Thunderous waves crash against the jagged cliffs, breaking apart in walls of white froth. High above, the black, volcanic stone gives way to a line of lush, radiant green the cover the whole of the island interior. A chorus of frogs and birds fills the jungle air from one side of the island to the other, and everywhere in between.

Along the edges of the river, a pair of basal sauropodomorphs – Anchisaurus – wet their lips with the cool, flowing water. The water flows into their open mouths, and the thrust their heads back to allow gravity to carry it down into their guts. Across the river, a few hundred feet away, a long-necked stegosaur called Miragaia walks into the running water to cool off from the intense rays of the Central American sun. Her arrival disturbs a group of filter feeding pterosaurs, who pause from straining aquatic creatures through their thousands of bristle-like teeth, and take off into the air from a standing start.

As they fly over the plains to the West, they pass over dozens of horned ceratopsians, long-necked sauropods, and duck-billed hadrosaurs that browse for food among groves of ferns and cycads, or else foraging among the tops of trees. The piece of their feeding is disturbed when a Concavenator – a mid-sized predator with a strange protrusion over his hips – erupts from the surrounding foliage to take out a ostrich-like Gallimimus. The two theropods clash in a brief though brutal moment of violence. When it ends, peace falls over the valley once more.

Far in the North of the island, the calls of the pack echo between the Eastern and Western mountains. And as the morning sun rises higher and higher, the Tyrannosaurus rex climbs to the remnants of the Jurassic World helipad to survey her territory.

There are no more tourists or park workers. Whatever buildings remain are empty, and not a single volt of electricity is left running. Just weeks after the total evacuation of all human personnel from Isla Nublar, the jungle has already begun the process of reclaiming the land, just as it had over 20 years ago. And as the Tyrant Lizard Queen examines her domain, she lets out a triumphant, powerful roar that harkens back to a time long since past, when dinosaurs ruled the earth.