I'm Mogu, a dinosaur enthusiast who also happens to be interested in the occult and spirituality.
This is a truly interesting experiment: I'm attempting to use divination to interpret dinosaur reconstructions.
It's a kind of clairvoyance, an attempt to connect with spirits from ancient times and see what the dinosaurs looked like.
I searched the internet for people around the world with similar ideas, but I couldn't find any.
So I decided to take the lead and start this project myself.
I'm collaborating with a friend who is a fortune teller.
Whether you believe it or not is up to you! That's part of the fun, but
this combination of paleontology and divination—science and pseudoscience—is unprecedented, making it incredibly interesting.
This time, I had my friend, the fortune teller, look at a reconstruction of a Pachycephalosaurus.
Pachycephalosaurus
Q. Is it a warm-blooded animal?
A. Yes, it is.
Q. Does it have feathers or flight feathers, and what is its body color?
A. It has a small, collar-like crest at the base of its face like a lion's. It has horse-like feathers growing from its back to its tail. The rest of its body is scaled. Its overall color is dark gray. Its eyes have white sclera, yellow pupils with black centers.
Q. Could it fly?
A. No.
Q. Could it fly like a migratory bird?
A. No. It did migrate somewhat seasonally (short distances).
Q. What sound did it make?
A. It makes a high-pitched, short cry. It sounds a bit like the sting of a monkey.
Q. What was its diet?
A. It is an omnivore.
It mainly eats meat from small animals. It will eat any small mammal. It also eats insects.
They rarely eat the meat of dead bodies or the eggs of birds or dinosaurs, but they will eat them if they are hungry.
They eat nuts and other plants. Sometimes they eat leaves as well.
Q. How do they raise their young?
A. The parents guard the nest until the eggs hatch, and then they leave once the chicks have hatched. They don't carry their chicks around like ostriches. Males and females take turns warming the eggs.
Q. What about the chicks?
A. They are generally dark grey, with white front and back legs. They have small crests.
↓Reconstruction by coloring
Paleontology will ultimately reveal whether this reconstruction accurately depicts the true appearance of the dinosaur.
Therefore, this is simply an interesting experiment.
My name is Mogu and I love dinosaurs, but I also have a penchant for the occult and spirituality.
I asked a fortune teller friend of mine to look at a reconstruction of a Tyrannosaurus Rex.
Tyrannosaurus
Q. Was it a warm-blooded animal?
A. It was somewhere between a warm-blooded and a cold-blooded animal.
Q. Could it fly?
A. No, it couldn't. Its ancestors had flight feathers but couldn't glide.
Q. Did it migrate?
A. No, it was primarily sedentary.
Q. What sound did it make?
A. It made a "shaaa" sound.
Q. What was its diet?
A. It was carnivorous. It hunted and hunted prey in groups. It was a predatory dinosaur.
What about its chicks and subspecies?
Chicks ate the meat of dinosaurs their parents had hunted, along with their parents. The parents would catch mammals and feed them to their chicks. They didn't eat insects.
Subspecies measuring 5-10 meters in length ate leftovers from adults. Some subspecies of that size were able to hunt mammals on their own, but others couldn't.
Q. How did they raise their young?
A. Multiple females lay eggs in a circle in one nest, and the females take turns watching over one nest.
After hatching, they mix with their parent group and are raised by multiple females. After about six months to a year, they leave their parents and become independent.
Q. What about the chicks?
A. Newly hatched chicks are fluffy and pure white. As they grow, they lose their feathers, and by the time they are less than one year old (about one meter long), they have the same pattern as their parents.
↓Reconstruction by coloring
Let me explain.
This is a really interesting attempt, where I'm trying to use fortune-telling to look at reconstructions of dinosaurs.
It's an experiment in which spirits reach back to ancient times to see what dinosaurs looked like.
I'm working with a fortune-teller friend of mine.
This kind of attempt, combining paleontology and fortune-telling -- in other words, science and super science -- is unprecedented, so it's very interesting.
Paleontology will reveal whether these reconstructions were the true appearances of dinosaurs.
Hello. I'm Mogu, a dinosaur lover, but also a fan of the occult and spirituality.
This is a really interesting attempt, but I'm going to start an attempt to read the fortunes of dinosaur reconstructions.
It's like clairvoyance, an attempt to see what dinosaurs looked like in ancient times through spirits.
I looked for people with similar ideas all over the world on the Internet, but there were no people.
So I'm going to take the initiative and start it.
I'm cooperating with my fortune teller friend.
It's up to you to believe it or not!
It's interesting, but
this kind of attempt of paleontology + fortune telling, in other words science + super science, is unprecedented, so it's very interesting.
I asked my fortune teller friend to look at the reconstruction of Troodon.
Troodon
Q. Warm-blooded?
A. Warm-blooded.
Q. Could it fly?
A. It couldn't fly. It used the feathers on its front legs as a rudder when walking and jumping.
Q. Have they migrated?
A. No. They are generally sedentary.
Q. What do they cry like?
A. They make a short, high-pitched cry similar to that of a crow. They also make a "gurgling" sound.
Q. What is their diet?
A. They are omnivorous, more like carnivores. They hunted mammals and small dinosaurs. They also ate insects and nuts.
Q. How do they raise their children?
A. They lay eggs in a single nest like emus, and the flock, regardless of gender, take turns incubating the eggs. Once the chicks hatch, they guard the nest and carry food, regardless of gender. After leaving the nest, they follow the parent bird (the flock) for a while. After that, they become independent, and some remain in the flock, while others leave.
Q. What chicks?
A. Chicks that have just hatched from eggs have their eyes open. They have only a few feathers and look gray and squishy. Over time, their feathers grow and they become gray and fluffy.