What Will Earth Be Like 300 Million Years From Now?

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  • čas přidán 1. 04. 2024
  • Check out Fascinating Fails: • Invasion of the Toxic ...
    and the entire PBS Earth Month playlist: • Earth Month from PBS
    We spend a lot of time here on Eons looking backwards into deep time, visiting ancient chapters of our planet’s history. But this time, we’re taking a look towards the deep future. After all, the story is far from over.
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    References:
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Komentáře • 816

  • @martijnvanweele6204
    @martijnvanweele6204 Před měsícem +962

    "Will you look into PBS Eons?"
    "what will I see?"
    "Things that were, things that are, and some things that have not yet come to pass..."

  • @Shantosh9550
    @Shantosh9550 Před měsícem +942

    Anyone remember The Future is Wild?

  • @user-qy3jq9kr1d
    @user-qy3jq9kr1d Před měsícem +474

    People always say that living forever would suck, but it’s my curiosity about these sorts of things that make me disagree.

    • @kats9755
      @kats9755 Před měsícem +66

      I still think living "forever" would suck. If you mean "forever" in cosmic terms. If we're just defining "forever" as "significantly longer lived than any other living thing that's come before", then I agree it'd be fun for a while.

    • @quillaja
      @quillaja Před měsícem +31

      Those people lack imagination.

    • @horuswasright
      @horuswasright Před měsícem +29

      Living forever as we are today with our limited cognitive abilities would drive us insane pretty soon.

    • @MaekarManastorm
      @MaekarManastorm Před měsícem +18

      You would grow tired , tired of the struggle, tired of watching everything you know and love turn to dust

    • @alittlewarlord
      @alittlewarlord Před měsícem +40

      rip to everyone else in the replies, but ME TOO!! even if i wasn't actively participating, just being able to watch what happens and how the universe continues to develop, getting to answer all of the questions i have about how things happen and will happen - ideally, if there is an afterlife, it's spectator mode.

  • @lerneanlion
    @lerneanlion Před měsícem +236

    The hopping snails in the vast desert, the squids that live in the lichen forests, the oceans that are filled with fish-sized crusteceans and the flying fishes that dominated the skies, the future is indeed wild.

  • @SciMinute
    @SciMinute Před měsícem +301

    This episode brought back memories of The Future is Wild! 😂

    • @roys.1889
      @roys.1889 Před měsícem +13

      Is that the one with the Super-sized Man-o-Wars called the Reef Glider, the Sapient Squid monkeys, and the Torratons?

    • @wildnye
      @wildnye Před měsícem

      ​@@roys.1889that's the one!

    • @stuartaaron613
      @stuartaaron613 Před měsícem

      Yes.
      @@roys.1889

    • @chakuseki
      @chakuseki Před měsícem +6

      Omg me too! One word: FLISH

    • @takenname8053
      @takenname8053 Před měsícem +4

      This is even further beyond!
      The Future is Wild stopped at 200 Million Years

  • @jaquessiemasz8650
    @jaquessiemasz8650 Před měsícem +192

    May PBS Eons last 100 million years! ❤

  • @Ythnewg
    @Ythnewg Před měsícem +69

    I have been a PBS fan since the trouble with trilobites. I was in high school then. Now i major in geology starting undergrad research on divergent boundary chemistry. Thank you for the inspiration you kept me excited when it was hard

  • @vgfytjbtff
    @vgfytjbtff Před měsícem +165

    "Amasia" looks like a pun in portuguese - as if the continent are "amasiados" (meaning they became lovers)

  • @normanmendez636
    @normanmendez636 Před měsícem +34

    Eons has come full circle, looking at the past to looking at the present now to looking at the future

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Před měsícem +4

      @normanmendez636 - I hope this doesn't mean they are closing up shop!

  • @kailawkamo1568
    @kailawkamo1568 Před měsícem +83

    This episode reminded me of The Future is Wild. What a trip down memory lane ❤

  • @nsnopper
    @nsnopper Před měsícem +27

    I learned from Star Trek: Voyager that mankind will evolve into salamanders.

  • @jameshill2450
    @jameshill2450 Před měsícem +33

    "We're getting the band back together."
    "We're on a mission from Gwondana."

  • @mouselet
    @mouselet Před měsícem +65

    Failed rift valley in the US? Can you do an episode on that and other similar terrain features in the future?

  • @icekangaroo9392
    @icekangaroo9392 Před měsícem +24

    Kinda wish this was a much longer video there’s a lot of speculation that could be interesting to see.

  • @butterw55
    @butterw55 Před měsícem +33

    6:20 "We're getting the band back together"
    Can't wait for the Pangea Reunion Album to drop!

    • @brianmiller1077
      @brianmiller1077 Před 7 dny

      The bands Asia, Europe and America form a super (continent) group

  • @nagari9093
    @nagari9093 Před měsícem +63

    Spoiler alert smh

  • @evangeloevoxi
    @evangeloevoxi Před měsícem +34

    I've been waiting for a video like this for so long! I love hypothesizing about the distant future.... Thank you!!! 💜💙💚

    • @mariovwcardoso5970
      @mariovwcardoso5970 Před měsícem

      check on Science and Futurism with Isaac Arthur. You might like it.

  • @AntoniusTyas
    @AntoniusTyas Před měsícem +85

    Ah, something Professor Ramirez hasn't heard before. Multituberculates were an extinct group of allotherian mammals that filled the niche now filled by rodents starting from Mid-Jurassic all the way to Late Eocene. Some of the more famous example like _Kamptobaatar_ and _Djadochtatherium_ were found in late Cretaceous Mongolia, while _Cimolodon_ (famously snatched by _Stenonychosaurus_ on the 'Ice World' episode of Prehistoric Planet) was from late Cretaceous USA. I'll be honest were it not for NatGeo's Gobi Expedition in early-to-mid 1990s to study the paleoecology of Djadokhta Formation and Nemegt Formation I wouldn't have known of Multituberculata mammals.

    • @Engitainment
      @Engitainment Před měsícem +8

      Thank you for explaining that!

    • @apexnext
      @apexnext Před měsícem +8

      Yeah I wanted to know what _multituberculates_ were more than the answer. 😂

    • @amandaewoldt8205
      @amandaewoldt8205 Před měsícem +3

      The come up repeatedly on the common descent podcast

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart Před měsícem +4

      @AntoniusTyas - Thank you. So, sort of like pre-rodent rodents. I'll go re-watch that "Prehistoric Planet" episode now and let Mr Attenborough get me excited to see life as it was 66,000,000 ya !

    • @LimeyLassen
      @LimeyLassen Před měsícem +2

      "Allotherian" meaning that they weren't placental but they were closely related to placentals.

  • @sephirothjc
    @sephirothjc Před měsícem +14

    The fact that we missed cat-sized horses makes me sad.

    • @FreedomAnderson
      @FreedomAnderson Před měsícem

      Have you heard of Thumbelina the Horse? She was a mini Horse with dwarfism.

  • @alumba
    @alumba Před měsícem +25

    If even Michelle can't easily say multituberculates, there's no hope for me

  • @rockingthemike
    @rockingthemike Před měsícem +12

    this was a fascinating episode. great work, eons team!

  • @Morrison-saber-tooth
    @Morrison-saber-tooth Před měsícem +60

    The future is wild moment

    • @Spongebrain97
      @Spongebrain97 Před měsícem +5

      When the octopus went to land and evolved into separate species, one of which began swinging from trees 😂

    • @chasingcheetahs5017
      @chasingcheetahs5017 Před měsícem +2

      @@Spongebrain97 Octopuses died out in the 100 myf mass extinction presumably, as the squibbon and megasquid are squid as evident by having 2 tentacles and 8 legs. Though, to be fair, the series did imply that the swampus evolved into the terasquid like how amniotes descend from "amphibian" tetrapods.

    • @Martha.fokker
      @Martha.fokker Před 21 dnem

      It's just uncertain

  • @stinew358
    @stinew358 Před měsícem +16

    I live on the border of gondwana with many footprints in ancient sand that has been now forced vertical. In Florida you can scuba dive to the old coastline during the ice age. Based on this channel, the only thing you can count on is something will be shaped like a crab.

  • @ancient_orchards
    @ancient_orchards Před 29 dny +3

    More future spec please! It makes me feel better about the systems collapse we're all living through - knowing that no matter what, life will persist, and all kinds of unknown beings will inevitably flourish again.

  • @Jezeus11
    @Jezeus11 Před měsícem +12

    Love this channel! ❤

  • @Merrinen
    @Merrinen Před měsícem +14

    That multituberculate will come back to haunt us in our dreams.
    Multiyoutuberculate...
    Meh multi CZcams chocolate it is.

  • @bradacker8028
    @bradacker8028 Před měsícem +4

    Thank y'all for these amazingly informative and entertaining videos.

  • @peterburridge9346
    @peterburridge9346 Před měsícem +3

    I really enjoyed this episode it is right up there with some of, my favourite episodes that everyone involved has made. Well done Eons team❤

  • @idle_speculation
    @idle_speculation Před měsícem +39

    4:58 other nearby rifts are growing faster than the one in East Africa, so it’s not likely to split off. Neither are the others, since Africa is on a collision course with southern Europe which will close the Mediterranean.

    • @bloodypigeon
      @bloodypigeon Před měsícem +10

      Mediterranean salt desert, here we come!

    • @patricklee5239
      @patricklee5239 Před měsícem +10

      @@bloodypigeon More like the Mediterranean Mountains, since the closing of the Mediterranean will result in Africa and Europe colliding , pushing up a new Himalaya-sized mountain range.

    • @bloodypigeon
      @bloodypigeon Před měsícem +1

      @@patricklee5239 I believe "The Future is Wild" agrees with us both.

  • @orthochronicity6428
    @orthochronicity6428 Před měsícem +1

    An episode on multituberculates now seems mandatory -- PBS Eons can't just drop something like that and leave us hanging!

  • @minecratsilentbuild5720
    @minecratsilentbuild5720 Před měsícem +4

    yay another pbs eons video i've been shaken and sweating not getting my fix,

  • @scottwooledge6387
    @scottwooledge6387 Před měsícem +3

    What great idea for a video. Loved it. Thank you.

  • @deborahdelgadopugley2316
    @deborahdelgadopugley2316 Před měsícem

    I just love you guys! Every time I want to relax and think about something else, I visit your channel and your high-quality videos open my mind! Thanks!

  • @moonbasket
    @moonbasket Před měsícem +1

    So cool! Thank you for making this video!

  • @KnickKnacksPlasticPlanet
    @KnickKnacksPlasticPlanet Před měsícem +2

    Another great EONS video! 🥰

  • @susanjane4784
    @susanjane4784 Před měsícem +3

    We must have more Eons more often!

  • @laurenmendes9087
    @laurenmendes9087 Před měsícem +1

    Loved this video, thank you

  • @glomi__
    @glomi__ Před měsícem +1

    yay this was cool would love to see more on this topic

  • @lauravansanten7804
    @lauravansanten7804 Před měsícem +14

    So I guess now we'll need an episode about multituberculates (by Michelle obviously)

  • @DeRien8
    @DeRien8 Před měsícem +1

    I kept thinking carnivorans for the trivia answer, but right at the last sentence of the blooper, I got a flash of inspiration and guessed right! Well, probably more remembered than guessed, given the content I watch on YT

  • @stephanieyee9784
    @stephanieyee9784 Před měsícem +1

    This is a fantastic episode and really interesting.

  • @ethandollarhide7943
    @ethandollarhide7943 Před měsícem +5

    Makes me wish the Future is Wild got more seasons

  • @pvazplasen5109
    @pvazplasen5109 Před měsícem +2

    Thank you ❤

  • @RythmicRaindrops
    @RythmicRaindrops Před měsícem +5

    This is what i want to see yessss

  • @Winter_Fan_01
    @Winter_Fan_01 Před měsícem +1

    Finally, something I have been asking (myself) for years

  • @29jgirl92
    @29jgirl92 Před měsícem +2

    It's still so crazy to me that the continents, the biggest land masses on earth, move!!! Like intellectually I understand why, but there is till a part of me that doesn't understand how they aren't bolted down!

  • @qazsedcft2162
    @qazsedcft2162 Před měsícem +3

    Also remember that the Sun is slowly getting warmer as it fuses its hydrogen and while that process is very slow it means it will be about 3% brighter in 300 million years. While that may not seem much it will have a huge impact on the climate of the earth, eventually leading to all oceans evaporating in about a billion years from now.

  • @manolios
    @manolios Před 4 dny +1

    it is amazing how these models try to predict earth in 100 millions years from now,
    while there is no a reliable model to predict next year or even next 10 years, with accuracy.
    Sometimes we cannot even predict the weather tomorrow

  • @brianlefko4404
    @brianlefko4404 Před měsícem +2

    As fascinating as stuff like this is, I kind of miss when we had more Eons episodes about specific extinct animals.

  • @TheTMR68
    @TheTMR68 Před měsícem +3

    It looks like a bunny! 🐰😀I think we should call it Bunnyland.

  • @brucewayne000
    @brucewayne000 Před měsícem +2

    Awesome content!!

  • @MrEmoImo
    @MrEmoImo Před měsícem

    This was a cool video. Thanks!

  • @windlessoriginals1150
    @windlessoriginals1150 Před měsícem +2

    Thank you

  • @bakaneo1
    @bakaneo1 Před 27 dny

    Love it! Love this show! Love all you guys talking science, it lit my day!

  • @pangtrilby9286
    @pangtrilby9286 Před měsícem +2

    Evospec gang unite! Really nice video btw

  • @johnkrappweis7367
    @johnkrappweis7367 Před měsícem

    When you mentioned that North American rift it immediately reminded me of that Harry Turtledove series of novels about Atlantis.

  • @TheMattsem
    @TheMattsem Před měsícem +2

    We need the planet to survive but the planet doesn't need us to survive

    • @lepidoptera9337
      @lepidoptera9337 Před měsícem

      The planet won't survive, either. It will be getting hotter, then eventually go through a phase like Venus and at the end it will be swallowed by the son. That's just a typical lifecycle in the universe. Nothing to get excited about.

  • @pollytiks3885
    @pollytiks3885 Před měsícem +3

    And now In The Year 2525 will be playing in my brain on repeat.

  • @rickcharlespersonal
    @rickcharlespersonal Před měsícem

    I would not mind it if Eons started a whole series speculating future geology and biology in more specific detail.

  • @normanmendez636
    @normanmendez636 Před měsícem +2

    The SpecEvo episode! Hurray!

  • @speed6ump
    @speed6ump Před měsícem

    Loved seeing my favourite local climbing spots featured in Eons! Palisade Head and Shovel Point in Tettegouche State Park along Lake Superior!

  • @monicaisabel4543
    @monicaisabel4543 Před měsícem

    I love this channel!

  • @ExtremeMadnessX
    @ExtremeMadnessX Před měsícem +14

    Future is Wild...

  • @arikorah2497
    @arikorah2497 Před měsícem

    I love this channel so much! I think I'm going to try to get a PHD in paleontology.
    As well; could you do more videos on ancient bats and how certain traits evolved in them? They're really cool, peculiar creatures, and I'd love to know more about how they came to be. 😊 🦇

  • @MikeJones-rk1un
    @MikeJones-rk1un Před 15 dny +1

    I'm still getting ready for the ice age they warned us about in the 1980s.

  • @GiantEagle610
    @GiantEagle610 Před měsícem +2

    One sad episode of the Future is Wild, all the mammalian species have all but disappeared, leaving only a tiny rodent like mammal eking out a living in the dark and being prayed on by spiders😢

    • @istvansipos9940
      @istvansipos9940 Před měsícem +2

      prEyed on. And, no offense, it was a funny typo. I visualized a spider church, too.

    • @GiantEagle610
      @GiantEagle610 Před měsícem +1

      @@istvansipos9940 haha, just noticed it. Thanks for pointing it out. Will leave it unedited and perhaps make others laugh

  • @franciscomilitao8947
    @franciscomilitao8947 Před měsícem +1

    Amazing!

  • @Metalkatt
    @Metalkatt Před měsícem +2

    What would happen to Antarctica if we get an East African Ocean? How will that affect the circumpolar current that keeps cold water in place?

  • @geneticon
    @geneticon Před měsícem +17

    THANK YOU for including your note acknowledging indigenous peoples and their land. It's so critical.

  • @poulthomas469
    @poulthomas469 Před měsícem

    The amount of time is just mind boggling.

  • @TragoudistrosMPH
    @TragoudistrosMPH Před měsícem +1

    8:39 Fossil evidence for hotsprings and other subterranean water sources?
    That would be interesting! 🤔
    (I've been to hotsprings in the desert)

  • @jakubbrown3521
    @jakubbrown3521 Před měsícem

    I would love to see an episode about Lake Bonneville that used to cover most of Utah

  • @301_tyron5
    @301_tyron5 Před měsícem +21

    300 million years is longer than modern human civilization. We’ll either all be dead or we’ll have successfully colonized other planets..interesting video

    • @sayvionwashington1939
      @sayvionwashington1939 Před měsícem +13

      We'll have evolved into a different species who knows how many times over by that point.

    • @nicholashylton6857
      @nicholashylton6857 Před měsícem

      Humans invented civilization about 10,000 years ago. That's like, 2 seconds ago in geologic time.
      300 million years is about 1000 times longer than our species has existed.

    • @ecurewitz
      @ecurewitz Před měsícem +1

      We’ll be dead

    • @darth856
      @darth856 Před měsícem +7

      To say it is longer is an understatement. If our descendants are still alive 300 million years from now, they will be totally unrecognicable compared to us.

    • @nicholaskelly1958
      @nicholaskelly1958 Před měsícem

      ​​@@darth856We will have (provided that we don't nuke ourselves) evolved into machine intelligence long long before that!

  • @charlesjmouse
    @charlesjmouse Před měsícem +1

    Thank you.
    An episode, or better yet a series, on multituberculates would be excellent. Still the most long-lasting mammal group, even though they are now almost certainly extinct. Often compared to rodents, but they were probably less gnawers and more 'tweezer teeth' - a niche that doesn't really exist today among mammals.

  • @l.a.gothro3999
    @l.a.gothro3999 Před měsícem +9

    I'm sad that I'm not going to be around to see all this come to pass.

    • @bryaneberly3588
      @bryaneberly3588 Před měsícem +2

      we'll have a viable type of vampirism soon, i hope.

    • @AdDewaard-hu3xk
      @AdDewaard-hu3xk Před měsícem +2

      I'm happy not to.

    • @l.a.gothro3999
      @l.a.gothro3999 Před měsícem +2

      @@bryaneberly3588 eh, I couldn't hang with that, it'd drive me bats.

  • @p_mouse8676
    @p_mouse8676 Před měsícem +2

    Ironic topic, since the current timeline is based on some very random moments in time.
    So random in fact that we most likely wouldn't be around here to begin with.

  • @Nmethyltransferase
    @Nmethyltransferase Před měsícem

    The Acid Trip Episode
    _[The Future Is Wild Theme Intensifies]_

  • @rapauli
    @rapauli Před dnem +1

    How is it that you expect the heat to level off? There is no reason for heat to stop, every reason that heat will continue to rise. Like the planet Venus.

  • @epiceducation867
    @epiceducation867 Před 5 hodinami

    me: I wish I lived on an island
    Descendant 10 Mya later: uhhh about that

  • @oravlaful
    @oravlaful Před měsícem

    i don't know if you have a video on that, but i'd love to understand how we actually know the path of the tectonic plates throughout earth's history

  • @waterbottle82730
    @waterbottle82730 Před měsícem +2

    watching this well writing a book helps to have some paleo stuff lol

  • @llll-lk2mm
    @llll-lk2mm Před měsícem +5

    i adore the absolute dedication with which the end notes about invasive research carried out by colonial nations is put out. kudos guys.

    • @theonebman7581
      @theonebman7581 Před měsícem +1

      Then you realize those native peoples are also colonizers in their own right (i.e. the Lakota aren't native to the Dakotas area, they invaded, colonized, and displaced the local populations around the late 18th century)
      The Bantu populations of subsaharian Africa invaded, conquered and colonized the entire area from the native Khoi-San peoples in the 15th century, who have largely gone extinct as a result (with some minor exceptions in South Africa and Namibia), and the Latins and Germans completely wiped out the Celts from Europe in the 4th century
      Indoeuropeans colonized Eurasia and displaced every almost local population into extinction, with some minor exceptions like the Basque
      Not to mention the hundreds of human-adjacent species we completely wiped off the map by invading and conquering their lands
      In the end, that's just humans being humans - there'll always be someone taking someone else's land, there's no one "more native" to a specific piece of land than the rest when we're all colonizers, there's no "culprit" or "victim" here, just humans being humans

    • @Kargoneth
      @Kargoneth Před měsícem

      Yes. Humans always replace other humans.

  • @michaelbiscay9836
    @michaelbiscay9836 Před měsícem

    "Today, we're looking far into the future. "
    "The future, EONS?"
    "That's right. We're looking all the way to the year... 2000."

  • @sohopedeco
    @sohopedeco Před měsícem +2

    And here was I, assuming multituberculates were some kind of potato. 🥔

  • @bluedragon219123
    @bluedragon219123 Před měsícem +2

    Honestly we already had a Super Continent during the Last Glacial Maxium with only Australia and Antarctica, though it was likely connected to South America via Glaciers, not being fully connected but where still very, relatively, close. Still Great Job on the Video! :)

    • @theonebman7581
      @theonebman7581 Před měsícem +3

      You could actually count Afroeurasia and the Americas right now as supercontinents when you think of it

    • @AndrewTBP
      @AndrewTBP Před měsícem

      Nonsense.

  • @Metawen
    @Metawen Před 13 dny +2

    Is anybody else curious about whatever happened to Steve?

  • @Replicaate
    @Replicaate Před měsícem +2

    The amount of people making The Future is Wild references warms my heart.

  • @StephanosBlack
    @StephanosBlack Před měsícem +1

    That was Amasiaing

  • @dracodracarys2339
    @dracodracarys2339 Před měsícem +13

    if there were no more vertebrates then, what's the next likeliest clade that could become the dominant megafauna?

    • @ExtremeMadnessX
      @ExtremeMadnessX Před měsícem +14

      🦀 🦀 🦀 🦀 🦀 🦀 🦀 🦀

    • @Renisanxious
      @Renisanxious Před měsícem +3

      While Arthropods as a whole is probably the best estimate, honestly I wouldn't be surprised by cephalopods either. Probably a combination of both

    • @patreekotime4578
      @patreekotime4578 Před měsícem

      ​@@ExtremeMadnessX you can find them down at the combination arthropod cephalapod store.

    • @EksaStelmere
      @EksaStelmere Před měsícem

      The time of Cnidarian bone slimes is nigh, child. They descend from the Khorallian neogels which should arise around AD 198M~202M ±4M.

    • @edmondantes4338
      @edmondantes4338 Před měsícem +1

      Arthropods already were for a while and could easily become again in a (geologic) heartbeat.
      However having an internal skeleton is massively advantageous if you want to grow really big so something is eventually gonna end up convergently evolving a vertebrate-like skeletal structure.

  • @sapphirII
    @sapphirII Před měsícem +1

    I was expecting a different rundown by the different temperature differences at the start of the video.

  • @Lorachzwan
    @Lorachzwan Před měsícem

    Man, am I really gonna miss out on those cool events? That sucks but at least my imagination can take me far enough into thinking how it might look like

  • @NathanSpiwak
    @NathanSpiwak Před měsícem +1

    Was the trivia question from THE Matt Parker?? Standup Maths is another favorite channel.

    • @mattparker7932
      @mattparker7932 Před měsícem +1

      No. We share a name. But this was from me, not him.

  • @AcornElectron
    @AcornElectron Před 6 dny

    We’ve been here a few thousand years and only technologically developing over a few hundred years. I think this is quite speculative.

  • @airrocker001
    @airrocker001 Před měsícem +2

    I'll be around

  • @multiyapples
    @multiyapples Před měsícem

    I’ve always wondered what the future holds.

  • @SiliconChemist
    @SiliconChemist Před měsícem

    *Hears the name 'Herrerasaurus'*
    *grabs popcorn*

  • @BZAKether
    @BZAKether Před měsícem

    I can't believe I got this one right "Multi tube... multi tubes... sounds like many tubes... the mammals who make tube-like structures are... rodents?". Got it right for once.

  • @daankw
    @daankw Před 19 dny

    So based on this, what current landforms will exist the longest in the future?
    For example, at some places really old sediments are found while in other places relatively new are found.

  • @jacksonstarky8288
    @jacksonstarky8288 Před měsícem

    Honestly, I wasn't even expecting a multituberculate to be a vertebrate. Interesting.

  • @colonelgraff9198
    @colonelgraff9198 Před měsícem +1

    0:30 watch Chicago Mountain