(WHTM) — No human has ever heard a dinosaur’s roar, so most people believe the iconic film series Jurassic Park and Jurassic World correctly depict how they communicated. However, according to experts ...
Diplodocids were a family of dinosaurs with long necks and, often, even longer tails — some species' tails reached 50 feet in length. They were wide-ranging, but especially flourished in what's now ...
The roar of a T. rex, made iconic by Jurassic Park, has become the soundtrack of prehistory. In reality, no one — not even paleontologists — can say for certain what dinosaurs sounded like, though ...
Courtney Brown is a professor at Southern Methodist University, where she directs a choir that performs music using one of her most innovative instruments: dinosaur skulls.
“Prehistoric Planet” is back on Apple TV+ with over two dozen new extinct species to explore. Given the amount of dinosaurs and birds, the biggest challenge for supervising sound editor Jonny Crew was ...
A single trumpet from a baby elephant at the San Francisco Zoo was used for every single T. Rex roar in Jurassic Park. "It scared me when I first saw [the offer] because there's so many different ...
Supervising sound editor Rob McIntyre tells IndieWire about equipping Gotham with an old Hollywood soundscape for Bruce Timm's and Ed Brubaker's new animated series. Bringing the character of Batman ...
Southern Methodist University student Ella Halverson (left) and professor Courtney Brown play musical instruments Brown created based on dinosaur skulls at SMU on May 12, 2025, in Dallas. In reality, ...
Nobody actually knows what dinosaurs sound like. But if you can imagine the roar of a T. Rex or the bellow of a brachiosaurus, it's probably thanks to the 1993 blockbuster Jurassic Park, which turns ...