Well it has never really been studied before, however it would be similar to a alligator's bite. It's defiantly not like T-rex's 10 ton smash bite, but it would hurt if you were bit. All in all around 4-6 tons. That is my hypothesis.
about 3 tonnes
no...
so biggg
16000 psi +
228 kPa
to big
We cannot know for sure, but T-Rex had a slightly stronger bite force, but Giganotosaurus's bite was also very powerful. Giganotosaurus was a little bigger, but Tyrannosaurus was probably a little more muscular. Either of them could win, because it is a 'whoever bites first' scenario. Whichever dinosaur decides to bite first will most likely be the winner.
yes because giganotosaurus was the biggest and the strongest carnivore on land but t - Rex bite force was stronger than giganotosaurus but size matters
i'd say tyrannosaurus because it had a much stronger bite force than giganotosaurus did. though it's possible for giganotosaurus to beat t-rex. but the might not have fought because t-rex lived in north America and g-rex(giganotosaurus) lived in south America. g-rex was a pack hunter. so 1 t-rex wouldn't stand a chance against a pack of g-rexes.
Animal with the largest bite force is the saltwater crocodile.
my money is on giganotosaurus!!!Good answer, whoever answered this. But what did you bet? All your money? Well then, you win then! Giganotosaurus carolinii evolved from Carcharodontosaurus saharicus. Since it evolved from it, Giganotosaurus is more advanced.But he is just a little smarter, in other words, he is almost as dumb as carcharodontosaurus. But the species lived and died 97 million years ago, evolving into mapusaurus roseae. Carcharodontosaurus, however, lived 7 million years, that is 100-93 million years ago. they both have something dumb in common; they are lone hunters! So they probably could've been defeated by the fast, the advanced, and the smart mapusaurus roseae.
Honestly the bite force of the African lion's is very impressive,the bite force is Actually 945 lbs (425 kg of force).
The Giganotosaurus is known as the (Giant Southern Lizard)
The bite force of a Allosaurus from what many paleontology have found was it only had the bite force of a adult male lion. the teeth of it are to small and weak to hold and break it's prey.
aprox. 400-500 pounds. The English Mastiff holds the record of the strongest bite force (500 pounds) for dogs. They measure bite force from the size of their head and English Mastiffs and Saint Bernards have just about the same size head, therefore they basically have the same bite force.
t. rex had a much stronger bite and bigger teeth but gigantosaurus was a little bigger than t. rex
leopard geckos don't bite very hard. its bite force is probably around 15 pounds
A crocodile definitely produces much more bite force. Herpetologist Brady Barr measured the bite force of a great white shark at 669 pounds (303.45 kg). However, this is probably not the best bite force that a great white shark can produce. But, in any case, the shark has such razor-sharp teeth that he doesn't need a greater bite force. He also measured the bite force of a crocodile of South Africa at 2500 pounds (1133.98 kg)! After that, he measured the bite force of a very big Nile crocodile at 5000 pounds (2267.96kg)! This is also the most powerful bite ever measured from any animal. And that was still a defensive bite, despite the brute force that this crocodile produced, as it bit the bite meter only when it was brought in its mouth, while it was resting. If this crocodile had bitten the bite meter while charging at it, especially in water, the bite force would have been even greater.