Dinopedia
Advertisement

Walking with Monsters is a 2005 three-part television documentary miniseries, produced by the BBC and Impossible Pictures in the United Kingdom, narrated by Kenneth Branagh, and is the third and final installment in the Walking with... series. In North America it has been retitled Before the Dinosaurs, and the original Discovery Channel broadcast was narrated by someone else. It is a prequel to Walking with Dinosaurs and recreates life in the Paleozoic by using a combination of both computer-generated imagery and animatronics.

Walking-with-mon cmyklrg

Episodes[]

Water Dwellers[]


  • 530 million years ago: Cambrian, Chengjiang, China
  • Oxygen Content: 30% below today
  • Hazards: world's first super predator
Haikouicthys01

The first episode begins with an illustration of the giant impact hypothesis: approximately 4.4 billion years ago when the Earth was formed, it is conjectured that a planet-like object referred to as Theia collided into the early Earth, dynamically reshaping the Earth and forming the moon. The episode then jumps ahead to the Cambrian Explosion, showing the first diversification of life in the sea. Strange arthropod predators called Anomalocaris feed on trilobites, and fight with each other, whereupon the wounded loser is attacked and harassed by a school of Haikouichthys, described as the first vertebrate.

Featured Prehistoric Animals[]


  • 418 million years ago: Silurian, South Wales, UK
  • Oxygen Content: 30% below today
  • Hazards: giant scorpions

The segment moves on to the Silurian period, where Haikouichthys has evolved into the jawless-fish Cephalaspis. The marine scorpion Brontoscorpio pursues a female Cephalaspis, but falls victim to the giant eurypterid Pterygotus, whose young feed on the smaller scorpion's body. Later a shoal of Cephalspis migrate into the shallows to spawn, navigating via memory thanks to their advanced (for the time) vertebrate brains. As they cross a shallow embankment, they are ambushed by several Brontoscorpio which are depicted as the first animals capable of walking on land. Several fish are killed but the majority slip past the feasting scorpions and arrive at the spawning site. One scorpion misses this feeding opportunity due to having to molt its skin.

Featured Prehistoric Animals[]

A short sequence depicts Cephalaspis evolving into Hynerpeton (bypassing the lobe-finned fish stage), amphibian-like tetrapods. Though capable of terrestrial movement, Hynerpeton have to remain near water to keep moist and reproduce. A lone male Hynerpeton hunting underwater is threatened by predatory fish, at first by a Stethacanthus which is eaten by a two-ton female Hyneria that chases the amphibian out of the water. After seeing off a rival during the night, the male finds a receptive female at dawn and the two mate at the water's edge. They are ambushed by the Hyneria, which beaches herself in the process, but then uses her fins to drag herself ashore and grab the fleeing male. Despite his untimely death, the Hynerpeton eggs were successfully fertilized and sink into the water to develop. A sequence depicts them acquiring hard shells as the first reptiles evolve, but as the offspring leave their nest, those left behind are soon at the mercy of a giant spider, representing the return of the arthropods.

Featured Prehistoric Animals[]

Reptile's Beginnings[]

The second episode shows the swampy coal forests of the Carboniferous. It explains that because of a much higher oxygen content in the atmosphere, giant land arthropods evolved, such as a Megarachne (a member of the primitive spider suborder however this one is the first species of that order), Meganeura; a giant dragonfly the size of a eagle and Arthropleura; a huge millipede relative. A female Megarachne hunts down a Petrolacosaurus. She comes back from her hunting expedition, only to find her burrow has flooded. Not only that, the Petrolacosaurus she caught is stolen by a female Meganeura. On the spider's search for a new burrow, she passes a pond full of Reptiliomorphs (which would make a more central appearance later on). Later she is chased by an Arthropleura, which is later killed in a fight with a Proterogyrinus. The Megarachne finally chases a Petrolacosaurus out of its own burrow and moves in. A storm brews and the narrator explains that its high oxygen content makes the atmosphere very combustible, so lightning is a real danger. The Proterogyrinus are seen leaping out of the water to catch Meganeura, which were driven below the tree canopy by the storm. Later, lightning and a forest fire pour in, devastating the life around. At last, only some animals survive...including Petrolacosaurus, who finds the dead body of the Megarachne (her burrow was at the centre of a lightning strike) and begins to feed upon the spider's carcass.

Featured Prehistoric Animals[]

  • 280 million years ago: Early Permian
  • Place:Bromacker,Germany
  • Global Temp:20% colder than today
  • Hazards: extreme seasons

The episode then moves on to the Early Permian, where the swamp-loving trees of the Carboniferous have been replaced with more advanced conifers that are better adapted to survive in a changing climate. Petrolacosaurus and a few other diapsids have evolved into the sub-group of creatures called pelycosaurs like the Edaphosaurus which are now closely related to mammals. They live in herds and have outgrown their arthropod contemporaries in size. A pregnant female Dimetrodon, another pelycosaur, hunts the Edaphosaurus herd, beginning with a fake charge to expose the weak and the juveniles. She finally kills a baby Edaphosaurus, but is forced to abandon her kill when the scent of blood attracts others of her kind, all highly-aggressive males. She builds a nest on a hill and is watched by an egg-stealing Reptiliomorph. Some time after laying her eggs, another gravid Dimetrodon tries to take over her nest. After a long duel, the original female drives off the intruder, but is badly injured and fatigued in the process. A male Dimetrodon approaches the now unguarded nest, but luckily kills the thieving reptiliomorph and leaves the eggs unharmed. The eggs hatch and the mother's bond with her offspring is severed. The episode ends with the wounded mother joining other adult Dimetrodon in attacking her own young which race to the trees and hide in dung to escape. At the end the narrator says that the reptiles will evolve to tighten their grip on land, becoming "new reptiles".

Featured prehistoric animals[]

Clash of Titans[]

  • 250 million years ago: Late Permian
  • Place: Siberia
  • Global Temp: 60% Hotter Than Today
  • Hazards: Extreme Heat, Volcanic Activity

The third episode is set in the Late Permian, on the supercontinent Pangaea, which was covered by a vast and inhospitable desert. In this arid climate, early therapsids, which are described as more mammal-like than reptile, are shown fighting to survive alongside other animals. The program starts with an old Scutosaurus, a relative of turtles, being killed by a female Inostrancevia or Gorgonops, a type of gorgonopsid which later joins others of her kind at a small waterhole. Other inhabitants of the area include Diictodon, a small burrowing dicynodont. In the pool itself is a starving Labyrinthodont that ambushes the female gorgonopsid in desperation and quickly retreats. A herd of Scutosaurus arrive and eventually drink the waterhole dry. The female gorgonopsid tries to dig out a pair of Diictodon but is unsuccessful. Upon returning to the waterhole, she unearths the Rhinesuchus wrapped in a "cocoon" which it utilized to survive drought. In a torpid state, it is helpless and quickly killed. The gorgonopsid is eventually killed by a sandstorm, foreshadowing the oncoming Permian-Triassic extinction event. The Diictodon meanwhile are able to adapt by digging their burrows deeper, occasionally unearthing plant tubers for sustenance.

Featured prehistoric animals

  • 248 million years ago: Early Triassic
  • Place: Antarctica
  • Global Temp: 40% Hotter Than Today
  • Hazards: Ambush Predators

Diictodon is seen evolving into the larger Lystrosaurus. The Lystrosaurus multiply into vast herds that must continually migrate in order to find fresh foliage. Also featured is the small insectivorous Euparkeria that is depicted as the ancestor of dinosaurs. When the Lystrosaurus herd traverses a ravine, one is killed by a pack of venomous Euchambersia, though the herd doesn't show any concern for the victim. Encountering a river, the herd enters the water and is attacked by numerous Proterosuchus. Many are killed, but the majority escape and continue their migration. The narrator explains that despite the dominance of Lystrosaurus, eventually the world will recover in full from the Permian-Triassic extinction event and other reptiles will overtake them; the resulting decline in all mammal-like reptiles meaning that mammals are destined to be confined to the shadows as a new group of animals becomes the dominant species on Earth. The episode ends as a Euparkeria is confronted by a Proterosuchus: the Euparkeria suddenly rapidly evolves into an Allosaurus and the scene cuts to the Late Jurassic where it approaches two Stegosaurus. The Age of Monsters is over. This is the beginning of the Age of Dinosaurs.

Featured prehistoric animals

Gallery[]

0B5BBF46-F509-469E-B978-969D07E7D3DB

Gorgonopsids

DDFB6838-4B55-46FD-BA8C-360520CEB268

American DVD cover

Trivia[]

The show serves as a prequel to walking with dinosaurs and walking with beasts

Advertisement