There is a landscape view of Los Angeles, California, "The City of Angels." A melting pot home to all walks of life, the largest city in California. Within this urban concrete jungle is Exposition Park, home to many museums, and institutions, among them, is the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles. At the centerpiece of the museum are the famous dueling dinosaur skeletons, two Cretaceous icons, predator and prey, in a dueling battle that has been around for millions of years, Tyrannosaurus Rex and Triceratops. Standing by is a Vietnamese-American black hair glasses wearing man in a Safari outfit named Thomas Tran.
"I always loved going to the museum, the first thing I see when I walk through the doors is one of the most remarkable animals ever to walk the earth. Dinosaurs. the most spectacular animals that have ever roamed this planet. They are magnificent and monstrous, sometimes misunderstood. Like this display, the dueling Triceratops prorsus and Tyrannosaurus Rex. They spark the imagination within all of us. All that we have left today of the dinosaurs are their bones, turned to stone by the passage of unimaginable time. It's easy to forget that these were once living animals. They had the same needs as all animals today: to feed, reproduce, survive, and evolve. What kind of animals were they? What did they look like? How did they live? Now, scientific research has answered such questions. By analyzing their fossils and comparing them to living animals, it's possible to imagine what life was like back then. And not just about T. Rex, and Triceratops, but the other species that lived alongside it and those that lived before and after them. And through the latest storytelling enables us to picture them and bring them all to life." Said Thomas
In the far distant past of the Late Cretaceous, by the shore of a river, a male and female Tyrannosaurus stood near each other grunting and soon nuzzled each other affectionally.
"Planet Earth, in Prehistoric times."
Then shows a woodland savanna in South America, a megatherium feeds on leaves from the trees as moths fly around it.
Then shows a tundra steppe landscape at night in Siberia, a herd of Woolly Mammoths, crowded together in the dark as one trumpeted as they were tightly packed.
In the shallow waters of the United Kingdom, a plesiosaurus grabs a smooth rock in its mouth and soon swallows it.
In the savannas of North America, an Ornitholestes disturbs a sleeping Allosaurus as it roars at it as the theropod rushes off as the giant predator snaps its jaws.
Over Europe, a Hatzegopteryx soars through the air.
"The skies are filled with flying giants."
In North America, a colony of Pterosaurs from Pteranodon, Geosternbergia, and Ncytosaurus gathered around the beaches and cliffs of the coasts as some flew around.
In the ocean, a Hoffmann's Mosasaurus glides through the water as fish swim around.
"In the seas, monstrous creatures patrol the depths."
In the Atlantic waters of the United Kingdom, a pod of Ophthalmosaurus mobs a Liopleurodon and swims off.
In the desert plains of South America, a herd of Argentinosaurus is on the march.
"And on land, dinosaurs and prehistoric animals of every kind, all facing the struggle to survive."
In the Mongolian desert, a Velociraptor stalks.
In the forests of Europe, a Hypsilophodon looks around as rustling was heard among the leaves.
In North America, two Dimetrodons confront each other as they hissed.
In the ocean, an ammonite swims off.
"you will read sixty stories of the bizarre animals, from mountainous herbivores to terrifying predators in this strange world. Before they roamed our imaginations, they were once gods on this very earth."
A Spinosaurus roars out.
A juvenile T. Rex shrieks as it then rushes off.
"This is their story."
The sun shines past the Earth giving off its dark shape.
PRIMEVAL PLANET
Chapters
1. Ankylosaurus
2. Archaeopteryx
3. Deinonychus
4. Dimetrodon
5. Iguanodon
6. Nothosaurus
7. Plesiosaurus
8. Pterodactylus
9. Rhamphorhynchus
10. Triconodon
11. Brachiosaurus
12. Chasmosaurus
13. Dilophosaurus
14. Dimorphodon
15. Lystrosaurus
16. Mamenchisaurus
17. Plateosaurus
18. Protoceratops
19. Allosaurus
20. Diplodocus
21. Hypsilophodon
22. Ichthyosaurus
23. Pteranodon
24. Woolly Mammoth
25. Apatosaurus
26. Brontosaurus
27. Cetiosaurus
28. Ornithomimus
29. Stegosaurus
30. Triceratops
31. Tyrannosaurus
32. Albertosaurus
33. Corythosaurus
34. Deinosuchus
35. Edmontosaurus
36. Oviraptor
37. Pachycephalosaurus
38. Parasaurolophus
39. Psittacosaurus
40. Quetzalcoatlus
41. Rutiodon
42. Scolosaurus
43. Spinosaurus
44. Struthiomimus
45. Cave Bear
46. Glyptodon
47. Mastodon
48. Megaloceros
49. Smilodon
50. Woolly Rhinoceros
51. Majungasaurus
52. Epidexipteryx
53. Gigantoraptor
54. Eoraptor
55. Microraptor
56. Nothronychus
57. Argentinosaurus
58. Hatzegopteryx
59. Liopleurodon
60. Mosasaurus
So this series was inspired by Daizua123's Primeval Legends, I don't anything from him, but the animal protagonists. It tells the story of a specific animal and their everyday struggles, in a manner like Dead Sound's Dinosauria, the Rupert Oliver dinosaur books mostly the updated versions of the updated Rourke Dinosaur Library on Deviantart by Slade824z, and to an extent, Primal with the tones of the Walking with… series and Prehistoric Planet. It will feature a lot of speculation and scientific accuracy in the series. While some stories like Brachiosaurus, Dilohposaurus, Tyrannosaurus, Ankylosaurus, Iguanodon, Archaeopteryx, Deinonychus, And Woolly Rhinoceros already have their story plots. It's up to you the readers to think up and suggest ideas for stories for the other creatures, so you can suggest dialogues, scenes, and natural or speculative behaviors for the prehistoric animals.
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