Mammoths, to see if they could thrive today.
Quagga, the Rau Quagga looks interesting enough
Moa/Elephant Birds for their massive size
Thylacine
Since the Quagga could return in the next few centuries, I'm going with the Mammoth, only because I think it'd be easier to have the Asian Elephant mimic the appearance of a mammoth and eventually adapt to cooler climates.
Neanderthals. They seemingly were very smart, but lonesome and probably autistic. It'd be interesting to see what happens.
Besides that, probably something that can be made livestock
Now I could be selfish and say something i like like trilobites or suchomimus, but rationally? Any large herbivore from the pleistocene, they benefitted the ecosystems they inhabited drastically, and can restore them if they were brought back, like the mammoth
A tree-browsing sauropod to live in north america. I bet they taste great, and that niche is currently completely unfilled. Also, their young would greatly benefit the predators in NA like catamounts, coyotes, ocelots, wolves, etc and help them while not threatening any existing animals. Bonus: there's nearly no chance they'd want to wander into urban areas or into large fields, or even into dense forests, instead living on their peripheries, so humans wouldn't find them pests one bit.
The Great Auk, Falkland Islands Wolf, Elephant bird, Hokkaido wolf, Quagga, Heath hen, and Giant Moa, are all very tempting. But, if I could only choose one, I'd have to go with the Thylacine. Still sucks this little guy bit the dust.
You have Neanderthal DNA in you from humans interbreeding with them long ago.
They were like us, but more orangutan like. More social, agreeable, cooperative. They didn't have much of a chance against humans.
Although I'm honestly still convinced the reason most archaic DNA carried forward in sapiens females were because all the other homo women were ugly as fuck.
Bringing back the Old English Bulldog from extinction would help to preserve the Bulldog (modern), Boxer, and French Bulldog by outbreeding. This would ensure that it continues to thrive for years to come.
The only "penguin" native to North America.
Passenger pigeon. Imagine a flock of a billion birds that covers the entire sky
Multituberculates
Trilobites
Pterosaurs
Pycnodont fish
Placoderms
Choristoderes
Dryolestoids
Basically any and everything you dumb fucks never heard off
>trilobites
>pterosaurs
>implying 7 year old boys don't know exactly what these are (western) world wide.
Megalodon, only to spite whale fuckers and see them seethe.
Mammoths, to see if they could thrive today.
Quagga, the Rau Quagga looks interesting enough
Moa/Elephant Birds for their massive size
Thylacine
Since the Quagga could return in the next few centuries, I'm going with the Mammoth, only because I think it'd be easier to have the Asian Elephant mimic the appearance of a mammoth and eventually adapt to cooler climates.
t. rex
fuck the world
Neanderthals. They seemingly were very smart, but lonesome and probably autistic. It'd be interesting to see what happens.
Besides that, probably something that can be made livestock
Carolina conure
Awoken from their ancient slumber at last
Those blue birds from Rio :,(
Big Dunc
Whatever tastes the best
the bubonic plague (on a mass scale)
The plague is not extinct it still exists in madagascar, india and some other shitty places
Also it’s not even that dangerous anymore, there’s even some theories saying humans have adapted since the plague to handle it better
Now I could be selfish and say something i like like trilobites or suchomimus, but rationally? Any large herbivore from the pleistocene, they benefitted the ecosystems they inhabited drastically, and can restore them if they were brought back, like the mammoth
Megalodon.
I'd feed David Attenborough to one and wipe his smug shit eating grin from the face of nature documentaries.
I don’t think I’ve seen a single good documentary that he wasn’t in for the last 10 years
some bad ass dinosaur
T-Rex, but it magically can survive in our time because I know twenty fuckers are about to post how it would die from oxygen and atmosphere.
There was actually less oxygen in the Mesozoic, s I doubt there'd by any problem with that
Texas wolf and kill all ranchers while im at it
A tree-browsing sauropod to live in north america. I bet they taste great, and that niche is currently completely unfilled. Also, their young would greatly benefit the predators in NA like catamounts, coyotes, ocelots, wolves, etc and help them while not threatening any existing animals. Bonus: there's nearly no chance they'd want to wander into urban areas or into large fields, or even into dense forests, instead living on their peripheries, so humans wouldn't find them pests one bit.
You think you want this, but you don't. It's all fun and games until you have an elephant breaking down your fence and chewing on your favorite tree.
It sounds like fun.
It isn't. There is a reason why a lot of African farmers shoot elephants on sight.
terror birds so i can let them loose in australia
>implying that would be any different from what their current wildlife is like
The Great Auk, Falkland Islands Wolf, Elephant bird, Hokkaido wolf, Quagga, Heath hen, and Giant Moa, are all very tempting. But, if I could only choose one, I'd have to go with the Thylacine. Still sucks this little guy bit the dust.
None of y'all are curious about Neanderthal pussy?
Fuck off degenerate scum.
You have Neanderthal DNA in you from humans interbreeding with them long ago.
They were like us, but more orangutan like. More social, agreeable, cooperative. They didn't have much of a chance against humans.
Yes
This.
>Tfw no cavewoman gf
Although I'm honestly still convinced the reason most archaic DNA carried forward in sapiens females were because all the other homo women were ugly as fuck.
Curious indeed
Just get a gnomish girlfriend.
fishe boi
invertebrates aren't your ancestor
You don't know me punk
one of the giant land crocodiles, like kaprosuchus or boverisuchus
Thylacine for my sister. She's always wanted to see one.
The Old English Bulldog.
Bringing back the Old English Bulldog from extinction would help to preserve the Bulldog (modern), Boxer, and French Bulldog by outbreeding. This would ensure that it continues to thrive for years to come.
Southern Hound, it's bloodline disappeared as it was interbred with other dogs, beagles, bloodhounds, and foxhounds are all modern day descendants
Thankful for the Southern Hound, it did well. Bloodhounds aren't disgenic from what I know.
Yo mama