The Forgotten Era: What Really Happened AFTER the Dinosaurs Went Extinct ? Earth History Documentary
Vložit
- čas přidán 7. 06. 2024
- 🌍 Today, many extinct animals are more familiar to us than some species that are still alive. Among them are the dinosaurs. The diplodocus is more famous than the aardvark, and the tyrannosaurus more famous than the peramete. Dinosaurs are part of popular culture. For over 160 million years, these majestic creatures dominated the Earth, occupying most ecological niches and leaving little room for other species.
On five occasions, the Earth was confronted with major upheavals that had a fundamental impact on its subsequent history. When they disappeared during the fifth mass extinction, the dinosaurs left an immeasurable void. But one man's misfortune is another man's gain, and this void enabled the evolution of mammals and birds, which are now highly diversified groups of animals. Without this extinction, dinosaurs would probably have continued to dominate life on Earth, and other animals would not have had the opportunity to make their mark.
Mass extinctions change the rules of the game, redistributing the cards by condemning certain groups and giving new opportunities to others. When the dinosaurs disappeared, our distant ancestors survived.
What did the Earth look like after the extinction of the dinosaurs?
🔥 As a reminder, videos are published on SUNDAYS at 6pm.
-------------------------
💥 How did life on Earth recover after the cataclysm that brought down the gigantic dinosaurs? :
- A mass extinction is an event that resembles a relatively brief biological crisis on the scale of geological time. At least 75% of animal and plant species disappear from the face of the Earth. Over the last 500 million years, life on the planet has undergone five mass extinctions. Today, over 99% of all organisms that have ever lived on Earth have disappeared.
The phenomenon of species extinction is no longer surprising. Species are deadly. Each of the great mass extinctions has played a role in the history of the living world, forcing it into new directions as decimated fauna and flora are forced to evolve.
The Ordovician-Silurian extinction took place 444 million years ago. A geological event triggered an episode of glaciation. Considerable quantities of water became trapped in an ice cap three times the size of present-day Antarctica. This event led to the disappearance of 85% of all terrestrial species.
The Devonian extinction began 383 million years ago. Probably due to a strong volcanic episode, pulses caused a sudden drop in oxygen levels in the oceans. 75% of species disappeared during this mass extinction.
The third mass extinction, the Permian-Triassic, took place 252 million years ago. It was the worst catastrophe ever experienced by life on Earth. Over 90% of all species were killed. The destroyed forests will need more than 10 million years to recover.
Around 200 million years ago, the Earth suffered the Triassic-Jurassic extinction. Geological events caused a warming of the Earth's surface and an increase in the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. This was a further blow to life on Earth, which lost up to 80% of its terrestrial and marine species.
The fifth and final mass extinction was the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction, which caused the disappearance of the famous non-avian dinosaurs.
-------------------------
🎬 Today's program:
- 00:00 - Introduction
- 02:35 - The phenomenon of mass extinctions
- 08:30 - The face of the Earth at the time of the dinosaurs
- 09:27 - Marine life at the time of the dinosaurs
- 14:30 - Life on land in the age of the dinosaurs
- 24:12 - 5th mass extinction marks end of dinosaur world
- 33:03 - Assessment of the catastrophe on flora and fauna
- 36:34 - The beginning of a new world: What was the world like after the dinosaurs went extinct?
- 38:50 - The last giant birds
- 41:00 - Hoofed animals
- 44:48 - Large herbivorous ungulates
- 45:53 - Large carnivores
- 47:10 - Primates
- 53:58 - Small carnivorous climbers
- 55:26 - Large amphibious herbivores
- 55:56 - Cetaceans
- 58:22 - Bats and Dermoptera
- 59:31 - Vegetation after the extinction of the dinosaurs
- 01:01:40 - The emergence of birds, heirs to the dinosaurs
- 01:07:00 - Geological transformations of the Earth
- 01:09:43 - The new giants
Wondody is an official channel affiliated to the network ©ORBINEA STUDIO - Věda a technologie
"the dinosaurs died, but everything that's alive today survived" ok narrator, what a good insight of what happened this was.
Were you trying to be funny? It's like the class clown in high school. It's just not funny anymore.
Yeah because ChatGPT write This...
@@tubate20092 I love the upward inflection at the end of each sentence. I think there is some relation to Forrest Gump there. ;p
Global warming precedes CO2 levels in the atmosphere and there is an 800 year lime lag. CO2 levels in the atmosphere is currently 430 parts per million, expressed another way less than 1/2 of 1/10th of 1% a tiny trace amount yet absolutely vital for plant life. In the past CO2 levels have been 1,000 times higher and the planet still went into an ice-age. They lied to us about everything.
@@larrysmerdell6327 Pointing out that something doesn't make sense isn't trying to be funny. I'm not trying to be funny when I point out that combustion can't take place in a vacuum.
I didn't know that Forest Gump is such a good narrator...
That's the part of the documentary that I liked. Finally a more humble voice.
yeah the AI voice is terrible, makes it unwatchable , goodbye
@@alanrooks1267 Dude gave his AI a speech impediment 🤣
Pangea split up well before the Cretaceous extinction event, these events occurring about 200 million years ago and 66 million years ago respectively. If you looked at Earth from space at the time of the final extinction event, you would have been able to identify each continent, even though some features might seem different or were under water at the time. Spinosaurus and Tyrannosaurus didn't live during the same time frames. Spinosaurus lived between 99-93 million years ago, whereas T-Rex roamed the Earth between 68-66 million years ago. That's just a few of the issues I caught in about the first 20 minutes.
I want to see the video you'd make!🦖🦕😊
He said Pangea already split, no that it split at that that time.
@@KeyUSeeCZ It’s still misleading. Imagine, for instance, I decided to make a documentary about the end of World War 2. I decide to start it by saying “the year is 1945. The Roman Empire had already fallen.” Technically it’s a true statement. But someone unfamiliar with the story would think the Roman Empire fell during the events of WW2. Same thing applies to this video. It doesn’t make much sense to even bring up Pangea in a video about what happened after the extinction of the dinosaurs.
@@adammartin5866 Well that was a bad example, because that is exactly what would be told in some documentaries "Third Reich had fallen, just like the Roman empire it was said to replace" or "The Roman Empire had already fallen and yet another supposed empire is going to follow".
English for someone not native can be misleading sometimes. Its not about the writer, but the reader/listener comprehension capabilities and that is not writers fault.
@@KeyUSeeCZ fine. You want a more dramatic example. “ the year is 1945. The dinosaurs of the Cretaceous period have been wiped out by a meteor impact.” And that example is in a smaller time frame than Pangea splitting up and the extinction of the dinosaurs.
Enjoyed it but I couldn’t stop thinking about how much the narrator sounded like a young Forrest Gump
Glad I wasn't the only one. lol
I don't think the large carnivores like T-Rex and Spinosaurus were continually fighting and attacking each other and trying to eat each other...I think it was more like crocks sunning on a beach very tolerant of each other, and every now and then they would fight for various reasons.
That's just a common trope with dinosaur documentaries. They treat them like movie monsters instead of everyday animals.
It is just for dramatization.
There are plenty of mammals, fish and insects today that just LIVE to fight and kill. I hardly think dinosaurs were a polite society…
They fought to get the chicks! :)
@@robbrown4621 or the chicks were fighting and the Males had enough sense to stay out of the way
In a word....Fascinating.
Well done.
Great video, well worth the watch
I love the passion you have for your topic, it's infectious! I love how informative your videos are, I always learn something new. Thank you so much! I'm looking forward to the next episodes!
How can you learn about something without evidence of actual existence
I'm a quarter of the way in and I'm still hearing about the dinosaur era in a very general way. I wanted to learn about AFTER the dinosaurs .
You just want to get to YOUR kind... mammals...heehee
You are right. this should have been called the extinction of the dinosaurs
I find this a very good breakdown of the critter lines of evolution.
I learned so much from these videos. Thx a bunch.
Fascinating video. Thank you
Forrest Gump explaines dinosaurs! I like it :)
I played it at 1.25 speed and then it sounds normal. 😊
JENNNNNNEYYYY
I can’t unhear it 😂
If Diplodocus was better known than the Aardvark wouldn't you have been more likely to mispronounce the latter?
I know how to spell Aardvark because of Arthur the Aardvark
@@THEREFILLSBANDonly around Boston
The narrator is a bot, it doesn't read comments. lol
@@mokarokas-1727 but it has you to read comments for it
@@spiritfingers98 - I'm reading them only for myself, thank you very much. Wouldn't know how to get into contact with the voice-over bot to correct it anyway.
i find it fascinating how nature has its way of adapting and evolving.
Prove it ever happened once.
@@user-hq8lb5we7uprove that diamonds form under extreme heat and pressure oh wait you cant because you dont have the technology to demonstrate it despite it being absolute fact and demonstable by actual professionals that have spent their entire lives to know what theyre talking about🤦 just shut up this video isnt for you people
@@user-hq8lb5we7uplus microorganisms evolve in front of your face every day, because of their insanely small scale and rediculously short lifespans they evolve at a rapid, demonstrable rate that absolutely COPIES the theory of evolution studied for the past 150~ years. and a theory is proven fact, scientists dont use vernacular like normal people, hypotheses in scientific research are what you would call a theory and theory is what you call fact, they refer to their theories as theories in order to leave them open to more research so that scientific progress never grows stagnant and suffers
@@user-hq8lb5we7ustagnant like the religion that brainwashed you and millions of others into dismissing literal centuries of hard ass work because it hurts your strong feelings about your god. get bent i hate you assholes
@@user-hq8lb5we7u1 last thing prove your god exists rn. when you have a character that is literally all knowing and all powerful you can explain away literally any argument with 'its god' because your character can do literally anything its so brainless and simple. almost like the story was made up by every culture around the planet as an evolutionary response to high intelligence/self awareness absolutely yearning for a reason to exist, but finding nothing tangible to cling onto. so they made some shit up 💀
We know so much more about dinosaurs today than we did fifty years ago. When I was in the fourth grade, we studied dinosaurs and there were dinosaur species that nobody had heard of back in 1971.
First job I wanted as a kid was paleontologist. I recall there being maybe 25 or 30 dinosaurs to learn about. It's amazing how much more we know. I often regret not following that first dream.
@@Raelven Yes, it is. The fossilized remains of Titanosaurus were discovered in 1979.
It also amazes me that dinosaur bones weren't discovered until 1677 which is pretty recent if you think about it. Imagine if that asteroid never hit, where we would be today and how far behind would we be in 2023.
@@wHw_Syxx Back in 1985, the people at the Royal Tyrell Museum in Alberta, came up with a thought experiment. The asked the question "What if the smaller carnivorous dinosaurs survived?" and came up with the dinosauroid. A being that looked human.
Hmm, that's how it is when you get past 50, you start to look, feel, and act like a dinosaur:- it's not fair, we were the "Baby Boomers" and we were never supposed to become "old", it was in our contracts!!!! (sigh). 😔😉@@blaircolquhoun7780
Fascinating presentation thanks xxx
A presentation it is ..........but only a presentation....
@@frankgeeraerts6243 I agree! We have to stop worshipping at the feet of scientists all the time! They get a lot of things wrong and they are constantly changing their theories! Of course we can't go back to silly superstitions and crackpot religious beliefs, but neither should we believe that scientists are infallible! 🤔
Very well done and immensely interesting- one of the best documentaries I've watched in a long time. I'm having to make myself turn it off and go to bed because it's getting late but- can't wait to watch the rest 2morrow.
2x and you'll finish it in one night.
Global warming precedes CO2 levels in the atmosphere and there is an 800 year lime lag. CO2 levels in the atmosphere is currently 430 parts per million, expressed another way less than 1/2 of 1/10th of 1% a tiny trace amount yet absolutely vital for plant life. In the past CO2 levels have been 1,000 times higher and the planet still went into an ice-age. They lied to us about everything.
What do Neil deGrasse Tyson, Bill Nye, Brian Cox and thousands of their fellow "Evo-Bang-Bangs" have in common?? All of them utter the mentally devolved phrase, "MALLIONS AND BALLIONS OF YAYERRRRRS AGO", which is "Snake-Oil Salesman Speak" for, "We have no idea". These "Evo-Bang-Bang" scientists radio-carbon date fossils blindly, with absolutely ZERO reference to what the Carbon-14 saturation of Earths atmosphere was, at the time when the fossilized creatures took their last breath.
They don't even have the common sense to realize that every fossil that they carbon-date has Carbon-14 in it. Ok, anyone would say, "Of course they have C-14 in them, so what??". Well, C-14 being present is what destroys everything they've been telling us.
The Facts are:
1) Everything in the Universe is dying. Every atom in the periodic table has as "Rate of Decay" and is measured by its calculated "Half-Life".
2) Carbon-14 has a Half-Life of only 5,730 yrs (+/- 40yrs). Its rate of decay is exponential and doing rough-calculus in my head, its full-life is 11,000-15,000yrs at most, before it fully decays into Nitrogen-14.
So absolutely NO dinosaur fossils are found without Carbon-14 and if people use their brains will realize NONE of them are lol, "MALLIONS AND BALLIONS OF YAYERRRRRS OLD".
Seems like, not only is the Earth very young, but the Universe is young as well. Just a thought but, if the Universe is "BALLIONS OF YAYERRRRRS OLD", in just our Milky Way Galaxy alone with billions of stars, we should be privy every night, to a grand celestial fireworks show of at least 500-1000 stars going supernova, from accidentally bumping into each other. In 70yrs, astronomers have witnessed what, 3 or 4?? Also, astronomers have kinda let the "cat out of the bag". They say that radiation readings from the so-called "Big Bang" are the same from Earth in every direction, as if the Earth is in the center. Well doesn't it say in Genesis that God spread out the Heavens? Since He created Earth first in Genesis 1:1, the Earth would be the center of the universe.
Yes very well put together...just one problem: Not much, if any, science in it!
@@dennisdougherty7538 Are you a scientist, or a journalist who covers science? Maybe a writer who writes about science or science fiction?
Your videos have ignited a passion for science and the mysteries of the universe within me. Thank you for being such an incredible source of inspiration.
Using metric system got your like and subscribed. well done. keep up the good work!
Life of all kinds is always, inevitably, a work in progress, world without end.
Makes one wonder what will replace us.
@@skipmartin3469squid people
Really well done video
The Earth after Humanity could be great video. Finally!
Look for the book “After Man” by Dougal Dixon
Climate change refers to long-term shifts in temperatures and weather patterns, mainly caused by human activities. Climate change happened when there was no life on earth and has been happening since the earth was formed. What do they think happened when the earth was covered in plants, there was more oxygen in the atmosphere, and a fire started with nobody there to put it out? Or when lots of volcanoes were erupting? Climate change happens with or without humans.
Yep - It's a no brainer...lol. The climate will change regardless of humans and our activities. History and geology show that.
There's big money to be made from the global warming scam/emergency that our elites insist we are having. As far as human extinction goes they did a real job on us recently with the lab virus that they inflicted on us in 2020 - the lunatic elite politicians are more likely to cause human extinction because they are too stupid to grasp a basic understanding of how viruses work yet they persist on fooling around with them in their shonky labs. We are in the hands of fools.
Yeah...climate change has only occurred since Homo Sapiens arrived. You would have to be a Signature Series Class A Mo Ron to really believe that.
This is true. However, human activity affects it. All that oxygen produced by plants came from carbon dioxide that the plants brothe (heh.. breathed). They took the c out of the co2 and released the o2, keeping the c. They made a difference. They eventually became crude oil. When humans burn that oil, the fire takes in o2 and releases co2, returning the c into the atmosphere, gradually reversing the process that the plants originally performed. After burning shit-tons of oil over many decades, a significant amount of o2 gets converted back into co2, enough to have an effect on the climate. Its small compared to all the other natural processes, but enough to eventually make a gradual difference
Think about it. You admitted the plants made a difference. If that difference gets undone to some extent, that will eventually lead to a measurable effect. When done on an industrial scale, why wouldnt it cause change? Humans are pretty good at burning plants in all their forms, including the ancient ones whose matter has become crude oil
I disagree that its mainly caused by human activities. Its partially caused by human activities. However, there is a tipping point at which one type of change triggers another type that contributes to the overall change that ends up snowballing into a particular direction
The thing that has always made me wonder is what was the foliage and vegetation like that was lost forever.
It was mostly Ferns at the time of the Dinosaurs 🦕 🦖 . Grasses and Flowers didn’t exist yet.
They have found Trees in a Valley in New South wales that is the same as leaves found in rocks. Its location is a secret
Most were too delicate to become fossils, and very few have been found.
Great video!
very entertaining , thanks for the video
The amount of people in this comment section who proved in three paragraphs or less that they have absolutely no intellectual capacity for science is just heart-wrenching
0:11
Stegoceratops! And you thought we wouldn't notice a hybrid dinosaur!
fr
Yeah during the video theres a bunch of weird mashups, but the biggest one to me is 25:55, like some mutated T-Rex with only 3 legs but 4 arms
And the dinosaur next to it has no head lmao
have subbed. great vid.
I love your videos 😻
Wonderfully, educationally, well researched, grammatically exquisite, videos. That said, could you please improve your AI-generated (or Coming-Attractions-Hollywoody) narrations regarding vocalized word endings? Sounds very Forest-Gumpy. Thanks
I am surprised that there is no mention of the deccan basalt eruptions. It is very well known.
Very well known to be way less important then the meteor as the reason of the extinction. That debate is over. But yeah, they could've mentioned it, since it did happen and was a big event.
This is seriously badass. Nice job.
Thankyou for using my channel name much appreciated
Around the 1 hour mark - Archaeopteryx, it mentions scales and feathers. I'd read elsewhere that with modern chickens, it's the presence or absence of retinoic acid that determines whether they develop scales or feathers. retinoic acid - vitamin a. It's a fascinating series of events and accidents that brings us to the modern day.
Thats fine but what would cause retinoic acid to exist in the first place? Why would it exist and how would it exist?
Really sounds like purposeful design to me
@@daveross7731 There you go, you have stumbled onto the answer.
There’s always competing theories.
@@ericeandco Of course
@daveross7731 there we go: the creation BS interferes with real science.... AGAIN! 🤢🤮
This narrator pronounces the animal names WRONG almost EVERY TIME!
SMH
Makes me wonder if it's not an AI reading it. I mean, what's a "Pleistosaur"? I've never thought I was a snob when it comes to pronunciation, but c'mon, even little kids know how to say 'plesiosaur'.
It is definitely AI voice. Not listenable
@@CStoph1979 Or he's just Canadian. lol
There's also lots of weird sentences that just don't make sense, I think this is AI nonsense.
The last extinction occurred 65 million years ago, not 66 million years ago
that`s really interesting video
Diplodocus wasn't a Cretaceous animal, it was a Jurassic animal. The titanosaurs had replaced them by the Cretaceous (and some of them were considerably bigger, which you also don't acknowledge).
Those things and other discrepancies aren't really the point of this and other videos of it's sort, made in the last few years. Climate and climate change is the main, yet underlying topic.
@@lilmike2710 That's all very well, and certainly it's important to talk about. But if you don't get your facts right, nobody's going to listen.
@@norarivkis2513 My friend you unknowingly just opened a door with that statement, but I'm going to just agree with you, because you're certainly correct, and simply move on.
Doesn't matter since 90% of all this is only theories . No one knows exactly how the extention went ,its only speculations based on a best educated guess that might be totally off. For all we know lots of dinosaurs actually survived many years and centuries but were already passed the tipping point of their inevitable extinction due to low population. They might have lived for centuries maybe thousands of years before disapearibng totally .
You sound like you're fun at parties.
.....no seriously, I always get stuck with these boring mfers. You sound like you know some interesting facts.
It was nice to hear the "sabertooth-tiger" term again, even if it is inaccurate!
''Saber-tooth tiger' is nevertheless, the accurate name of a saber-tooth tiger.
If it IS inaccurate, then it is no more inaccurate than starfish, cuttlefish, groundhog, hedgehog, prairie dog, eggplant, seahorse, sea lion, elephant seal, sea cucumber, glow worm, slow worm, pineapple, guinea pig, etc. etc. etc. etc. etc...
Naming things after unrelated things that they vaguely remind people of, is extremely common.
Thanks for sharing this massage.
I love the fact that they use Jurassic Park evolution video game footage in this
Is that Forest Gump narrating?
I was thinking it was a long lost relative.
What i find most interesting is that dinosaurs were wiped out and earth was pretty much inhabitable.. yet slowly with time, new life was born and evolved into what we have today.
So it's safe to say.. even on planets that seem deserted or couldn't possibly harbour life, given enough time and evolution.. can as well. Because it happened here.
Not only that but considering organisms like the waterbear which can survive in the void of space the ideas of panspermia seem entirely plausable and proves that life has the potential to survive anywhere.
We human's could destroy everything down to Amoeba and life would eventually evolve back to the complex life forms again. Only a total sterilization would stop it coming back. Or when our sun envelopes the planet eventually
I grow tardigrades (waterbears) and search them out with a microscope. They are beautiful and amazing little animals!
life uh... finds a way.
Not really uninhabitable because most of the small mammals and small reptiles survived.
Been fascinated by dinosaurs 🦕 ever since I was a kid how did these enormous creatures start on planet earth
Fantastic video , I`ve watched it three times now. The Primates section 47:10 was very interesting, thank you
1:04:12 not going to say anything about how a drone capturing them with a tractor beam is NOT anything unusual for this kind of animal?
I like the way the narrator says "Theee Dye-NOH-sau-RA-ZAH".
Edit: it's odd that crocodile evolved to become less efficient swimmers. And yet, they persist.
i was scrolling down for it. what's with the emphasis on last syllabe, i never seen that before xDDDDD
I mean is it really odd? Superspecialized animals are the most vulnerable to environment changes and crocodiles are one of the biggest generialists that there are. They evolved as fish eaters but instead of specializing at becoming better at catching the more elusive fish (and later sharks and other bigger deeper water animals) as some of the prehistoric ocean reptiles, somewhere along the way they decided "fuck it, this shallow water fish is good enough" and instead in addition to that talking in gaming terms started to abuse probably one of the of the most broken things possible - camping at the water sources for occasional but also inevitable bigger meal. Crocodiles are kinda both generalist and occupiers of one of the most reliable and least impacted by big environmental changes niches possible at the same time which is why they are to this day more or less the same as they used to be during the times of dinosaurs (outside of temporary reduction in size after the asteroid cataclysm).
The speaker has an odd emphasis on all trailing S’s. I wonder if that is a computer generated voice? The script has an odd structure that might be AI generated, too.
@@tagberto yep, it's a bot, and the speech pattern is highly distracting sadly.
@@AzuraTarotI agree.
Nice info on that planet! 🪐🥅🌑🌌🌐🌑Dark moons is a Pluto?
I love the narrator's voice!!!
I thought Titanosaurs were larger than diplodocus and brachiosaurus, particularly Patagotitan and Argentinasaurus
Nice documentary very well presented with excellent images and graphics, well worth watching!
The graphics certainly help to sell the story.
Just because you enjoy eye candy doesn't mean its documentary... this is not a documentary, it's dramatic fiction.
Global warming precedes CO2 levels in the atmosphere and there is an 800 year lime lag. CO2 levels in the atmosphere is currently 430 parts per million, expressed another way less than 1/2 of 1/10th of 1% a tiny trace amount yet absolutely vital for plant life. In the past CO2 levels have been 1,000 times higher and the planet still went into an ice-age. They lied to us about everything.
What a fascinating video. I really enjoyed watching it.
Hi I’m forest Forrest Gump. Lol 😂 great video.
This is 2 weeks old as I begin to watch it, so far I’m left astounded that new information isn’t being applied as opposed to the continuation of propagating what we now know to be false information. That was all good when we didn’t have a good idea and was making educated guesses but now we know more and should be passing that information along.
A lot of the dinosaurs that we thought of as scaled reptile like beings were in fact probably feathered bird like creatures. And as we learn this new and updated information we should be passing it along. I know when I heard this the first time it stirred conversation between my wife and I.
Gotta love science and all the discoveries and deep dives into history. Those of us who spend the time watching documentaries instead of other short vids about nothing tend to learn more, pass that information on to anyone willing to listen. When they talked about birds, I was taken by surprise! I had heard something like this not all that long ago, but it still makes me look at my conures' feet differently.😁🥰
You sound illiterate. Take out "my wife". It would just be "that started a conversation with I." See, stupid. "A lot of dinosaurs uad feathers and not scales." You see one tictok and think you're a paleontologist. Shut up and listen. You might learn something.
Unfortunately we have fundamentalists who insist that the earth is only 6000 years old and try to use state power to enforce their views on others.
@@stephenmartin7632I would've read some more recent research if I were you. If I didn't want to be willingly ignorant that is.
@@stephenmartin7632 dinos had feathers, you might need to check your sources again(and also re-learn how to read koz aparently you can't - koz the man never claimed dinos were birds or something)
I hate AI generated science videos, but it really make me appreciate the real hardworking creators with their passion and charm❤
The wheels and stripes look awesome and looks like they performed really well
This is the first time i've heard of a dyplodocus!
Perhaps the dinosaurs were reduced to a few smaller species who would have made an eventual comeback if not for the post apocalypse mammals which had been reduced to small burrowing scavengers eating whatever they could find including eggs of the remaining dinosaurs finally ending their potential comeback.
you mean birds? dinosaurs didn't all die out
I knew someone would find a way to blame us for the dinosaur extinction. I guess chickens were easier to ranch, than t-rexes?
Well mammals was already present during the late cretaceous period. If it wasn't for the asteroid, Earth would have suffered a new icy age anyway since that stuff is cyclical.
So large dinosaur megafauna would have adapted or hit extinction.
What people usually ignore is the fact that dinosaurs average dimensions was around that of a cat till that of a cow.
Then there was the megafauna. Those large animals we see in the movies. It seems also that species like the T-Rex was part of the megafauna.
But the average size is way smallers so, once the icy ages hits, many species would die and mamnals would thrive occupying those niches.
In the end, even without asteroid, Earth today would have been similar to ours with just more species of reptile/birds like creatures.
Most of the fauna anyway would have been made by mammals due to the fact that mammals are more competitive than reptiles, birds and dinosaurs. It was stated that dinosaurs for example had mix blood. Not warm blood like mammals, not cold blood like reptiles, but mixed.
While mammals with their fast life cycle and methabolism are just better suited to adapt to the most extreme environments.
We find for example mammals that lives from the most hot temperatures on the planet to the most freezing. With a slight preference for cold environments.
Probably in the case of no asteroid impact, dinosaurs would have remained in the hot zones while mammals would have occupied the coldest ones. I mean, they would have dominated or had more species than the average in those climates. While in hot environments the dinosaurs would have had the supremacy.
@@danielefabbro822 There were no 'ice ages' during the Mesozoic.
@@brianhammer5107 I talk after the mesozoic.
This is like watching the Discovery Channel in 2004. Thats a compliment btw
Good content. Best to watch at 1.75x speed.
Really interesting, but PLEASE could we sometimes have narratives without the loud intrusive music??
7:19 extinction event "66 MYA" 8:45 in the cretaceous "65 MYA"
Correction the "65" number is too small. It should be at least 66, if not 67 or greater.
65 MYA was in the Paleocene Epoch, in the Paleogene Period, in the Cenozoic Era, in the Phanerozoic Eon.
this was made by AI, ive seen an increasing number of these on YT in teh last week. we as society are going to have to be even more descerning with what we take as fact from now on.
This is pretty spot on. I survived primarily on Cheetos and off brand sodas.
Супер видео репортаж ! ! !❤❤❤😋😀🙂😎
@28:24 is an amazing specimen of the pergatorius! I'd love to know where they acquired that. lol.
"10,000 living species of birds are recorded today. Whereas there were only a few during the dinosaur era, including the archeopteryx and pterosaur lines." Oh no. No no no no no. Pterosaurs were NOT a line of birds. They weren't. even. dinosaurs. You might as well call crocodiles otters.
Up to that point, I was thinking you'd got the science pretty much correct. Congratulations up to that point, anyway.
Dont be a plonker Rodney its figment science
Thanks for your knowledge. I wonder at the number of vids that present "facts" that need tweaking, and how some walk about quoting these errors as if it is absolute truth. Willy Nilly Knowledge. So I appreciate your correction, as I did not recognize that about Pterosaurs not being part of the bird line.
Among the flightless birds of the time included the Rex, Raptor, and Troodon, and other bipedal dinosaurs along with thousands of species that did not leave any evidence that they ever existed. The number was much higher than you think, and a number we will never know.
No music needed here
What i got from the first minutes is life is not fragile,its really hard to kill .
Excellent documentary! Thank you. Kept my attention throughout. No mean feat! :)
Protip: mass extinctions often occur around the changeover from one period to another. Be extra careful around these times, and double check your insurance is in order.
Good luck finding your insurance adjuster after the apocalypse, they’ll all be in hiding and won’t be taking any calls.
Geikosaurus?
@@thenoneckpeoplerepresentat8074but that darn extended warranty guy will still be calling you
@@ladywolfwolf Cockroaches will always survive.
It's difficult to take the video seriously when it keeps repeatedly using a graphic of a triceratops skull on a stegosaurus skeleton. Top flight narration over bush league graphics.
Awesome, thanks for sharing 🤙
Learning about dinosaurs and other ancient animal with their unique shape and behavior are very fun.
Well then, stay healthy for all of us & Safety First!✌😉
The way he said diplodocus just killed me.
Seriously though, the one thing thats been proven over and over by scientists and many in the STEM field is that no matter what time of day nor what day of the week... before, during and after dinosaur extinction, there was always absolute gridlock traffic all around the city of Atlanta and its suburbs 😂❤🎉
This is misinformation. I'm telling Joe Biden.
You think you're funny. Dinosaurs are like santa claus , you moro
Atlanta traffic is responsible for the extinction of the dinosaurs.😢🤣🤣
Why is this so true though 😭
@@minakhan8184 Women drivers?🤔🤣
At about 1:42, there's a Triceratops skull sitting in front of what appears to be Stegosaur ribs and spinal section. Triceratops lived during the Cretaceous Period (145-66 mya) while Stegosaurs lived during the earlier Jurassic Period (200-145 mya). At 10:24, why is there a submersible in the background behind the Mosasaur?
Pesky time travellers and their submarines.
@@Trimondius Aren't they the ones who are editing the images from the James Webb Telescope, as they are traveling to Earth?
Easter egg, perhaps?
Because it's AI generated content?
I've never heard Diplodocus pronounced that way. I kinda like it.
"Beatles such as beatles"?
No hate! Love the video.
It’s so incredibly sad that so many creatures died this way… I know it’s cool we were able to develop but it’s still so heartbreaking hearing how everything had to die so brutally. I think about them often and wonder if the earth mourned this loss
Nope not a chance.
It's sad that you watch this ai crap and believe it
For 3 months, I helped out a friend's pool table business, but I still found this helpful. I appreciated some of your tips. Well done and thanks
It’s true that normally in the pool table business you don’t learn much about dinosaurs, so I can see how this would be helpful.
@@Sashazur yes pool and snooker do not mix well with dinosaurs.
When I hear the alligators are as smart as a Border Collie. I say: what a croc!
I do quite enjoy that the video comes with a context message about climate change being "mainly caused by human activities" when the content of the video relates to climate change before hominids evolved.
There's not many documentaries on what the world was like when titanoboa live
You mean fake-a-mentary bcs no one was there it's CGI hearsay
I make that about 11 miles per second. This means the asteroid went right through the atmosphere from the mesosphere to the ground in just five seconds! Good grief.
I wouldn't want to be within 10,000 miles of something like that which is bigger than the circumference of the planet! You would need a spaceship and foreknowledge so you could launch a day or so earlier. You would need a farm section to survive because returning to earth would take a few years and even then food would be scarce!
@@vincewilson1 The circumference of earth is 24,000 miles
I find it funny that the skeleton at the start of the video was a triceratops head on a stegosaurus body. Bearing in mind that besides the obvious impossibility of this creature existing, stegosaurus died out around 70 million years before the last triceratops died out due to the extinction of the dinosaurs.
0:27 Cell JR: so are you really a dinosaur? Rex: DA - neat.
I feel like this was made by AI. Great doc. A few discrepancies, but just gives me an AI vibe.
It's the constant mispronunciation that got me to stop watching
Also this consistent, weird way of the voice going deep down and then up at the end of each sentence for no reason. Sounds so strange and distracting....
Lots of cursed image stills too. Dinosaurs with wrong number of limbs, submarines amongst the mosasaurs, weird size discrepancies, etc.
I can't tell if it's a robotic malfunction or a guy with a speech impediment.@@aliensuperweapon
I also noticed that the mosasurus is from Jurassic world evolution.
These are great videos but does anyone watch it on normal playback speed? I'm on 1.5X
There's so much interesting information that I've learned to play at 2x speed and backup to slow down at 1.5 for a moment if I'm missing something. You are not alone.
Seems there are an extremely well educated bunch that watch this channel. Incredibly refreshing to see. However, it does mean that the videos have to be meticulous. Reading the comments is like reading a professor test correction. I liked this video and appreciate the depth to which the audience fills in some of the details. A for video. A+ community.
8:07 I like how they elude to “The Great Disappeared Civilizations”.
That Triceratops skull at very beggining have Stegosaurus body...what?
Hehe. I saw that. A Tristegatopus, perhaps?
25:45 - What the hell am I looking at there?? A four-armed, three-legged T-Rex? And the dinosaur in back of it blends in with it so it looks like it has a tail for a head but it's actually the T-Rex's tail.
I had to go back and take a look at that at full screen! It is BIZARRE!
I can only assume it has been generated by an AI app. No illustrator would get something so wrong (unless they'd been working three days straight with no sleep!).
@@rexharrison6827 LOL. I suppose so!
Thak you.
so cool
I thought this was going to be about the ONE MILLION YEARS after the meteor hit for the planet go really get going again after the meteor hit.
Me too. Title is misleading.
Why is there a Triceratops (Cretaceous) head connected to a Stegosaurus (Jurassic) skeleton body?
The last of one and the first one of the other species ....................hahaha
Because this movie is pure fiction.
You certainly did a fine job generating this vast number of WILD conjectures.
It makes sense that with the continental shifts, the earths rotation on its axis was affected.
An interesting video. Much guess work, likely some accurate, some not, since there were no humans around during most of the time. And even after humans appeared on the scene, we didn't begin recording our history till fairly recently. This video presents as factual and only about the theory of evolution. What if the theory of evolution AND the theory of creation are both true? What if the creators infused early primates with the DNA of a different species and allowed evolution to take its course? If so, who were the creators? Do they still exist? Do they still visit earth to see how their experiment is coming along? Where did they come from? I can see and understand how some believe one thing and some another. It seems to me however, that we really don't know much of anything. All we can do is attempt to see into the past and try to figure it all out. It is after all what we do, isn't it? Just like we have always looked to the horizon and wondered what was beyond that mountain or that sea or ocean. And we go. Our natural desire and hunger for knowledge pushes us forward into uncharted territory. It drives us to risk it all to learn what we don't know. Enjoyed your video.
Oh Daniel! When you said that you believe that " humans do not really know much about anything" I could not agree more! There is also nothing wrong with having a hunger for knowledge, that is how we have progressed so far. However, humans are also very arrogant, and think they can figure out just about anything about our existence! Many times scientists have come up with theories that are completely wrong! There are many things we will never understand about our universe!🧐