What appears to be one of the deadliest scenes in Jurassic World Rebirth is supported by science.  The upcoming Jurassic World Rebirth appears to be a terrifying movie based on the previews.  The moments when the characters are fighting a quetzalcoatlus while dangling from a cliff and being chased by a mosasaurus while on a boat, for instance, are guaranteed to keep viewers on the edge of their seats. Furthermore, the D-rex, a new hybrid dinosaur from Jurassic World Rebirth, appears to be the most terrifying animal in the series. 

It is impossible to overlook the Tyrannosaurus Rex, despite the fact that Jurassic World Rebirth will feature a large number of dinosaurs. Since the T-rex was the most powerful dinosaur in the first Jurassic Park film, it is almost a given that it will appear in every subsequent Jurassic Park movie.  Therefore, when a T-rex attacks some of the characters in Jurassic World Rebirth, it shouldn't come as a surprise to anyone.  Nonetheless, there is a very uncommon scene in Jurassic World Rebirth where a T-rex swims. 

Although most viewers probably wouldn't think that T-rexes could swim, the dinosaur species has been spotted in water in a prior franchise film.  In fact, the second movie in the series, The Lost World: Jurassic Park, has a swimming T-rex.  But it looks like Jurassic World Rebirth will focus a lot more on a T-rex's swimming prowess.  Fortunately, specialists claim that real-life T-rexes were capable of swimming. 

Marks called "swim traces" have been discovered on T-rex bones, as described in apple TV+'s Prehistoric Planet.  Furthermore, using CT scans, scientists have found that the hollow form of the T-rex's bones would have allowed it to float when swimming across vast quantities of water.  The T-rex swimming down the river in Jurassic World Rebirth is therefore incredibly lifelike.  It seems sense that the T-rex in the future film will swim like a crocodile because they are also archosaurs. 


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