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  1. Walking with Beasts is the 2001 spinoff of the Speculative Documentary series, Walking with Dinosaurs.Following the mass extinction that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago, Beasts focuses on life during the Cenozoic Era, as mammals evolve to fill in the new niches left behind by their Mesozoic counterparts. Like in WWD, six episodes were made, each focusing on different time periods ...

  2. The Macrauchenia appeared in the 2001 documentary mini-series called Walking with Beasts. They´re here prehistoric llama, where it hunted by Smilodon . Community content is available under CC-BY-SA unless otherwise noted. The Macrauchenia appeared in the 2001 documentary mini-series called Walking with Beasts.

  3. 6 de mar. de 2023 · Share your thoughts, experiences, and stories behind the art. Literature. Submit your writing

  4. Macrauchenia was a prehistoric mammal that lived around 7-1 million years ago. It was herbivore, and the last of a dying breed of which we know relatively little, the Lipoterns. It was the prey of predators like the Machairodont Smilodon and the Terror-Bird Phorusrhacos. They could reach 3 metres long and 1.5 metres tall at the shoulder, and females lived in herds, a good way to protect their ...

  5. Sabre Tooth is the 5th episode of Walking with Beasts and follows Half-Tooth and his clan now ruled by The Brothers. The fifth episode shows the strange fauna of the isolated continent of South America and explores the effects of the Great American Interchange, which had happened 1.5 million years earlier. Since South America had drifted apart from Antarctica 30 million years ago, many unique ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MacraucheniaMacrauchenia - Wikipedia

    Macrauchenia ("long llama", based on the now-invalid llama genus, Auchenia, from Greek "big neck") is an extinct genus of large ungulate native to South America from the late Pliocene to the end of the Pleistocene. It is a member of the extinct order Litopterna, a group of South American native ungulates distinct from the two orders which contain all living ungulates which had been present in ...

  7. Books. Walking with Beasts: A Prehistoric Safari. Tim Haines. BBC Worldwide, 2001 - Nature - 264 pages. Since the dinosaurs died out over 65 million years ago our planet has been dominated by mammals. A succession of bizarre evolutionary specimens have come and gone - from walking whales to sabre-toothed cats - yet many of these magnificent ...