seldom-Seen Species]]:
** '''Land of Giants:''' ''Argentinosaurus'', ''Giganotosaurus'', ''Ornithocheirus'', ''Macrogryphosaurus'' (provided that the unspecified iguanodont is this)
** '''Land of Giants:''' ''Argentinosaurus'', ''Giganotosaurus'', ''Ornithocheirus'', ''Macrogryphosaurus'' (provided that the unspecified iguanodont is this)
** '''The Giant Claw:''' ''Saurolophus'', ''Protoceratops'', ''Mononykus'', ''Tarbosarus'', ''Therizinosaurus'', ''Azdarcho''
** '''The Giant Claw:''' ''Saurolophus'', ''Protoceratops'', ''Mononykus'', ''Tarbosarus'', ''Therizinosaurus'', ''Azdarcho''
* [[The Worf Effect]]: To ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Large Theropods|Tarbosaurus]]'', and again, courtesy of another animal (''[[Useful Notes/Birdlike Theropods|Therizinosaurus]]'').
* [[The Worf Effect]]: To ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Large Theropods|Tarbosaurus]]'', and again, courtesy of another animal (''[[Useful Notes/Birdlike Theropods|Therizinosaurus]]'').


=== ''Sea Monsters'' provides examples of: ===


== ''Sea Monsters'' provides examples of: ==
* [[Anachronism Stew]]: ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|T. rex]]'' appearing in a [[Cameo]] role 75 million years ago, whereas the oldest known ''rex'' dates from "only" about 68 million years ago. And it's clearly confirmed to be a real ''T. rex'' in the book, not one of its ancestors.<ref> ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Large Theropods|Daspletosaurus]]'' would have been more appropriate.</ref>
* [[Anachronism Stew]]: ''[[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|T. rex]]'' appearing in a [[Cameo]] role 75 million years ago, whereas the oldest known ''rex'' dates from "only" about 68 million years ago. And it's clearly confirmed to be a real ''T. rex'' in the book, not one of its ancestors.<ref> ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Large Theropods|Daspletosaurus]]'' would have been more appropriate.</ref>
* [[Death World]]: While nearly all the seas could counts, the Creataceous Western Interior Seaway, which is actually called ''Hell's Aquarium'' to signify its dangers, particularly stands out.
* [[Death World]]: While nearly all the seas could counts, the Creataceous Western Interior Seaway, which is actually called ''Hell's Aquarium'' to signify its dangers, particularly stands out.
* [[Everything's Even Worse with Sharks]]: ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|C. megalodon]]''; unusual given how often the series subverts this.
* [[Everything's Even Worse with Sharks]]: ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|C. megalodon]]''; unusual given how often the series subverts this.
* [[Everything's Squishier with Cephalopods]]: [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Orthocones]].
* [[Everything's Squishier with Cephalopods]]: [[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Orthocones]].
* [[Feathered Fiend]]: Subverted with ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Birds|Hesperornis]]'', which look agressive but only serve to get eaten by other predators. Played straight in the book, which lists [[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|dromaeosaurs]] as Cretaceous land menaces.
* [[Feathered Fiend]]: Subverted with ''[[Prehistoric Life/Dinosaurs/Birds|Hesperornis]]'', which look agressive but only serve to get eaten by other predators. Played straight in the book, which lists [[Stock Dinosaurs True Dinosaurs|dromaeosaurs]] as Cretaceous land menaces.
* [[Giant Flyer]]: The ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Pteranodon]]''s.
* [[Giant Flyer]]: The ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Pteranodon]]''s.
* ''[[Megalodon]]'': The third most dangerous [[Sea Monster]].
* ''[[Megalodon]]'': The third most dangerous [[Sea Monster]].
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* [[The Stinger]]: {{spoiler|A pod of mosasaurs attacks the boat after the credits for the last episode.}}
* [[The Stinger]]: {{spoiler|A pod of mosasaurs attacks the boat after the credits for the last episode.}}



=== ''Walking With Cavemen'' provides examples of: ===
== ''Walking With Cavemen'' provides examples of: ==
* [[Frazetta Man]]: This being a well-researched scientific documentary, it's mostly avoided. But it doesn't stop the protohumans from looking terrifying.
* [[Frazetta Man]]: This being a well-researched scientific documentary, it's mostly avoided. But it doesn't stop the protohumans from looking terrifying.
* [[One-Scene Wonder]]: The ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Mammals|Gigantopithecus]]''.
* [[One-Scene Wonder]]: The ''[[Prehistoric Life/Mammals|Gigantopithecus]]''.
* [[People in Rubber Suits]]
* [[People in Rubber Suits]]
* [[Seldom-Seen Species]]:
* [[Seldom-Seen Species]]:
** '''First Ancestors:''' ''Australopithecus afarensis'', ''Ancylotherium'', ''Deinotherium''
** '''First Ancestors:''' ''Australopithecus afarensis'', ''Ancylotherium'', ''Deinotherium''
** '''Blood Brothers:''' ''Paranthropus boisei'', ''Homo habilis'', ''Dinofelis'', ''Deinotherium'', ''Ancylotherium'', ''Homo rudolfensis''
** '''Blood Brothers:''' ''Paranthropus boisei'', ''Homo habilis'', ''Dinofelis'', ''Deinotherium'', ''Ancylotherium'', ''Homo rudolfensis''
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** '''The Survivors:''' ''Homo heidelbergensis'', Irish Elk
** '''The Survivors:''' ''Homo heidelbergensis'', Irish Elk


=== ''Walking With Monsters'' provides examples of: ===


== ''Walking With Monsters'' provides examples of: ==
* [[Always a Bigger Fish]]: The huge eurypterid ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Pterygotus]]'' killing the alleged [[Big Bad]] of the episode, ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Brontoscorpio]]''.
** Literally with the huge fish ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Hyneria]]'' swallowing a [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|prehistoric shark]] whole.
* [[Always a Bigger Fish]]: The huge eurypterid ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Pterygotus]]'' killing the alleged [[Big Bad]] of the episode, ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Brontoscorpio]]''.
* [[Big Creepy-Crawlies]]: The ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Meganeura'', ''Brontoscorpio'', ''Arthropleura'', Mesothelae]], and all the other arthropods in this spinoff.
** Literally with the huge fish ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Hyneria]]'' swallowing a [[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|prehistoric shark]] whole.
* [[Big Creepy-Crawlies]]: The ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Meganeura'', ''Brontoscorpio'', ''Arthropleura'', Mesothelae]], and all the other arthropods in this spinoff.
* [[Book Ends]]: See above.
* [[Book Ends]]: See above.
* [[Crapsack World]]: The late Permian.
* [[Crapsack World]]: The late Permian.
* [[Darker and Edgier]]: Has a scarier edge to the fight for survival than Dinosaurs and Beasts.
* [[Darker and Edgier]]: Has a scarier edge to the fight for survival than Dinosaurs and Beasts.
* [[Death by Sex]]: The male ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Hynerpeton]]'' gets eaten by a ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Hyneria]]'' right after it mates. In an interesting subversion, this only happens because it failed to mate the previous night, so in a way, it's a case of "death by belated sex".
* [[Death by Sex]]: The male ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Hynerpeton]]'' gets eaten by a ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Hyneria]]'' right after it mates. In an interesting subversion, this only happens because it failed to mate the previous night, so in a way, it's a case of "death by belated sex".
* [[Eats Babies]]: The ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Dimetrodon]]''s.
* [[Eats Babies]]: The ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Dimetrodon]]''s.
* [[Everything's Squishier with Cephalopods]]: The [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|orthocones]].
* [[Everything's Squishier with Cephalopods]]: The [[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|orthocones]].
* [[Eye Scream]]: A female ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Dimetrodon]]'''s eye is knocked out of her head while defending her nest.
* [[Eye Scream]]: A female ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Dimetrodon]]'''s eye is knocked out of her head while defending her nest.
* [[Infant Immortality]]: Yet more aversions. A juvenile ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Edaphosaurus]]'' gets eaten by a ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Dimetrodon]]'', a bunch of baby ''Dimetrodon'' get eaten by the adults, and a mesothelae spider butchers an entire nest of ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Petrolacosaurus]]'', save for the few that got away.
* [[Infant Immortality]]: Yet more aversions. A juvenile ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Edaphosaurus]]'' gets eaten by a ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Dimetrodon]]'', a bunch of baby ''Dimetrodon'' get eaten by the adults, and a mesothelae spider butchers an entire nest of ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Petrolacosaurus]]'', save for the few that got away.
* [[Mama Bear]]: The mother ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Dimetrodon]]''.
* [[Mama Bear]]: The mother ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Dimetrodon]]''.
* [[Misplaced Wildlife]]:
* [[Misplaced Wildlife]]:
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** '''Late Permian Period:''' ''Gorgonops'', ''Diictodon'', ''Rhinesuchus'', ''Scutosaurus''
** '''Late Permian Period:''' ''Gorgonops'', ''Diictodon'', ''Rhinesuchus'', ''Scutosaurus''
** '''Early Triassic Period:''' ''Lystrosaurus'', ''Euparkeria'', ''Proterosuchus'', ''Euchambersia''
** '''Early Triassic Period:''' ''Lystrosaurus'', ''Euparkeria'', ''Proterosuchus'', ''Euchambersia''
* [[Somewhere a Palaeontologist Is Crying]]: ''Walking With Monsters'' plays this trope straight more than any other presenter-less series. Evolution is described here as ''a war between predators and preys'' and many predators ([[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|giant arthropods]] and the giant fish ''Hyneria'' for example) are portrayed as a sort of Hollywoodian [[Big Bad|Big Bads]] that do nothing else but menacing the protagonist species (portrayed as a sort of Hollywoodian [[The Hero|hero]] who fights enemies several times stronger). It's worth noting that big primitive arthropods like scorpions and spiders ''weren't'' an obstacle for vertebrate evolution: they instead ''did help'' our ancestors in an indirect way, preying upon the less adapted of them and thus selecting actively their best-adapted traits. One can say that they "guided" actively their evolution and perhaps even contributed to make primitive fish becoming amphibians and finally Amniotes (the group including "reptiles", birds and mammals). In a sense, they may better be considered ''our friends'' rather than ''our enemies''. This argument is more widely discussed in [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life|Prehistoric Life]].
* [[Somewhere a Palaeontologist Is Crying]]: ''Walking With Monsters'' plays this trope straight more than any other presenter-less series. Evolution is described here as ''a war between predators and preys'' and many predators ([[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|giant arthropods]] and the giant fish ''Hyneria'' for example) are portrayed as a sort of Hollywoodian [[Big Bad|Big Bads]] that do nothing else but menacing the protagonist species (portrayed as a sort of Hollywoodian [[The Hero|hero]] who fights enemies several times stronger). It's worth noting that big primitive arthropods like scorpions and spiders ''weren't'' an obstacle for vertebrate evolution: they instead ''did help'' our ancestors in an indirect way, preying upon the less adapted of them and thus selecting actively their best-adapted traits. One can say that they "guided" actively their evolution and perhaps even contributed to make primitive fish becoming amphibians and finally Amniotes (the group including "reptiles", birds and mammals). In a sense, they may better be considered ''our friends'' rather than ''our enemies''. This argument is more widely discussed in [[Prehistoric Life]].
** Not to mention the mistakes about ancestor -> descendant relationship: the jawless, armoured ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Cephalaspis]]'' becoming a primitive amphibian missing two passages ([[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|jawed armoured fish and and non-armoured lobe-finned fish]]), and the early lizard-like ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Petrolacosaurus]]'' (portrayed as the "first reptile") wrongly becoming an ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Edaphosaurus]]'' (a ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Dimetrodon]]'' relative, thus a ''mammal'' ancestor). Another example is ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Euparkeria]]'' mentioned as the ancestor of all the dinosaurs (it was only a distant relative). And [[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|chasmatosaurs]] ''were not'' the ancestors of crocodiles and alligators, and perhaps they weren't even aquatic as shown in the program.
** Not to mention the mistakes about ancestor -> descendant relationship: the jawless, armoured ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Cephalaspis]]'' becoming a primitive amphibian missing two passages ([[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|jawed armoured fish and and non-armoured lobe-finned fish]]), and the early lizard-like ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Petrolacosaurus]]'' (portrayed as the "first reptile") wrongly becoming an ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Edaphosaurus]]'' (a ''[[Stock Dinosaurs Non Dinosaurs|Dimetrodon]]'' relative, thus a ''mammal'' ancestor). Another example is ''[[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|Euparkeria]]'' mentioned as the ancestor of all the dinosaurs (it was only a distant relative). And [[Prehistoric Life/Non Dinosaurian Reptiles|chasmatosaurs]] ''were not'' the ancestors of crocodiles and alligators, and perhaps they weren't even aquatic as shown in the program.
* [[Zerg Rush]]: ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Haikouichthys]]'' against the injured ''[[Useful Notes/Prehistoric Life Other Extinct Creatures|Anomalocaris]]''.
* [[Zerg Rush]]: ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Haikouichthys]]'' against the injured ''[[Prehistoric Life/Other Extinct Creatures|Anomalocaris]]''.


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[[Category:British Series]]
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[[Category:Nature Documentary]]
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[[Category:Walking with Dinosaurs]]
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[[Category:TV Series]]

Latest revision as of 03:17, 9 April 2020

"Imagine you could travel back in time, to a time long before man."
—Kenneth Branagh, the show's Narrator.

Walking with Dinosaurs (1999) is a BBC Speculative Documentary series focusing on... well... dinosaurs, using then-state-of-the-art CGI to recreate Mesozoic life. It was narrated by Kenneth Branagh.

It received several equally successful continuations, specials, and spin-offs:

  • The Ballad of Big Al (2000), which tries to recreate the possible life of a Real Life Allosaurus, named Big Al.
  • Walking with Beasts (2001), focusing on mammal evolution which came after the dinosaurs in the Paleogene, Neogene, and Quaternary Periods.
  • Chased by Dinosaurs (2002), two specials focusing on two striking dinosaurs, the gigantic Argentinosaurus and the odd Therizinosaurus. This was the first in the Walking with... series to feature a visible presenter (in this case, Nigel Marven).
  • Prehistoric Planet (2002), a revised version of the Walking With Dinosaurs and Walking With Beasts documentaries, aimed at a younger audience and narrated by Ben Stiller.
  • Sea Monsters (2003), focusing on dangerous prehistoric marine wildlife, from "the seventh most dangerous sea ever" up to "the first" one. This also featured Nigel Marven.
  • Walking with Cavemen (2003), focusing on... guess. Also went for the "presenter" format (in this case, Robert Winston).
  • Walking with Monsters (2005), this time focusing on what came before the dinosaurs. Returned to the presenter-less format favoured by WWD and WWB.
  • The Complete Guide to Prehistoric Life (2006), a book that producer Tim Haines and consultant Paul Chambers wrote featuring creatures from throughout the series.
  • Walking With Dinosaurs: The Arena Spectacular (opened in 2007), a touring live arena show featuring life-sized animatronic dinosaurs and performers in costume.
  • Walking With Dinosaurs 3D (2013), a theatrical movie, but with a different team behind it. Unknown whether it will follow a documentary-style storytelling, or not.

Prehistoric Park (2006) and Planet Dinosaur (2011) can be regarded either as spiritual successors to the later Nigel Marven specials and the original WWD, respectively, or as actual spin offs.

See also its Rule of Cool, Science Marches On and Stock Dinosaurs pages.


Tropes used in Walking with Dinosaurs include:

General tropes used throughout the franchise:

  • Anachronism Stew: Almost every animal had either gone extinct or not evolved by the time they're shown, mostly in Dinosaurs and Beasts.
  • Author Vocabulary Calendar: The narrator describes quite a lot of things as "lethal."
  • Badass: Where to begin? There's at least one per setting!
  • Camera Abuse: Almost Once an Episode, especially in Beasts.
  • Carnivore Confusion: The "predation is just a fact of life" approach, as most predators are treated as any documentary animals should be treated, not as villains. There are a few exceptions though, mainly in the two spinoffs ending with "Monsters".
  • Downer Ending: A given, since every animal featured in the program goes extinct eventually.
  • Everything's Even Worse with Sharks: Subverted mostly, as sharks in the series can't hold a candle to larger predators like Dunkleosteus, Liopleurodon, Hyneria and Basilosaurus.
  • Good Bad Translation: The Italian and Spanish versions. For example, the Spanish changes Utahraptor to Velociraptor, Diplodocus to Saurolophus, Postosuchus to a postosuchid,[1] and Megaloceras to Megalosaurus!
    • The Hungarian translation, too.
  • Never Smile At a Crocodile: Postosuchus and Deinosuchus in Walking with Dinosaurs and Sarcosuchus in Chased by Dinosaurs. Phytosaurs and Proterosuchus are not a close crocodile relatives, but fill the same role in the accompanying book Walking with Dinosaurs: A Natural History and in the TV series Walking with Monsters, respectively.
    • Deinosuchus gets only a cameo appearance in Walking with Dinosaurs the TV series, but its badassery is emphasized in the accompanying book, where it's stated that it's even capable of killing a Tyrannosaurus getting too close to the water and later a group of them scares the female Tyrannosaurus away from freshly killed Anatotitan.
  • Noisy Nature: And HOW! All animals in the whole series make continuously sounds of every kind from roars to bellows, screechs, and so on (a major example of the strong Rule of Cool that characterize this series). The most incredible example is perhaps the early "amphibian" Hynerpeton which makes belch-like sounds without a pause and apparently without any good reason.... despite being a very archaic vertebrate, and thus very unlikely to utter any loud cry.
    • Another example: giant arthropods like the scorpion Brontoscorpio and the millipede Arthropleura making creaking sounds when walking and even when they're moulting their exoskeleton. This kind of sound is heard also during the "Evolution takes over" moments in WWM (just like an horror movie...)
  • Roger Rabbit Effect: Some CGI animals share a scene or two with live-acted ones (including ancient humans), but this is used more greatly for comedic effect in all the various Making of specials.
  • Rule of Cool: Several examples throughout the series, especially about speculative animal behaviour. Another example is the fact that only the most spectacular animals of each taxonomic group are usually portrayed in almost all the shows of the series, despite they were probably less common in their environments that their smaller relatives (like what happens among modern animals as well). However, we can see many small-sized prehistoric animals too. Still another example is that many animals are more or less oversized in the program: the two most striking examples are the swimming Liopleurodon and the flying Ornithocheirus.
    • Since the list of examples from this trope is really large, please go here to see them.
  • Science Marches On: Many new discoveries have been made after this series, which changed our perception about prehistoric wildlife. These discoveries regard animal behaviour, taxonomy, or other issues. See here for examples.
  • Sexy Discretion Shot: No way, oh no. You get a clear view of everything, including the giant paleo-penises.
  • Small Taxonomy Pools: Averted - the series did feature several creatures that weren't well-known among the general public before.
  • Speculative Documentary: Maybe a bit too much on the speculative side.
  • Stock Dinosaurs: Lots, but a few new additions and subversion as well. For every stock dinosaur used, there's one or more creatures that have never been heard of in mass media before--or, substitution for an appropriate relative. Again, see here for a exhaustive list of examples.


Walking with Dinosaurs provides examples of:


The Ballad of Big Al provides examples of:


Walking with Beasts provides examples of:


Chased by Dinosaurs provides examples of:


Sea Monsters provides examples of:

  • Anachronism Stew: T. rex appearing in a Cameo role 75 million years ago, whereas the oldest known rex dates from "only" about 68 million years ago. And it's clearly confirmed to be a real T. rex in the book, not one of its ancestors.[4]
  • Death World: While nearly all the seas could counts, the Creataceous Western Interior Seaway, which is actually called Hell's Aquarium to signify its dangers, particularly stands out.
  • Everything's Even Worse with Sharks: C. megalodon; unusual given how often the series subverts this.
  • Everything's Squishier with Cephalopods: Orthocones.
  • Feathered Fiend: Subverted with Hesperornis, which look agressive but only serve to get eaten by other predators. Played straight in the book, which lists dromaeosaurs as Cretaceous land menaces.
  • Giant Flyer: The Pteranodons.
  • Megalodon: The third most dangerous Sea Monster.
  • Prehistoric Monster: Played straight, but that's kind of the point.
  • Schmuck Bait: Nigel repeatedly states that there's no way he would go into "Hell's Aquarium" - but decides to dive in anyway to ride a giant sea turtle.
  • Sea Monster: The title should tell you something.
  • Seldom-Seen Species:
    • The Seventh Most Dangerous Sea: Cameroceras, Megalograptus, Astraspis, Isotelus
    • Sixth: Peteinosaurus, Nothosaurus, Cymbospondylus
    • Fifth: Bothriolepis, Stethacanthus, Dunkleosteus
    • Fourth: Arsinotherium, Dorudon, Basilosaurus
    • Third: Odobenocetops, Cetotherium
    • Second: Leedsicthys, Metriorhyncus, Hybodus
    • First: Hesperornis, Squalicorax, Xiphactinus, Halisaurus
  • The Stinger: A pod of mosasaurs attacks the boat after the credits for the last episode.


Walking With Cavemen provides examples of:

  • Frazetta Man: This being a well-researched scientific documentary, it's mostly avoided. But it doesn't stop the protohumans from looking terrifying.
  • One-Scene Wonder: The Gigantopithecus.
  • People in Rubber Suits
  • Seldom-Seen Species:
    • First Ancestors: Australopithecus afarensis, Ancylotherium, Deinotherium
    • Blood Brothers: Paranthropus boisei, Homo habilis, Dinofelis, Deinotherium, Ancylotherium, Homo rudolfensis
    • Savage Family: Homo ergaster, Homo erectus, Gigantopithecus
    • The Survivors: Homo heidelbergensis, Irish Elk


Walking With Monsters provides examples of:

  • Always a Bigger Fish: The huge eurypterid Pterygotus killing the alleged Big Bad of the episode, Brontoscorpio.
  • Big Creepy-Crawlies: The Meganeura, Brontoscorpio, Arthropleura, Mesothelae, and all the other arthropods in this spinoff.
  • Book Ends: See above.
  • Crapsack World: The late Permian.
  • Darker and Edgier: Has a scarier edge to the fight for survival than Dinosaurs and Beasts.
  • Death by Sex: The male Hynerpeton gets eaten by a Hyneria right after it mates. In an interesting subversion, this only happens because it failed to mate the previous night, so in a way, it's a case of "death by belated sex".
  • Eats Babies: The Dimetrodons.
  • Everything's Squishier with Cephalopods: The orthocones.
  • Eye Scream: A female Dimetrodon's eye is knocked out of her head while defending her nest.
  • Infant Immortality: Yet more aversions. A juvenile Edaphosaurus gets eaten by a Dimetrodon, a bunch of baby Dimetrodon get eaten by the adults, and a mesothelae spider butchers an entire nest of Petrolacosaurus, save for the few that got away.
  • Mama Bear: The mother Dimetrodon.
  • Misplaced Wildlife:
    • Carboniferous Period: Proterogyrinus was likely extinct by the time chronicled in this segment.
    • Early Permian Period: Edaphosaurus is unknown from Europe, including the Bromacker Quarry.
    • Late Permian Period: Rhinesuchus and Gorgonops are unknown from Russia and probably were restricted to the Southern hemisphere.
    • Early Triassic Period: Euchambersia, Proterosuchus, and Euparkeria are all unknown from Antarctica.
  • Prehistoric Monster: It's even titled Walking With Monsters! Predators here are represented in a scarier way than the original Dinosaurs and Beasts.
  • Seldom-Seen Species:
    • Cambrian Period: Haikouichthys, Anomalocaris
    • Silurian Period: Cephalaspis, Brontoscorpio, Pterygotus, Cameroceras
    • Devonian Period: Hynerpeton, Hyneria, Stethacanthus
    • Carboniferous Period: Mesothelae, Petrolacosaurus, Meganeura, Arthropleura, Proterogyrinus
    • Early Permian Period: Edaphosaurus, Seymouria
    • Late Permian Period: Gorgonops, Diictodon, Rhinesuchus, Scutosaurus
    • Early Triassic Period: Lystrosaurus, Euparkeria, Proterosuchus, Euchambersia
  • Somewhere a Palaeontologist Is Crying: Walking With Monsters plays this trope straight more than any other presenter-less series. Evolution is described here as a war between predators and preys and many predators (giant arthropods and the giant fish Hyneria for example) are portrayed as a sort of Hollywoodian Big Bads that do nothing else but menacing the protagonist species (portrayed as a sort of Hollywoodian hero who fights enemies several times stronger). It's worth noting that big primitive arthropods like scorpions and spiders weren't an obstacle for vertebrate evolution: they instead did help our ancestors in an indirect way, preying upon the less adapted of them and thus selecting actively their best-adapted traits. One can say that they "guided" actively their evolution and perhaps even contributed to make primitive fish becoming amphibians and finally Amniotes (the group including "reptiles", birds and mammals). In a sense, they may better be considered our friends rather than our enemies. This argument is more widely discussed in Prehistoric Life.
  • Zerg Rush: Haikouichthys against the injured Anomalocaris.
  1. If you want to get techincal, it should be "rauisuchid"
  2. The latter show gave the allosaurs and Utahraptor identical color schemes to the original show.
  3. The scarcity of the first two in popular culture is somewhat justified due to science marching on.
  4. Daspletosaurus would have been more appropriate.