:04:06
Charlie, those are herbivores.
They wouldn't fight each other.
:04:10
But these are carnivores,
and they really like fighting each other.
:04:14
They use their teeth and their claws
to rip each other's throats out.
:04:18
Alan, he's three. Let's wait till he's five.
:04:22
Right. Sorry, Charlie.
:04:24
-Ellie?
-Yeah?
:04:25
It's Tom. He says he has to talk to you
about the last chapter.
:04:28
Tell him I won't lose the Horner quote.
My editor thinks he's a paleontologist.
:04:33
Hey, Mark!
:04:35
Hey, babe, look who's here.
:04:39
This is Alan.
:04:40
Nice to meet you, Alan.
:04:43
Daddy, this is a herbivore
and that's the dinosaur man.
:04:46
Dinosaur man?
:04:49
Jack, say my name. Is my name Alan?
:04:52
Is my name Alan?
:04:57
He used to know me.
:05:01
-It's sad, huh?
-Here you go.
:05:03
Thanks. Mark's been working
for the State Department now.
:05:07
What do they do, Mark?
:05:09
International relations,
mostly treaty law, things like that.
:05:14
-Call of the wild one.
-I'll go.
:05:16
You guys catch up.
:05:19
Thanks, babe.
:05:23
He's a great guy.
:05:26
-So, what are you working on now?
-Raptors, mostly.
:05:29
My favorite.
:05:31
Do you remember the sounds they made?
:05:34
I try not to.
:05:36
All our theories about Raptor intelligence...
:05:38
...what they were capable of,
we weren't even close.
:05:41
-Tell me.
-We did cranial scans of a fossil skull...
:05:44
...and found what looks to be
a very sophisticated resonating chamber.
:05:47
Wait a second. So we were right.
:05:49
-They'd the ability to vocalize.
-It's the key to their social intelligence.
:05:53
Which explains
why they could work as a team.
:05:55
They'd coordinate attacks so their prey
wouldn't know what was going on.
:05:59
-They could talk to each other.
-To a degree we never imagined.