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1[[quoteright:331:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/51gnc76x0zl_ac.jpg]]
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3''When Dinosaurs Roamed America'' (2001, sometimes shortened to ''When Dinosaurs Roamed'' outside North America) was the Creator/DiscoveryChannel's first major attempt to [[FollowTheLeader cash-in]] on the dinosaur-[[{{Documentary}} documentary]] trend started by [[Creator/TheBBC BBC]]'s famous ''Series/WalkingWithDinosaurs''. Similar to that program, it also aimed for a SpeculativeDocumentary format, and used {{CGI}} to recreate its dinosaurs, [[UsefulNotes/PrehistoricLifeNonDinosaurianReptiles pterosaurs, and various other prehistoric animals]], placing them into [[RogerRabbitEffect real-life]] scenery. The stories were told in chronological order, from the beginning to the end of the dinosaurs' reign. The series is narrated by Creator/JohnGoodman, with music by former Music/TangerineDream member and ''Series/BabylonFive'' composer Christopher Franke.
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5Unlike its predecessor/competitor, however, ''WDRA'' included short cut-away scenes to paleontologists and at times froze the animation to reveal the skeletal structure behind the animals' skin, using solid facts to [[ShownTheirWork explain the science]] that went into creating the program.
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7Other things that make it different from ''WWD'' is the fact that it concentrates purely on American dinosaurs, and condenses its stories into small segments, instead of devoting full episodes to them.
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9While disliked by some due to how quickly Discovery churned it out after hearing of the dinosaurs' marketability from Britain, the product was generally well-received by the viewers, especially compared to some later works, such as ''Series/ClashOfTheDinosaurs'' and ''Series/MonstersResurrected''.
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11!!The work contains examples of the following tropes:
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13* AllThereInTheManual: Notice that small, unnamed theropod from the very beginning of the last segment? The now- gone website reveals it's an ''Ornithomimus''.
14* AlwaysABiggerFish:
15** The ''Megapnosaurus'' (''Kayentavenator''?) suddenly cease their attack on the ''Anchisaurus''. It turns out that the ''Dilophosaurus'' has shown up.
16** ''Allosaurus'' to ''Ceratosaurus''. Also counts as an example of TheHunterBecomesTheHunted.
17* AnachronismStew:
18** Coelophysis is put in the late Triassic of 220 million years when the Dinosaur didn't appear until about 216 million years ago.
19** Dilophosaurus didn't exist 200 million years ago.
20* AnimalsNotToScale:
21** Most likely the result of the animators not paying attention. When the first ''T. rex'' shows up, it doesn't seem out of scale with the rest of the animals. But the narration claims it's actually a ''juvenile''. Later, when his mother appears, she is hulking huge, even compared to the "Anatotitan" which is supposed to be the same size as a ''rex''!
22** Similarly ''Megapnosaurus'' is said to be 10 feet long; how come the not-even 7 foot ''Anchisaurus'' is more than twice their size (this could be a case of ScienceMarchesOn as the larger ''Ammosaurus'' is sometimes considered ''Anchisaurus'')?
23* ApocalypseHow: A ApocalypseHow/{{Class4}} event at the end of the Cretaceous, but interestingly, the documentary also ''starts'' with an even larger meteor-strike, that was supposed to represent the great extinction event that ended the Permian and made way for the evolution of dinosaurs in the Triassic. A lesser meteor-related extinction also separates the Triassic and Jurassic.
24** ApocalypseWow: The K-T extinction is depicted as a supermassive atomic bomb going off with a blazing wall of ash and fire rushing across the land, causing the mighty ''T. rex'' family to flee in terror. In the aftermath, a grey world is left behind littered with dinosaur corpses.
25* ArtisticLicensePaleontology:
26** While the theropod hands are correctly shown facing each other in most scenes, they are shown as pronated (kangaroo-like) in some shots.
27** ''Icarosaurus'' was not the first reptile to evolve the ability to glide as earlier gliding animals like ''Coelurosauravus'' and ''Sharovipteryx'' were known many years before the documentary's creation.
28** An example that is borderline this and ScienceMarchesOn are the dromaeosaurs in the Mid Cretaceous segment. Mid-way through production, the fossils which the dromaeosaurs were based on were reclassified as a much more primitive coelurosaur (later determined to be a tyrannosaur and named ''Suskityrannus''). Unfortunately, it was too late to fix, as the dromaeosaurs were the main characters. But the more accurate depiction was given a nod with the unnamed coelurosaurs which briefly appear in the episode.
29** ''Quetzalcoatlus'' is depicted as being slow and clumsy on the ground and having difficulty taking off, when in fact it was quite fast and comfortable on the ground and could take off relatively easily: ''Azhdarchids'' spent a considerable amount of time on the ground, like giraffe-sized storks and due to being able to gallop and jump using the muscles in all four limbs rather than just their hind limbs they could get airborne fairly easily in spite of their bulk. Granted, this documentary was made before it was determined that azhdarchids were agile on ground.
30* BehindTheBlack: The ''Ceratosaurus'' doesn't notice the hulking huge, oncoming ''Allosaurus'' either, until it's right on top of it. To the ceratosaur's credit, though, it ''was'' off-screen, even if out in the open, plainly visible from all sides.
31* BewareMyStingerTail: ''Stegosaurus'' and ''Desmatosuchus'' both use armoured tails to defend themselves against predators. ''Ceratosaurus'' finds this out the hard way.
32* TheDayTheDinosaursDied: The last segment depicts [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lancian Lancian]] fauna at the very end of the Late Cretaceous, and ends with the asteroid striking the Earth, sweeping over the landscape with a fiery blast wave and wiping out 70% of all life.
33* DecompositeCharacter: Accidental example. [[https://zdig.org/zdig-dispatch-gazette/2019/5/4/3pg6ogxicn52t3duo3zp6xuh1qwe5j Due to the producers having to deal with a misclassification discovered halfway through production]], [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suskityrannus the Zuni theropod]] (eventually named ''Suskityrannus'') wound up being split into two different dinosaurs; the Zuni raptors (as the find was originally interpreted as a dromaeosaur), who are focal characters, and a generic coelurosaur, who is given a minor role in the segment.
34* DidntThinkThisThrough: The raptors in the fourth segment die in a forest fire because they were too busy eating to run away.
35* TheDreaded: ''Dilophosaurus'' towers over its competitors and its prey in the Early Jurassic. The only thing they fear is another ''Dilophosaurus''.
36* EagleLand: The documentary takes place in prehistoric America, back when eagles were big, scaly and had teeth.
37* EatsBabies: ''Ceratosaurus'' kills and devours a baby ''Dryosaurus''.
38* FailedASpotCheck: The deinonychosaurs fail to notice a forest fire, even when being surrounded by flames.
39* FamilyUnfriendlyDeath:
40** What happens to the poor ''Apatosaurus'' that trips and falls. As if slowly starving to death wasn't bad enough, a hungry pack of ''Allosaurus'' descends on it and ravenously devours it alive.
41** During the lightning/forest fire sequence in the mid-Cretaceous segment, the raptors get roasted alive along with the ''Zuniceratops'' corpse they were feeding on.
42** During the same segment, a ''Nothronychus'' gets struck by a bolt of lightning and ''explodes''! This was cut from the television broadcast for obvious reasons.
43* FeatheredFiend: The documentary famously depicted many dinosaurs with feathers for the first time, including "raptors" and the bizarre-looking ''Nothronychus''. As for the fiend part of the trope, the raptors are carnivores and the herbivorous ''Nothronychus'' has no issue taking deadly swipes at them with its claws when they try to add it to their menu.
44* ForegoneConclusion: The extinction at the end of the Cretaceous period.
45* GiantFlyer: ''Quetzalcoatlus'' is the size of a small plane.
46* GoofyFeatheredDinosaur: Subverted with the raptors and ''Nothronychus''. Their early {{CGI}} feathered coatings may make them look goofy, but they are very dangerous animals. Especially the ''Nothronychus'' since they can swipe away a raptor with their mighty claws despite being described as "a half-plucked turkey [that] walks like a potbellied bear."
47* TheHunterBecomesTheHunted: ''Allosaurus'' does this to ''Ceratosaurus'' as it chases down the ''Dryosaurus''.
48* InconsistentDub: All three Hungarian narrations (yes, there's that many) had trouble deciding where to use soft "C"s and hard "K"s, which lead to mispronunciations like "Koelophysis", "Keratosaurus" and "koelurosaurus".
49* MightyRoar:
50** ''Tyrannosaurus'' does this, obviously, but ''Dilophosaurus'' also has an awesome roar (which sounds oddly metallic). ''Ceratosaurus'' is no slouch either, as it has arguably the most fearsome sounding roar.
51** Inverted in the case of ''Allosaurus'', which sounds incredibly weak being the largest carnivore in the Late Jurassic segment of the show.
52* {{Narrator}}: Creator/JohnGoodman does this.
53* NeverSmileAtACrocodile: Averted by the herbivorous ''Desmatosuchus'', but the phytosaur ''Rutiodon'' does the job alright.
54* NoisyNature: For a dinosaur-show, this is almost prerequisite. A particularly glaring example is the Dilophosaurus. Justified in the part where the Syntarsus ([[ScienceMarchesOn now Megapnosaurus]]) steal his food, since he is trying to scare them away, but for the most part he can't seem to shut up even when he's stalking prey (Ironically, ScienceMarchesOn and it is fairly certain most dinosaurs were not incredibly noisy animals).
55* PrehistoricMonster: Avoided, although the animals do behave as aggressive as its intended audience expects them to.
56* RaptorAttack: Somewhat {{justified|Trope}}, as the {{CGI}} team couldn't get their feathers to be quite as birdlike as they should be. Though one may wonder why they couldn't just keep the feathers as textures, as done on realistic CGI birds.
57* RealIsBrown: Practically half the animals are some shade of brown or earthen tome.
58* ScreamsLikeALittleGirl: The ''Ceratosaurus'', as the ''Allosaurus'' kills it.
59** ''Allosaurus'' itself, '''all the time'''.
60* SexyDiscretionShot: When the ''Stegosaurus'' pair get ready to mate, the camera tilts skywards. This was the only solution, though: we don't really know just ''how'' they did it.
61* ShownTheirWork:
62** The scenes of paleontologists inserted in between the dinosaur clips.
63** This is one of the first dino-documentaries to feature feathered raptors and therizinosaurs (in the form of ''Nothronychus''). While the {{CGI}} technology wasn't ready to depict birdlike feathers, the sight of a fuzzy but dangerous raptor is enough to hammer home of just how close dinosaurs are to birds.
64** The depiction of ''Dilophosaurus'' as an apex predator of its day rather than a scavenger with a weak bite or the fictitious frilled-spitting dinosaur from ''Film/JurassicPark''. While there are minor scientific inaccuracies with the portrayal itself, this is one of the few major dinosaur media that refutes the idea of ''Dilophosaurus'' being physically weak carnivore (even back in 1986, paleontologists argued that ''Dilophosaurus'' may have still hunted other dinosaurs despite its apparent fragile jaws, while reviews of ''Dilophasaurus'' skulls in 2021 found that their supposedly fragile nature was the result of misinterpretation and it was definitely robust enough to kill large prey).
65** The Quetzalcoatlus is depicted with pycnofibers.[[note]]Though it should probably have more.[[/note]]
66* SpeculativeDocumentary: Since dinosaurs are long gone, it's inevitable that the documentary would have to construct its interpretation of the Mesozoic era based on the evidence they have with fossils.
67* TerrifyingTyrannosaur: ''Tyrannosaurus rex'' is the "star" of the final segment, and John Goodman plays up its fearsome nature, calling it the "scourge of the American West." The documentary portrays the ''T. rex'' in two variants of terror: The fast, nimble juveniles that can chase down any prey they find, and the giant, powerful adults that can instantly kill their prey with one bite. Together, they form a formidable pack feared by all.
68* TooDumbToLive: The dromaeosaurid attacking the ''Nothronychus'' head on, although both survive the attack. They then die when they're burned alive in the forest fire because they were too busy eating the corpse of the dead ''Zuniceratops'' to run away from the fire.
69* WhatTheHellAreYou: How the ''Nothronychus'' is introduced, with the rogue raptor that encounters it being utterly dumbstruck by its bizarre appearance. Then he tries to attack the seemingly clumsy and defenseless vegetarian, only to get its ass whooped. For context, this was the very first time a therizinosaur was brought to life in a nature documentary, beating ''Series/ChasedByDinosaurs'' by a year.
70* WolverineClaws: ''Nothronychus'' has unusually large claws.
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