Dino Dana (2017–…): Season 3, Episode 9 - Dinostaurus/Hot and Cold Dino - full transcript
When Dana finds a lone Incisivosaurus left behind after some herbivore herds pass by her, she wonders why the dino isn't following its fellow plant-eaters. And while Dana helps Grandma and ...
[squawks]
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[Dana]
Dino Dana!
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Dino Dana!
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[Dana] "Dinostaurus."
Dino herd spotted.
I count two Kosmoceratops,
one Maiasaura,
and two Edmontosaurus.
[high-pitched braying]
Correction:
three Edmontosaurus,
and one of them
is really cute.
That's a lot of herbivores.
Dana.
Please don't tell me you're
in that pile of leaves.
[Dana]
Would it help if I told you
I was doing dino research?
I didn't think so.
[Grandma]
Ugh. Now look at you.
You've got leaves everywhere.
Yes, but I also have
valuable observations.
Couldn't you get
your observations
from someplace
a little less dirty
like your tree fort
or, uh... a book?
Scientists use
hides like to this
to observe animals
up close
without the animals
seeing them
or getting scared away.
Plus it's way more fun.
I guessed as much.
And it worked.
I just saw a herd
of Kosmoceratops,
Maiasaura, and Edmontosaurus
walking together.
Should those names
mean something to me?
They're all herbivories.
Plant eaters.
Where do you think
they're going, Grandma?
I don't know,
but I do know
where we're going.
[Dana]
Wait...
Is it...
Tomato sauce time!
[Grandma laughs]
Yay... [chuckles]
[Dana]
Aren't you excited, Saara?
[Saara]
Yeah, I love
cleaning tomatoes
and jars all day.
Do you love
the tomato sauce
we get to eat afterwards?
I do love that.
Like my grandma
used to say,
"A bit of work now
for a winter of enjoyment."
[all chuckle]
Alright, girls.
You keep washing
those tomatoes,
and I'll prep the jars.
[laughs]
Saara, guess
what I saw out front.
I'm going to take
a wild guess
and say...
a dinosaur.
No.
Dinosaurs.
A whole herd of them.
Where do you think
they were going?
Hopefully someplace warm.
Grandma, can't we
do this inside?
And make a giant mess
inside the house?
Are you kidding me?
But you may have a point.
So... we can go inside?
About the dinosaurs
going somewhere warmer.
When it starts to get cold,
some animals travel
to where it's warmer
and where there's more food.
Maybe the dinosaurs
did the same thing.
Hmm.
I can't blame them.
Whew.
Let's speed this up.
Dana, next bucket, please.
[cooing and squawking]
[Dana]
Oh no!
Looks like the herd
left somebody behind.
I'll be right back.
[Saara]
Think pasta.
Think pasta!
Wait.
We are having pasta, right?
You think I would do
all of this
if there wasn't a meal
at the end of it?
[both laugh]
[dinosaur squawking]
[Dana] Are you looking for
your herd, Incisivosaurus?
[squawking]
They went that way.
Where are you going?
Sorry, Incisivosaurus.
All the vegetables are gone.
It's too cold for
them to grow anymore.
[squawking]
That's why that
herd of dinosaurs
is heading somewhere warm...
where there's more food.
You should go with them.
Maybe you're
too hungry to go.
Wait here.
I'll be right back.
[Saara chuckles]
You started crushing
without me?
That's my favorite part.
Correction: eating
is my favorite part,
crushing is second.
Be my guest.
I've gotten juice
squirted in my eye twice.
Like my grandma
used to say,
"No pain, no food." [chuckles]
Keep turning.
Speaking of "no food",
I think the Incisivosaurus
got left behind,
and now he's hungry.
The Incisivi-what-now?
The Incisivo...
saurus.
Oh.
This one.
Its name means "incisor lizard"
because it had these two...
buck teeth at the front
that paleontologists think
it would have used
to eat plants -
plants like tomatoes.
You're not going
to give a tomato
to a bucked-tooth lizard.
But Grandma, he's hungry!
Well, so am I.
But look at all the jars
we're going to fill.
Yes, we're filling them now
so we can chow down later.
I mean, these are meant to
last us the whole winter, Dana.
Poor Incisivosaurus.
Yeah. Poor little dino
must be starving,
like I am.
Okay, you can
give him one tomato.
Thanks, Grandma.
I'll be right back to help.
Save some crushing for me.
Aww. That was nice.
Oh! Ow.
I just got juice
in my eye again.
Oh.
I've got an idea.
[sighs]
Incisivosaurus!
[squawking]
It's okay.
It's just me.
You can stop
searching for food.
Look what I brought you.
You can take it.
It's for you.
Wow.
Your big buck teeth
must really help you
gnaw your food.
Wait.
Aren't you going to eat it?
I guess not.
Maybe he wasn't
hungry after all.
Oh, hey.
Is your dino happy?
Oh, Grandma lent me
her sunglasses
so I won't get
tomato juice in my eye.
Smart thinking.
And I think so.
You think so?
Well, it took the tomato,
but it didn't eat it.
Please don't tell me
we wasted a perfectly
good tomato.
Nothing's wasted
in science.
It's just that my
prediction is wrong.
He wasn't hungry.
So, what are you
going to do now?
Come up with
another prediction.
It's my favorite part.
-Do you want to help?
-Sure.
As long as you help us
fill the jars.
Deal.
Here's what we know:
the Incisivosaurus
didn't leave with the herd
and didn't eat
the tomato.
What was it doing?
Predictions?
Hmm.
I predict
that the Incisivosaurus
doesn't like tomatoes.
It likes to eat
other things.
Interesting.
Grandma?
[Grandma]
I predict
we'll have enough
tomato sauce stored
to last us
until next spring.
[all chuckle]
I don't think that's
the type of prediction
Dana was looking for.
Actually, Grandma,
you might be
onto something.
-Hmm?
-We make tomato sauce
in the fall so that
we have it all winter.
Maybe the Incisivosaurus
is doing the same thing.
-[Saara] Hmm.
-It's making tomato sauce?
No, it's keeping
its food for later.
Like my grandma
used to say,
"We're filling them up now
so we can chow down later."
He's just putting his food
in holes, not jars.
Well, some birds that don't
head to warmer places
for the winter
do store their food
to eat later.
How do we prove it?
If only there was
a pile of leaves
you could hide in.
Thanks, Grandma.
I'll be right back
with our results.
[chuckles] Hungry?
Starving.
I'm ready to
store some food.
In my stomach.
[both laugh]
[Dana]
The Incisivosaurus is back.
And he still has
the tomato.
He's looking to see
if anyone's watching.
He's digging a hole.
My theory was right:
the Incisivosaurus is
storing food for the winter.
[dinosaur squawking]
I can't wait to tell
Grandma and Saara!
Grandma, Saara,
you won't believe it!
Grandma, Saara,
you won't believe it!
Pasta?
Yes, please.
I'll get it.
We were right:
the Incisivosaurus
did store its food.
Hmm!
This is so good.
Well, like my
granddaughter says,
"Eating is my
favorite part."
Now, swallow your food
and tell us more.
[dinosaur squawking
faintly]
[Dana, fading out] Well,
Grandma's prediction was right.
I saw the Incisivosaurus...
♪ ♪
[Dana] Next up, more Dino Dana!
[squawks]
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[Dana]
Dino Dana!
♪ ♪
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Dino Dana!
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[Dana] "Hot and Cold Dino."
[Mom]
Oh, thank you so much
for looking after her
on such short notice, Ethyl.
Oh, I'm just glad
I can help.
Um, there's soup
in the kitchen,
and there is a thermometer
and some cough syrup
in the bathroom
medicine cabinet.
If you could just keep
taking her temperature
and let me know what it is,
that would be great.
Will do.
And don't you worry
about a thing, Eva.
I've got everything
under control.
-Thank you.
-You guys have a good day.
We'll be fine.
[knocking]
Dana, are you asleep?
Hey, kiddo.
I hear you're not
feeling your best, huh?
Aww.
[Dana]
Roar! [coughs]
Roar!
[coughs]
Roar-- [coughs]
[congested] Come back, T-rex.
I have a dino
experiment to solve.
It's not coming back.
[sighs]
Dana, what are you
doing out here?
Ms. Currie?
You're going to
catch another cold.
Your mom asked me
to look after you
while she ran
some errands.
And it doesn't look
like I'm doing
that hot a job, does it?
Come on. Let's go.
-Come on.
-But...
Yeah, you can
finish your "but"
once we're inside
where it's warm.
There.
Now just lean over and
breathe in the steam.
This should help
with your stuffiness.
There you go.
-Can I finish my "but" now?
-Yeah, of course.
But I was trying to perform
dino experiment 725,
"Were dinosaurs warm-
or cold-blooded?"
What's the difference?
Breathe.
Warm-blooded animals
like people and birds
make their own body heat,
so whether it's warm
or cold outside,
their body temperature
stays the same.
Ah.
Breathe.
Cold-blooded animals like
reptiles and fish
get their body heat
from their environment,
so if it's hot outside,
their body temperature
is warmer,
and if it's cold,
they're cooler.
[Ms. Currie]
Ah. Breathe.
So how are you going to
figure this out?
[Dana, muffled] We get to
come up with an experiment.
What's that, dear?
We get to come up
with an experiment.
If I can get the temperature
of the T-rex
outside where it's cold
and inside where it's warm,
then I can see
if its body temperature
stays the same or changes.
If it stays the same,
then it's warm-blooded.
If it gets warmer,
then it's cold-blooded.
Now, all I have to do
is figure out how
to get its temperature.
Temperature! I'm supposed to be
checking your temperature.
Come on. Come with me.
Okay, let's see.
[device beeping]
Ooh, 102.
Still running hot.
I'm going to go and
get your soup ready.
I want you to go
and relax, okay?
Good girl.
[dinosaur snorts faintly]
[Dana]
The T-rex is back!
[beep]
Wait up, T-- [coughs] --rex.
I need to take
your temperature.
But how am I
going to do that?
[sighs]
Wait, T-rex.
Look,
some yummy Ugrunaaluk.
You should stop
and think about
how you're going to
try to get one.
Now's my chance!
[beep]
[beep]
Ninety-eight point six degrees.
Got it.
Thanks, T-rex.
[roars]
Good luck trying
to catch an Ugrunaaluk!
[Ms. Currie]
Dana...
That doesn't
look like relaxing.
Dino experiments
are relaxing.
Well, come on in.
The soup's on.
[coughs]
But I've only got half
my dino experiment complete.
I know the T-rex's
body temperature outside,
but now I need
to compare it
with its body
temperature inside.
Well, it sounds like
you're going to
have to do it
from the inside anyway.
Good point.
I'll be right there.
[coughs]
[Ms. Currie]
There you go.
Thanks, Ms. Currie.
[Ms. Currie]
The key to getting over a cold
is rest and
lots of fluids,
so you finish up
that chicken soup.
Science never rests.
It's constantly changing.
The word "dinosaur"
means "terrible lizard",
but paleontologists
now think that dinosaurs
evolved into birds,
not lizards.
Oh. Take another bite.
Well, if dinosaurs
became birds
and birds are warm-blooded,
wouldn't that mean that
dinosaurs are warm-blooded, too?
Aha! You would think so,
but some paleontologists think
that, because
dinosaurs were so big,
they were cold-blooded
because it would take
way too much energy
to make their own heat.
Oh.
[beep]
Well, your heat
is still 100 degrees.
Now, that's better,
but still
on the warm side,
so I am going to
get your bed ready
for a nice nap, okay?
And just to be clear,
I'd like you to stay
inside this time, okay?
-Understood.
-Yep.
[dinosaur snorts faintly]
[Dana]
The T-rex is back!
But how am I going to
get her inside?
[gasps]
Hey, T-rex.
Want some tasty chicken?
[roars]
[roars]
Now's my--
--chance.
The T-rex can't fit its head
through the doorway.
Now how am I going to
finish my dino experiment
and see if your
body temperature changes
whether you're
inside or out?
[roars]
Okay, relax. I hear you.
Well, I'm glad
one of us is happy.
[baby roars softly]
[roars softly]
The mama T-rex may be
too big to fit
inside the house,
but her baby isn't!
It's okay, baby.
Here you go.
That's a good baby.
Now come on inside
where it's nice and warm.
Is that good?
[sniffing]
Now's my chance!
[device beeping]
Ninety-eight
point six degrees,
which means that T-rex has
the same body temperature
whether it's inside
or outside,
which means you can control
your own body heat,
which means you're
warm-blooded!
Thanks, baby T-rex.
[Ms. Currie]
Oh, Dana. There you are.
I thought I said
for you to stay inside.
I am.
Mostly. But...
You can tell me
your "but" once you're--
Upstairs where it's warm?
Exactly. Now quickly,
come on up.
Alright, there you go.
Okay.
Can I finish my "but" now?
Of course you can.
But... guess what:
I finished
dino experiment 725.
Did you?
Yes, but I had to perform
the second half of
my experiment on a baby T-rex
because the mama T-rex
couldn't fit through the door.
Oh.
Well, it's a good thing
the baby was around.
What did you discover?
That dinosaurs,
or at least the T-rex,
were warm-blooded because
they could make their own heat.
Huh.
Oh, speaking of...
[device beeping]
Mm-hmm, 99.5 degrees.
You're still making
a bit too much heat,
but nothing a good sleep
can't fix.
There you go.
Sweet dreams, Dana.
Thanks for taking care
of me, Ms. Currie.
Aww. Are you kidding?
It was fun.
And we made a major
scientific discovery today,
didn't we?
♪ ♪
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[Dana]
Dino Dana!
♪ ♪
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Dino Dana!
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[Dana] "Dinostaurus."
Dino herd spotted.
I count two Kosmoceratops,
one Maiasaura,
and two Edmontosaurus.
[high-pitched braying]
Correction:
three Edmontosaurus,
and one of them
is really cute.
That's a lot of herbivores.
Dana.
Please don't tell me you're
in that pile of leaves.
[Dana]
Would it help if I told you
I was doing dino research?
I didn't think so.
[Grandma]
Ugh. Now look at you.
You've got leaves everywhere.
Yes, but I also have
valuable observations.
Couldn't you get
your observations
from someplace
a little less dirty
like your tree fort
or, uh... a book?
Scientists use
hides like to this
to observe animals
up close
without the animals
seeing them
or getting scared away.
Plus it's way more fun.
I guessed as much.
And it worked.
I just saw a herd
of Kosmoceratops,
Maiasaura, and Edmontosaurus
walking together.
Should those names
mean something to me?
They're all herbivories.
Plant eaters.
Where do you think
they're going, Grandma?
I don't know,
but I do know
where we're going.
[Dana]
Wait...
Is it...
Tomato sauce time!
[Grandma laughs]
Yay... [chuckles]
[Dana]
Aren't you excited, Saara?
[Saara]
Yeah, I love
cleaning tomatoes
and jars all day.
Do you love
the tomato sauce
we get to eat afterwards?
I do love that.
Like my grandma
used to say,
"A bit of work now
for a winter of enjoyment."
[all chuckle]
Alright, girls.
You keep washing
those tomatoes,
and I'll prep the jars.
[laughs]
Saara, guess
what I saw out front.
I'm going to take
a wild guess
and say...
a dinosaur.
No.
Dinosaurs.
A whole herd of them.
Where do you think
they were going?
Hopefully someplace warm.
Grandma, can't we
do this inside?
And make a giant mess
inside the house?
Are you kidding me?
But you may have a point.
So... we can go inside?
About the dinosaurs
going somewhere warmer.
When it starts to get cold,
some animals travel
to where it's warmer
and where there's more food.
Maybe the dinosaurs
did the same thing.
Hmm.
I can't blame them.
Whew.
Let's speed this up.
Dana, next bucket, please.
[cooing and squawking]
[Dana]
Oh no!
Looks like the herd
left somebody behind.
I'll be right back.
[Saara]
Think pasta.
Think pasta!
Wait.
We are having pasta, right?
You think I would do
all of this
if there wasn't a meal
at the end of it?
[both laugh]
[dinosaur squawking]
[Dana] Are you looking for
your herd, Incisivosaurus?
[squawking]
They went that way.
Where are you going?
Sorry, Incisivosaurus.
All the vegetables are gone.
It's too cold for
them to grow anymore.
[squawking]
That's why that
herd of dinosaurs
is heading somewhere warm...
where there's more food.
You should go with them.
Maybe you're
too hungry to go.
Wait here.
I'll be right back.
[Saara chuckles]
You started crushing
without me?
That's my favorite part.
Correction: eating
is my favorite part,
crushing is second.
Be my guest.
I've gotten juice
squirted in my eye twice.
Like my grandma
used to say,
"No pain, no food." [chuckles]
Keep turning.
Speaking of "no food",
I think the Incisivosaurus
got left behind,
and now he's hungry.
The Incisivi-what-now?
The Incisivo...
saurus.
Oh.
This one.
Its name means "incisor lizard"
because it had these two...
buck teeth at the front
that paleontologists think
it would have used
to eat plants -
plants like tomatoes.
You're not going
to give a tomato
to a bucked-tooth lizard.
But Grandma, he's hungry!
Well, so am I.
But look at all the jars
we're going to fill.
Yes, we're filling them now
so we can chow down later.
I mean, these are meant to
last us the whole winter, Dana.
Poor Incisivosaurus.
Yeah. Poor little dino
must be starving,
like I am.
Okay, you can
give him one tomato.
Thanks, Grandma.
I'll be right back to help.
Save some crushing for me.
Aww. That was nice.
Oh! Ow.
I just got juice
in my eye again.
Oh.
I've got an idea.
[sighs]
Incisivosaurus!
[squawking]
It's okay.
It's just me.
You can stop
searching for food.
Look what I brought you.
You can take it.
It's for you.
Wow.
Your big buck teeth
must really help you
gnaw your food.
Wait.
Aren't you going to eat it?
I guess not.
Maybe he wasn't
hungry after all.
Oh, hey.
Is your dino happy?
Oh, Grandma lent me
her sunglasses
so I won't get
tomato juice in my eye.
Smart thinking.
And I think so.
You think so?
Well, it took the tomato,
but it didn't eat it.
Please don't tell me
we wasted a perfectly
good tomato.
Nothing's wasted
in science.
It's just that my
prediction is wrong.
He wasn't hungry.
So, what are you
going to do now?
Come up with
another prediction.
It's my favorite part.
-Do you want to help?
-Sure.
As long as you help us
fill the jars.
Deal.
Here's what we know:
the Incisivosaurus
didn't leave with the herd
and didn't eat
the tomato.
What was it doing?
Predictions?
Hmm.
I predict
that the Incisivosaurus
doesn't like tomatoes.
It likes to eat
other things.
Interesting.
Grandma?
[Grandma]
I predict
we'll have enough
tomato sauce stored
to last us
until next spring.
[all chuckle]
I don't think that's
the type of prediction
Dana was looking for.
Actually, Grandma,
you might be
onto something.
-Hmm?
-We make tomato sauce
in the fall so that
we have it all winter.
Maybe the Incisivosaurus
is doing the same thing.
-[Saara] Hmm.
-It's making tomato sauce?
No, it's keeping
its food for later.
Like my grandma
used to say,
"We're filling them up now
so we can chow down later."
He's just putting his food
in holes, not jars.
Well, some birds that don't
head to warmer places
for the winter
do store their food
to eat later.
How do we prove it?
If only there was
a pile of leaves
you could hide in.
Thanks, Grandma.
I'll be right back
with our results.
[chuckles] Hungry?
Starving.
I'm ready to
store some food.
In my stomach.
[both laugh]
[Dana]
The Incisivosaurus is back.
And he still has
the tomato.
He's looking to see
if anyone's watching.
He's digging a hole.
My theory was right:
the Incisivosaurus is
storing food for the winter.
[dinosaur squawking]
I can't wait to tell
Grandma and Saara!
Grandma, Saara,
you won't believe it!
Grandma, Saara,
you won't believe it!
Pasta?
Yes, please.
I'll get it.
We were right:
the Incisivosaurus
did store its food.
Hmm!
This is so good.
Well, like my
granddaughter says,
"Eating is my
favorite part."
Now, swallow your food
and tell us more.
[dinosaur squawking
faintly]
[Dana, fading out] Well,
Grandma's prediction was right.
I saw the Incisivosaurus...
♪ ♪
[Dana] Next up, more Dino Dana!
[squawks]
♪ ♪
[Dana]
Dino Dana!
♪ ♪
♪ ♪
♪ ♪
♪ ♪
♪ ♪
♪ ♪
Dino Dana!
♪ ♪
[Dana] "Hot and Cold Dino."
[Mom]
Oh, thank you so much
for looking after her
on such short notice, Ethyl.
Oh, I'm just glad
I can help.
Um, there's soup
in the kitchen,
and there is a thermometer
and some cough syrup
in the bathroom
medicine cabinet.
If you could just keep
taking her temperature
and let me know what it is,
that would be great.
Will do.
And don't you worry
about a thing, Eva.
I've got everything
under control.
-Thank you.
-You guys have a good day.
We'll be fine.
[knocking]
Dana, are you asleep?
Hey, kiddo.
I hear you're not
feeling your best, huh?
Aww.
[Dana]
Roar! [coughs]
Roar!
[coughs]
Roar-- [coughs]
[congested] Come back, T-rex.
I have a dino
experiment to solve.
It's not coming back.
[sighs]
Dana, what are you
doing out here?
Ms. Currie?
You're going to
catch another cold.
Your mom asked me
to look after you
while she ran
some errands.
And it doesn't look
like I'm doing
that hot a job, does it?
Come on. Let's go.
-Come on.
-But...
Yeah, you can
finish your "but"
once we're inside
where it's warm.
There.
Now just lean over and
breathe in the steam.
This should help
with your stuffiness.
There you go.
-Can I finish my "but" now?
-Yeah, of course.
But I was trying to perform
dino experiment 725,
"Were dinosaurs warm-
or cold-blooded?"
What's the difference?
Breathe.
Warm-blooded animals
like people and birds
make their own body heat,
so whether it's warm
or cold outside,
their body temperature
stays the same.
Ah.
Breathe.
Cold-blooded animals like
reptiles and fish
get their body heat
from their environment,
so if it's hot outside,
their body temperature
is warmer,
and if it's cold,
they're cooler.
[Ms. Currie]
Ah. Breathe.
So how are you going to
figure this out?
[Dana, muffled] We get to
come up with an experiment.
What's that, dear?
We get to come up
with an experiment.
If I can get the temperature
of the T-rex
outside where it's cold
and inside where it's warm,
then I can see
if its body temperature
stays the same or changes.
If it stays the same,
then it's warm-blooded.
If it gets warmer,
then it's cold-blooded.
Now, all I have to do
is figure out how
to get its temperature.
Temperature! I'm supposed to be
checking your temperature.
Come on. Come with me.
Okay, let's see.
[device beeping]
Ooh, 102.
Still running hot.
I'm going to go and
get your soup ready.
I want you to go
and relax, okay?
Good girl.
[dinosaur snorts faintly]
[Dana]
The T-rex is back!
[beep]
Wait up, T-- [coughs] --rex.
I need to take
your temperature.
But how am I
going to do that?
[sighs]
Wait, T-rex.
Look,
some yummy Ugrunaaluk.
You should stop
and think about
how you're going to
try to get one.
Now's my chance!
[beep]
[beep]
Ninety-eight point six degrees.
Got it.
Thanks, T-rex.
[roars]
Good luck trying
to catch an Ugrunaaluk!
[Ms. Currie]
Dana...
That doesn't
look like relaxing.
Dino experiments
are relaxing.
Well, come on in.
The soup's on.
[coughs]
But I've only got half
my dino experiment complete.
I know the T-rex's
body temperature outside,
but now I need
to compare it
with its body
temperature inside.
Well, it sounds like
you're going to
have to do it
from the inside anyway.
Good point.
I'll be right there.
[coughs]
[Ms. Currie]
There you go.
Thanks, Ms. Currie.
[Ms. Currie]
The key to getting over a cold
is rest and
lots of fluids,
so you finish up
that chicken soup.
Science never rests.
It's constantly changing.
The word "dinosaur"
means "terrible lizard",
but paleontologists
now think that dinosaurs
evolved into birds,
not lizards.
Oh. Take another bite.
Well, if dinosaurs
became birds
and birds are warm-blooded,
wouldn't that mean that
dinosaurs are warm-blooded, too?
Aha! You would think so,
but some paleontologists think
that, because
dinosaurs were so big,
they were cold-blooded
because it would take
way too much energy
to make their own heat.
Oh.
[beep]
Well, your heat
is still 100 degrees.
Now, that's better,
but still
on the warm side,
so I am going to
get your bed ready
for a nice nap, okay?
And just to be clear,
I'd like you to stay
inside this time, okay?
-Understood.
-Yep.
[dinosaur snorts faintly]
[Dana]
The T-rex is back!
But how am I going to
get her inside?
[gasps]
Hey, T-rex.
Want some tasty chicken?
[roars]
[roars]
Now's my--
--chance.
The T-rex can't fit its head
through the doorway.
Now how am I going to
finish my dino experiment
and see if your
body temperature changes
whether you're
inside or out?
[roars]
Okay, relax. I hear you.
Well, I'm glad
one of us is happy.
[baby roars softly]
[roars softly]
The mama T-rex may be
too big to fit
inside the house,
but her baby isn't!
It's okay, baby.
Here you go.
That's a good baby.
Now come on inside
where it's nice and warm.
Is that good?
[sniffing]
Now's my chance!
[device beeping]
Ninety-eight
point six degrees,
which means that T-rex has
the same body temperature
whether it's inside
or outside,
which means you can control
your own body heat,
which means you're
warm-blooded!
Thanks, baby T-rex.
[Ms. Currie]
Oh, Dana. There you are.
I thought I said
for you to stay inside.
I am.
Mostly. But...
You can tell me
your "but" once you're--
Upstairs where it's warm?
Exactly. Now quickly,
come on up.
Alright, there you go.
Okay.
Can I finish my "but" now?
Of course you can.
But... guess what:
I finished
dino experiment 725.
Did you?
Yes, but I had to perform
the second half of
my experiment on a baby T-rex
because the mama T-rex
couldn't fit through the door.
Oh.
Well, it's a good thing
the baby was around.
What did you discover?
That dinosaurs,
or at least the T-rex,
were warm-blooded because
they could make their own heat.
Huh.
Oh, speaking of...
[device beeping]
Mm-hmm, 99.5 degrees.
You're still making
a bit too much heat,
but nothing a good sleep
can't fix.
There you go.
Sweet dreams, Dana.
Thanks for taking care
of me, Ms. Currie.
Aww. Are you kidding?
It was fun.
And we made a major
scientific discovery today,
didn't we?
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