Very nice job! I was surprised there's not a lot of trilobite content here on UA-cam, and your doc is surely one of the best. Thanks for all the effort you put into it and for sharing it as well. Really great. Saludos desde Brasil, hermano
Found my first trilobite fossil on the railroad tracks in front of my house. The rocks in the bedding in this stretch of track is coral and is loaded with worm fossils so imagine my joy when I found this little gem. It's about two inches long.
Sweet! What geological period of rock strata was it? If you don't know there is an app called RockD that will tell you the period of the strata where you're at. It will also tell you the geological formation and fossils, anywhere, the map is for the whole world. It also has fossils in the region, minerals and a Paleo map. All I got where I live is Ordovician and Mississippian age rock and I have no idea where to start fossil hunting but I study my ass off ua-cam.com/play/PLgRoK-eyLjomaNEGNHjb1r8YWbUzVIskd.html
@@whatabouttheearth Ohio is great place to do it on a hike. TONS of trilobite fossils are around to find. I'm sure you can find great parks there if you're interested and have the means! You'll have a tougher time in more developed regions, but I'd collected dozens of them with only a couple of visits. They're mostly small pebble sized but have noticeable striations of the trilobite
Great video. I truly enjoyed its originality and appreciate how much work you did to compile it for us. I especially like comments from professionals. I would put their names and affiliations as captioning when they talk, not just at the end. You are fortunate to have such cool friends.
@@caliche750 The one I found in Mineral Wells is fairly small. Cannot attest to that size being the norm, as I have not returned to find more. However, it came from an area of exposed ancient seabed of the Pennsylvanian period and the fossils are dated at 300 million years, or more.
Really good job assembling alot of interesting videos. You should make more, there are not enough paleo videos that are actually educational, it's usually pop sci. I love this style. Suscribed
Excellent contents. Very informative, extensive knowledge is being broadcast. But much room to improve audio quality. You should consider suppressing percussion and other loud music, especially at levels interfering with intelligibility of human voice. Sure, you like it, but what about your viewers? Echoes can easily be reduced by hanging drapeware out of visual reach. Auto-generated subtext does not help at all. In fact, it suffers from the same kind of inintelligibility that human ears do with the audio track. Have a look at it: amazingly confusing. Consider editing it, thus providing a reliable source of input to viewers.
Man, this would be extremely better without the poor audio quality. It's still really good! Don't stop making videos, and no need to use a robot voice.
I didn't want to compare your video to others, but I must tell you yours was way more indepth and informative than several on Utube presented by major museums. I hope you do more, your format of presentation was excellent and well edited. I'm still collecting Trilobites but I'm now living in Florida and as you know our rocks here are to young for Trilobites.
@@davidletasi3322 I'm glad to hear that. Yes I will do more soon. I learned how to do my own 3d animations and green screen tricks. Next one will be fun. I need people to collaborate with me and sometimes they are busy. That is why this videos also has emotional value to me. I wish I was in Florida eating ceviche.
Highly informative and educational on a high level. However the audio is terrible. Hard to listen to and at times impossible to understand. Better next time?
Just eating sand or eating worms that ate sand. They will get the crystals and then shrink them to molecular level. Finally they move them into cells that are able to attach to them in the same way calcium is inside osteocytes.
Thank you. I was going to create another one about the transition of arachnids from water to land. But because of this pandemic, I did not record enough. With in like 2 months from now I'll come back to that project. It will be called "Chelicerates: Pioneers of the Paleozoic." I plan to make a trilogy with the final one being mandibulates.
Years ago I collected in the Spinnerville, NY eurypterid road cut. It is hard to believe that eurypterids ate trilobites because I have never seen them in the same strata. Maybe they competed for slugs and worms and were more efficient predators. I noticed you pronounced calymene like a Greek name, collectors I talk to try to latinize it. Lol.
I saw an article about trilobites and eurypterids in the same layer. Long time ago someone showed me that pdf. I asked the same question in a Facebook group. I think it was from Siberia or Russia. Very rare. I was also in the believe that eurypterids lived in rivers and lakes. But 2 experts (Seldon and Braddy) told me that they were mostly marine rather than fresh water, but in some cases, they had the tendency to live in hyper saline environments. What type of eurypterids did you find? The thing with eurypterids is that they needed to leave the ocean like horseshoe crabs. All of them together. It is called “the molt and mate hypotheses”. I guess many of the once found are part of the mating season. Remember they reached placed where trilobites didn’t. I might be wrong. I want a think of them like salmon. Hatching in fresh water but returning always to the ocean.
Trilobites and horseshoe crabs looks quite similar, but Horse shoe crabs are chelicerae and related arachnids. Also theory Trilobites not are crustacean or Insects ancestor. Trilobite are archaid group arachnomorph.
@@WWZenaDo I recently added a new video …. Check it out …. I’ll be doing a third video on palaeodictyopteran insects … then I’ll do my last one on eurypterids …. It will take probably a couple of years
Watch Aron Ra's 50 part series 'Systematic Classification of Life' and you'll see how they couldn't become fish: ua-cam.com/play/PLgRoK-eyLjomaNEGNHjb1r8YWbUzVIskd.html Sadly they just went extinct like 99% of species have
"ev. Edward Lhwyd published in 1698 in The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, the oldest scientific journal in the English language, part of his letter "Concerning Several Regularly Figured Stones Lately Found by Him", that was accompanied by a page of etchings of fossils.[110] One of his etchings figured a trilobite he found near Llandeilo, probably on the grounds of Lord Dynefor's castle, he described as "… the skeleton of some flat Fish …".[2] The discovery of Calymene blumenbachii (the Dudley locust) in 1749 by Charles Lyttleton, could be identified as the beginning of trilobite research. Lyttleton submitted a letter to the Royal Society of London in 1750 concerning a "petrified insect" he found in the "limestone pits at Dudley". In 1754, Manuel Mendez da Costa proclaimed that the Dudley locust was not an insect, but instead belonged to "the crustaceous tribe of animals." He proposed to call the Dudley specimens Pediculus marinus major trilobos (large trilobed marine louse), a name which lasted well into the 1800s. German naturalist Johann Walch, who executed the first inclusive study of this group, proposed the use of the name "trilobite". He considered it appropriate to derive the name from the unique three-lobed character of the central axis and a pleural zone to each side.[111] Written descriptions of trilobites date possibly from the third century BC and definitely from the fourth century AD. The Spanish geologists Eladio Liñán and Rodolfo Gozalo argue that some of the fossils described in Greek and Latin lapidaries as scorpion stone, beetle stone, and ant stone, refer to trilobite fossils. Less ambiguous references to trilobite fossils can be found in Chinese sources. Fossils from the Kushan formation of northeastern China were prized as inkstones and decorative pieces.[110] In the New World, American fossil hunters found plentiful deposits of Elrathia kingi in western Utah in the 1860s. Until the early 1900s, the Ute Native Americans of Utah wore these trilobites, which they called pachavee (little water bug), as amulets.[112][113] A hole was bored in the head and the fossil was worn on a string.[112] According to the Ute themselves, trilobite necklaces protect against bullets and diseases such as diphtheria.[112][113] In 1931, Frank Beckwith uncovered evidence of the Ute use of trilobites. Travelling through the badlands, he photographed two petroglyphs that most likely represent trilobites. On the same trip he examined a burial, of unknown age, with a drilled trilobite fossil lying in the chest cavity of the interred. Since then, trilobite amulets have been found all over the Great Basin, as well as in British Columbia and Australia.[110] In the 1880s, archaeologists discovered in the Grotte du Trilobite (Caves of Arcy-sur-Cure, Yonne, France) a much-handled trilobite fossil that had been drilled as if to be worn as a pendant. The occupation stratum in which the trilobite was found has been dated as 15,000 years old. Because the pendant was handled so much, the species of trilobite cannot be determined. This type of trilobite is not found around Yonne, so it may have been highly prized and traded from elsewhere.[110]"
An excellent response whatabouttheearth! I grew up in the area of Utah that Mr Beckwith describes and am familiar with the Indian jewelry customs. May I ask how you became aware of him?
Creator. Does use his designs over and over in many different species from all the way from microscopic species to megalolithic species. . Designers reuse their ideas designs.
So your preferred version of invisible supernatural superbeeing creator un-intelligently designed wisdom teeth....or Crohn's disease....cancer in children.... hermaphrodites.... Proteus syndrome....or my favorite= the way too narrow female birth canal causing millions of miscarriages and spontaneous natural abortions killing mother and child... Your also saying your creator is not creative enough to design life without copying his own ideas....while the way more probably answer is "Homology shared due to an universal common ancestor." So your creator comes up with un-intelligent design that causes misery, genetic defects, mutations and death....while to stupid to use anything but the same design over & over again....kind of pathetic invisible supernatural superbeeing you got there....
@@Spicy_Italian_Sausage It is actually because artiopods (including trilobites) have ghonatobases all the way through all appendages… chelicerates have them in their head only
Very nice job! I was surprised there's not a lot of trilobite content here on UA-cam, and your doc is surely one of the best. Thanks for all the effort you put into it and for sharing it as well. Really great. Saludos desde Brasil, hermano
My friend, this is the best video there is about trilobites on the whole internet. CONGRATULATIONS. Subscribed. ✔️
Trilobites are some of my favorite extinct animals. Thank to this, I know more about them. Thank you for posting.
This is actually very detailed and impressive. I hope you keep making this type of prehistoric content.
As soon I get some free time I’ll make more …
Found my first trilobite fossil on the railroad tracks in front of my house. The rocks in the bedding in this stretch of track is coral and is loaded with worm fossils so imagine my joy when I found this little gem. It's about two inches long.
Sweet!
What geological period of rock strata was it?
If you don't know there is an app called RockD that will tell you the period of the strata where you're at. It will also tell you the geological formation and fossils, anywhere, the map is for the whole world. It also has fossils in the region, minerals and a Paleo map.
All I got where I live is Ordovician and Mississippian age rock and I have no idea where to start fossil hunting but I study my ass off
ua-cam.com/play/PLgRoK-eyLjomaNEGNHjb1r8YWbUzVIskd.html
@@whatabouttheearth Ohio is great place to do it on a hike. TONS of trilobite fossils are around to find. I'm sure you can find great parks there if you're interested and have the means! You'll have a tougher time in more developed regions, but I'd collected dozens of them with only a couple of visits. They're mostly small pebble sized but have noticeable striations of the trilobite
Great video. I truly enjoyed its originality and appreciate how much work you did to compile it for us. I especially like comments from professionals. I would put their names and affiliations as captioning when they talk, not just at the end. You are fortunate to have such cool friends.
I wanted to do it the way you say....but the information is complex enough to easily get distracted....I want to get as much attention as possible...
Love this! Trilobites are probably my favorite fossils. I have only one speciman, found in Mineral Wells, Texas, but it is small.
Oh yeah the really tiny ones right? Those are the modern trilobites from the Carboniferous, I think.
@@caliche750 The one I found in Mineral Wells is fairly small. Cannot attest to that size being the norm, as I have not returned to find more. However, it came from an area of exposed ancient seabed of the Pennsylvanian period and the fossils are dated at 300 million years, or more.
Really good job assembling alot of interesting videos. You should make more, there are not enough paleo videos that are actually educational, it's usually pop sci. I love this style.
Suscribed
Fascinating long form documentary, most appreciated
Nice documentary. Well done and thanks for all the information
Excellent contents. Very informative, extensive knowledge is being broadcast.
But much room to improve audio quality. You should consider suppressing percussion and other loud music, especially at levels interfering with intelligibility of human voice. Sure, you like it, but what about your viewers?
Echoes can easily be reduced by hanging drapeware out of visual reach.
Auto-generated subtext does not help at all. In fact, it suffers from the same kind of inintelligibility that human ears do with the audio track. Have a look at it: amazingly confusing. Consider editing it, thus providing a reliable source of input to viewers.
I love the Zerg noises for the trilobites
This video is put together really well, hope you do more 👍
I made a new video. Check it out!!
im impressed with your video my fossil hunting buddy.
Man, this would be extremely better without the poor audio quality. It's still really good! Don't stop making videos, and no need to use a robot voice.
Really good job. Can anybody please let me know how you evaluate the age? Is it possible an evaluation without isotopes?
Usually the ages of the rock layers is determined
I got surprised at 23:50. Good job Carlos!
Nice documentary. 😍
This is one of the best videos on Trilobites, nice job.
thanks man... it was my obsession and I made it last year...
I didn't want to compare your video to others, but I must tell you yours was way more indepth and informative than several on Utube presented by major museums. I hope you do more, your format of presentation was excellent and well edited. I'm still collecting Trilobites but I'm now living in Florida and as you know our rocks here are to young for Trilobites.
@@davidletasi3322 I'm glad to hear that. Yes I will do more soon. I learned how to do my own 3d animations and green screen tricks. Next one will be fun. I need people to collaborate with me and sometimes they are busy. That is why this videos also has emotional value to me. I wish I was in Florida eating ceviche.
lol the sound of Drone. you are a genius.
spawn more overlords
yo dawg I'm hooked. great intro
Great job brother!
Highly informative and educational on a high level. However the audio is terrible. Hard to listen to and at times impossible to understand. Better next time?
If the eyes were made of glass. How they grow the glass into there bodies in the first place?
Just eating sand or eating worms that ate sand. They will get the crystals and then shrink them to molecular level. Finally they move them into cells that are able to attach to them in the same way calcium is inside osteocytes.
nice work
Exelente video!
Me sirvio mucho para mis clases de biología
Que bueno que sirvió…suerte!!
nice documentary
Thank you. I was going to create another one about the transition of arachnids from water to land. But because of this pandemic, I did not record enough. With in like 2 months from now I'll come back to that project. It will be called "Chelicerates: Pioneers of the Paleozoic." I plan to make a trilogy with the final one being mandibulates.
Years ago I collected in the Spinnerville, NY eurypterid road cut. It is hard to believe that eurypterids ate trilobites because I have never seen them in the same strata. Maybe they competed for slugs and worms and were more efficient predators. I noticed you pronounced calymene like a Greek name, collectors I talk to try to latinize it. Lol.
I saw an article about trilobites and eurypterids in the same layer. Long time ago someone showed me that pdf. I asked the same question in a Facebook group. I think it was from Siberia or Russia. Very rare. I was also in the believe that eurypterids lived in rivers and lakes. But 2 experts (Seldon and Braddy) told me that they were mostly marine rather than fresh water, but in some cases, they had the tendency to live in hyper saline environments. What type of eurypterids did you find? The thing with eurypterids is that they needed to leave the ocean like horseshoe crabs. All of them together. It is called “the molt and mate hypotheses”. I guess many of the once found are part of the mating season. Remember they reached placed where trilobites didn’t. I might be wrong. I want a think of them like salmon. Hatching in fresh water but returning always to the ocean.
Trilobites and horseshoe crabs looks quite similar, but Horse shoe crabs are chelicerae and related arachnids. Also theory Trilobites not are crustacean or Insects ancestor. Trilobite are archaid group arachnomorph.
What specifically is that astounding animal @10:00??? Isopoda Serolidae, but what is its specific name?
ceratoserolis trilobitoides
@@caliche750 Thank you!
@@caliche750 It's kinda pretty in addition to looking somewhat creepy....
@@WWZenaDo I recently added a new video …. Check it out …. I’ll be doing a third video on palaeodictyopteran insects … then I’ll do my last one on eurypterids …. It will take probably a couple of years
@@caliche750 Thank you! Thank you for producing and posting your videos. I'll check out your latest video.
nicely made
Subscribed to your channel.
Kabuto fans represent
Is it possible that some of these trilobites metamorphosed into other forms of fish or something?
No. Fish are vertebrates. Trilobites are invertebrates. Completely different lineages.
Watch Aron Ra's 50 part series 'Systematic Classification of Life' and you'll see how they couldn't become fish:
ua-cam.com/play/PLgRoK-eyLjomaNEGNHjb1r8YWbUzVIskd.html
Sadly they just went extinct like 99% of species have
They're closest related to spiders and scorpions if I recall correctly
Beat kicks in at 10:23 - nice
nice vod!!
Ibex evolved huge horns because cats target the neck and rear?
Just one suggestion.... please clean the lens of your camera before filming 😂
38:58 saint seiya music
"ev. Edward Lhwyd published in 1698 in The Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, the oldest scientific journal in the English language, part of his letter "Concerning Several Regularly Figured Stones Lately Found by Him", that was accompanied by a page of etchings of fossils.[110] One of his etchings figured a trilobite he found near Llandeilo, probably on the grounds of Lord Dynefor's castle, he described as "… the skeleton of some flat Fish …".[2]
The discovery of Calymene blumenbachii (the Dudley locust) in 1749 by Charles Lyttleton, could be identified as the beginning of trilobite research. Lyttleton submitted a letter to the Royal Society of London in 1750 concerning a "petrified insect" he found in the "limestone pits at Dudley". In 1754, Manuel Mendez da Costa proclaimed that the Dudley locust was not an insect, but instead belonged to "the crustaceous tribe of animals." He proposed to call the Dudley specimens Pediculus marinus major trilobos (large trilobed marine louse), a name which lasted well into the 1800s. German naturalist Johann Walch, who executed the first inclusive study of this group, proposed the use of the name "trilobite". He considered it appropriate to derive the name from the unique three-lobed character of the central axis and a pleural zone to each side.[111]
Written descriptions of trilobites date possibly from the third century BC and definitely from the fourth century AD. The Spanish geologists Eladio Liñán and Rodolfo Gozalo argue that some of the fossils described in Greek and Latin lapidaries as scorpion stone, beetle stone, and ant stone, refer to trilobite fossils. Less ambiguous references to trilobite fossils can be found in Chinese sources. Fossils from the Kushan formation of northeastern China were prized as inkstones and decorative pieces.[110]
In the New World, American fossil hunters found plentiful deposits of Elrathia kingi in western Utah in the 1860s. Until the early 1900s, the Ute Native Americans of Utah wore these trilobites, which they called pachavee (little water bug), as amulets.[112][113] A hole was bored in the head and the fossil was worn on a string.[112] According to the Ute themselves, trilobite necklaces protect against bullets and diseases such as diphtheria.[112][113] In 1931, Frank Beckwith uncovered evidence of the Ute use of trilobites. Travelling through the badlands, he photographed two petroglyphs that most likely represent trilobites. On the same trip he examined a burial, of unknown age, with a drilled trilobite fossil lying in the chest cavity of the interred. Since then, trilobite amulets have been found all over the Great Basin, as well as in British Columbia and Australia.[110]
In the 1880s, archaeologists discovered in the Grotte du Trilobite (Caves of Arcy-sur-Cure, Yonne, France) a much-handled trilobite fossil that had been drilled as if to be worn as a pendant. The occupation stratum in which the trilobite was found has been dated as 15,000 years old. Because the pendant was handled so much, the species of trilobite cannot be determined. This type of trilobite is not found around Yonne, so it may have been highly prized and traded from elsewhere.[110]"
Like a pendant. Yes, it has a shape similar to the thor's hammer pendant.
@@caliche750
Never thought of that.
Dude, Trilobites look way more metal than Thor's hammer though 🤘🪳
An excellent response whatabouttheearth! I grew up in the area of Utah that Mr Beckwith describes and am familiar with the Indian jewelry customs. May I ask how you became aware of him?
👍👍👍
❤❤❤
Hey! Anybody wanna' bite my 'trilo?'
Creator. Does use his designs over and over in many different species from all the way from microscopic species to megalolithic species. .
Designers reuse their ideas designs.
Emergent properties blindly do whatever they can from the combinations of what they got.
So your preferred version of invisible supernatural superbeeing creator un-intelligently designed wisdom teeth....or Crohn's disease....cancer in children.... hermaphrodites.... Proteus syndrome....or my favorite= the way too narrow female birth canal causing millions of miscarriages and spontaneous natural abortions killing mother and child...
Your also saying your creator is not creative enough to design life without copying his own ideas....while the way more probably answer is "Homology shared due to an universal common ancestor."
So your creator comes up with un-intelligent design that causes misery, genetic defects, mutations and death....while to stupid to use anything but the same design over & over again....kind of pathetic invisible supernatural superbeeing you got there....
24:00 Jackie Chan is preparing for battle
The trilobite orders are the drunken gods.
Looks like horseshoe crabs are actually trilobites
They are both descendants of the megacheirans.
Horseshoe crabs' ancestors lived alongside the trilobites, but they are not trilobites due to the lack of 3 lobed body.
@@Spicy_Italian_Sausage It is actually because artiopods (including trilobites) have ghonatobases all the way through all appendages… chelicerates have them in their head only
I have a hypothesis that they went through hyper evolution, learned to fly and became flying saucer and tic tac UFOs.
Encontré algunos fósiles
A then egh. 250 miillion ofyeaago