![]() ![]() Aliens have visited Earth to help in the fight against Fuse: We see it with the Plumbers and the anonymous visitors in their UFO hovering over the Haunted Ridge, the ones who gave us an off-world ore that can fend off Fuse’s infection via a crashed meteor in the “SACT Attack” mission arc. So, here’s a balance between my initial ideas and what we’ve gathered in the previous bullets. Someone from the Jetson’s futuristic time period (It’s 2062, according to promotional sources for their show, but we can make some leeway in either direction since the creators couldn’t have known where we’d be technologically in modern times and FusionFall itself also has a futuristic setting.) could’ve travelled to the Flintstone’s Stone Age and established the totems then. We know time-travel exists for them because of crossovers between The Jetsons and The Flintstones like “The Flintstones: The Rescue of Dino and Hoppy” and “The Jetsons Meet the Flintstones.” This would explain why we see such characters across multiple eras featured on the totems. It’s possible that these characters took the information from Fuse’s invasion and planted that knowledge in ancient times so present-day Earth would stand a better chance than whatever occurred in their own timeline. ![]() Therefore, it’s likely safe to say that these characters exist within the world of FusionFall even if we never interact with them directly. It’s also worth noting that one important location tied to the totems, the ruins, is called the Hani-Baba (Hanna-Barbera) Temple. Hanna-Barbera characters such as Scooby Doo have been featured alongside CN originals during the CN City era, and they also have appeared in cameos like Yogi Bear and Boo-Boo Bear in GAOBAM. What’s interesting about this though is that they aren’t CN’s original characters, but rather some of Hanna-Barbera’s characters such as Fred Flintstone, Top Cat, and-more importantly for what I’m about to get into-George Jetson. "We'd like to find a femur or tibia," he says, but adds they'll be looking for all of its remains.One interesting thing about the totems is that we find several familiar cartoon characters depicted on them. This summer, he and his research team plan to return to the site where it was found. While the skeleton fragments they do have are helping craft a clearer picture of what the dinosaur was, Burnham says they're not done digging it up. It's one thing that's been lacking all of those years, and it will provide a lot of information," he adds. He believes the fossil could be an illuminating touchstone for the paleontological debate. "We're trying to keep our minds open," Burnham says of studying the remains. Many paleontologists think that so-called Nanotyrannus fossils are actually juvenile T. rex on their hands, or possibly a Nanotyrannus, a tiny genus of tyrannosaur that's a matter of scientific debate. rex, though it can be difficult to know how exactly those skeletons change because so few juveniles have been found.įurther work will determine whether the team actually has a T. "Our young selves look nothing like we do as adults," he says, noting, for instance, the degrees to which a skull can change shape in a person's lifetime. rex, but more work will need to be done to say for sure. Every tooth position is filled."īurnham says the teeth they've since cleaned suggest it's a juvenile T. ![]() "Ours is so important because we have so many bones. rex, that would make them around 66 million years old.Īdding to the rarity of the find is the fact that the fossils may belong to a juvenile. Paleontologists dug up parts of a skull, foot, hips, and backbones. The entire fossil remains of the upper part of the dinosaur's jaw, with all its teeth, was found. rex fossil to be found, but University of Kansas scientists think it could be one of the most intact. "If you put a black dot on the map for every fossil found in that area, it would be all black."įossils from various periods have been found there, and this isn't the first T. In Hell Creek, you're bound to find them. "We just set off prospecting and a student came across some bone fragments," says David Burnham, a paleontologist from the University of Kansas. It was in Hell Creek that researchers from the University of Kansas recently stumbled on the remains of a young Tyrannosaurus rex-they think. The Montanan wildlife refuge is rife with clay and stones that hold clues to our prehistoric past. Hell Creek is heaven for paleontologists. ![]()
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