Our daughter graduated from Transylvania University in Lexington, Kentucky. It translates to forested land, until Bram Stoker's Dracula novel loosely based on Vlad the Impaler and vampire myths. There is a disease that is helped by drinking blood.
Dude, you've created a great channel and we're the ones honoured to have you. You maintain the wonder and joy of discovery that attracts so many of us to paleonotological aspects and themes. Oh, and in case I haven't mentioned it, I really love the Didgeridoo music in your intro!
I'm so glad I found this channel. It makes me so happy to see how much it has grown in just a year. His content is engaging and interesting. The information is presented in an informative but still lighthearted way ( which I love!) First video was fantastic and the history of the earth series got me hooked! I look forward to seeing this channel grow even more in the coming year. ^_^
You win the award for my personal favorite new channel that I found earlier this year. I absolutely love your delivery, your approach to your edits, the manner in which you cover topic's, Etc. You keep my curiosity and wonder about the natural world around us, very much alive and well. I'm so glad I found your channel and I know you're going to have great success because you have natural talent at this that even some of the biggest channels don't possess. Keep up the great work dude 🤘🏻
This channel makes me feel like I’m watching a science video in school in ‘99, when the teacher rolled the TV and VHS player into the room, which is about the time I fell in love with all of this stuff. ❤️
1:25 , proud to be one of the first thousand to subscribe! Thank you so much for creating this channel and all of your videos!!!! They're a treasure to the rest of us and we love them! Thanks again and have a great new year! 😃
I love this channel and your incredible growth, does not surprise me. You deserve it and more for your incredible work that you put into, every video you produce. Ive learned so much from you! So thank you, for all you do for paleontology and the telling of past and the lives and deaths of these creatures. Its incredible.
I have found yor channel when I was looking for a fun paleo channel so I can entertain my six y.o. nephew with dino facts. I started to follow because I was entertained and educated at the same time on a topic that has nothinfg to do with my job. I love the personal touches you include! Thanks for all the videos, I am looking forward to the new ones in this new year!
You are a great creator that covers amazing topics. Your videos are so good I have watched them repeatedly. Keep up the great work and helping to educate us on the topic of paleontology.
Congratulations on your incredible growth of subs. I hope you feel accomplished and proud of your work. I wish you all the success in the coming year. Thank you for creating such wonderful content on an ongoing basis.
I've just come across this series and absolutely love it! As much as I enjoy normal factual videos, hearing about current research is something few and far between on youtube, particularly in this sort of lay term format. Its really refreshing and a great end to the year, thank you!!
8:22 I have to wonder how many times this has happened, but was ignored by *early* paleontologists since they didn't really know what they were seeing yet. (particularly if the contents were almost completely digested) Paleontology really needs the folks retreading the same ground constantly. SO MUCH gets missed even today just because people don't realize what they've found because they have no context for it until they find something else decades later that makes it click in place. It's like trying to understand Batman, but we aren't even finding full pages and we certainly aren't getting the bits we do have in any contextual order.
I found your channel maybe a week ago, and I'm happy that I did! I hope your channel will grow in 2023. I especially love videos about Triassic animals and The complete history of the Earth series. A few things I would like to know more: - How do you do your research? What sources you use? Where and how you find pictures? I would love to learn new things about ancient animals, but I really don't have anough previous information to check if the source is good. I'm going to check your videos again for source links, at least this SciNews looks amazing. No need to video, just link list would be amazing. If you already have something like that, I missed it. - I have wondered what ancient Indian animals looked like. It was a continent when it left Africa and before it crashed with Asia. Australia and South America have/had interesting animals because of isolation, so I wonder if India was the same. I know about Deccan traps in 66 million years ago, so where there animals after that?
I actually found this channel because of last year's Paleo Rewind. I liked the video style, so watched a couple of other videos on the channel and liked them, so subscribed. So I'm confident that I subscribed before the channel has 2K subscribers. My how things have grown.
Oh noes! I was wondering how hard it must be to get 12 content creators all on the same daily schedule and not have any hiccups. Hopefully it works out eventually
@@apexnext this was prepared with weeks in advance. So far only one posted a day late, Henry the Paleoguy, and Prehistorica has yet to post. It's not hard, it just takes work, but at least they should tell us when to expect Prehistoricas upload.
Many greetings from Germany. I just love your channel, you are just fantastic, TimTim … oh, of course also my Kudos to your weird permanently mutating assistant 😇.
I would love you to make a side video covering just small bird like dinosaurs that didn't have beaks those things look creepy as hell when you look at them thinking they're burning they turn around and you see a mouthful of teeth
first, congratulations on the subscriber bump. Second, I'm surprised that I am surprised we're still discovering new stuff. I know it's a big, old planet, but how are we still finding new animals?
Whenever I see discoveries like the fossilized intestines or the skin impressions, I can't help but wonder how many other times we've encountered similar remains - but, because the discoverer didn't recognize them, they were lost.
I think I originally found this channel through a previous Paleo Rewind and I'm very glad I did, you've become one of my favourite paleo creators. So thank you for making such well put together, informative videos, and I hope the sabre tooth in your logo never manages to close it's jaws or you'll be left with a really unfortunate channel name!
Really? Daspletosauras was a bigger discovery than preserved fossil intestines? I realize that might come off as a rude reply, but I don't mean it to be more than a honest question. I realize you have a personal affinity for Daz. Thanks for your hard work, dude
19:18 ??? Because clouded leopards are in the genus Neofelis, they certainly cannot, by any stretch, be counted as members of the genus Panthera. I guess, by the mention of the clouded leopard, you mean to say that six species are in the subfamily Pantherinae, but that’s still slightly incorrect: there are agreed to be not one but two species of clouded leopards (one in mainland Indochina and the other in the Sunda Islands), so there are seven species in Pantherinae and still just five in Panthera.
Show me a sauropod nesting site and I would bet that somewhere nearby will be a theropod nesting site too. Theropods would want their young feeding on baby sauropods because they cannot fight back effectively. I would imagine that the older theropods would do a stampede run through the sauropods to chase a group of young towards their own for the young to get some practice at killing and eating their favorite foods as they followed the herd on their yearly migrations. Large heads of sauropods probably followed the same routes year after year so life would be one big rinse and repeat for the circle of life.
I don't know why it's showing that, there are currently 9 videos in the History of the Earth Playlist. Hadean Archean Photerozoic Cambrian Ordovician Silurian Devonian Carboniferous Early Permian
I missed the premiere and chat bc I've been so sick (and lazy) that I ran out of clean dishes 🧼🪣 Not a great excuse but at least I got to it. Nice to see Narratorsaur 🤣❤️
Dig your channel. What happened to this years Paleo Rewind....?......its sucked, we're missing months(July, Aug, Sept, Oct), the videos have been short, wtfh?! Good Luck! TIA.
A couple of the presenters have said that they were asked to keep the videos short this year (like 15 minutes tops) which is understandable for the compilation video at the end.
@@Adasaur250 I think 10 has been the tops. Last year was longer/ as long, plus divided in to two parts. It just seems like nothing was really covered, or covered in any detail this year. Its been weak. That's just my opinion, I could be wrong.
How the HECK does the Transylvaniasaurus NOT have giant fangs and beleived to go “bleh!” !?!?
I do NOT go “bleh bleh bleh!”
Lol
Our daughter graduated from Transylvania University in Lexington, Kentucky. It translates to forested land, until Bram Stoker's Dracula novel loosely based on Vlad the Impaler and vampire myths. There is a disease that is helped by drinking blood.
Dude, you've created a great channel and we're the ones honoured to have you. You maintain the wonder and joy of discovery that attracts so many of us to paleonotological aspects and themes.
Oh, and in case I haven't mentioned it, I really love the Didgeridoo music in your intro!
I'm so glad I found this channel. It makes me so happy to see how much it has grown in just a year. His content is engaging and interesting. The information is presented in an informative but still lighthearted way ( which I love!) First video was fantastic and the history of the earth series got me hooked! I look forward to seeing this channel grow even more in the coming year. ^_^
Honey, forget the kids at school they can walk home... Paleo Analysis just dropped another banger!
I missed the premier, dang it! I knew being productive was a mistake!
You win the award for my personal favorite new channel that I found earlier this year. I absolutely love your delivery, your approach to your edits, the manner in which you cover topic's, Etc. You keep my curiosity and wonder about the natural world around us, very much alive and well. I'm so glad I found your channel and I know you're going to have great success because you have natural talent at this that even some of the biggest channels don't possess. Keep up the great work dude 🤘🏻
This channel makes me feel like I’m watching a science video in school in ‘99, when the teacher rolled the TV and VHS player into the room, which is about the time I fell in love with all of this stuff. ❤️
Let's get you to a million next year! Your videos are full of info and easy to understand.
1:25 , proud to be one of the first thousand to subscribe! Thank you so much for creating this channel and all of your videos!!!! They're a treasure to the rest of us and we love them! Thanks again and have a great new year! 😃
Im proud to say I was the first 80k 😁👍
But also proud to say I joined the Patreon as it came out. This channel has opened my eyes to Paleontology!
I came looking for something interesting to watch/listen to. I found a fun storyteller and stayed looking forward to each of your videos
Your channel has been one of my favorite finds this year. Especially your content on crocodillians.
Oh, that's why EDGE videos have been starting to move into my suggestion videos
You deserve all of it and more. Now when can we expect that 3 hour video on all the stuff that went down during the Great American Interchange?
Love your vids. Greetings from Germany
Hallöchen
Auch von mir! Bin einer der ersten 1000 oder so. 💖
Lovely work and thanks for opening my eyes to the pre dinosaur eras. 🙂👍
I love this channel and your incredible growth, does not surprise me. You deserve it and more for your incredible work that you put into, every video you produce. Ive learned so much from you! So thank you, for all you do for paleontology and the telling of past and the lives and deaths of these creatures. Its incredible.
That growth's deserved !
I love your channel! Thank you so much for taking the time an effort to do this for us. Epic as always.
I have found yor channel when I was looking for a fun paleo channel so I can entertain my six y.o. nephew with dino facts. I started to follow because I was entertained and educated at the same time on a topic that has nothinfg to do with my job. I love the personal touches you include! Thanks for all the videos, I am looking forward to the new ones in this new year!
You are a great creator that covers amazing topics. Your videos are so good I have watched them repeatedly. Keep up the great work and helping to educate us on the topic of paleontology.
That channel growth is very impressive and well deserved!
This channel is so good I'm not surprised it's grown so much, so quickly. Great job
Ive followed and watched many paleo-content creators for a few years now.
And i gotta say, i like your channel the most :)
Well thank you. Love your videos. I realy like the way you talk and explain things.
Proud to be one of the first ten thousand.
Congratulations on your incredible growth of subs. I hope you feel accomplished and proud of your work. I wish you all the success in the coming year. Thank you for creating such wonderful content on an ongoing basis.
Do like your use of modern genera to illustrate paleo genera. Happy New Year to you and I will be watching and enjoying this next year again.
One of my favourite channels. Always such a great watch/listen. I learn so much and it's so interesting. Why wasn't school like this?
Glad to see the channel grow so fast
So happy to be here ❤
Congratulations on the growth and can't wait until you get to 1 million subscribers, and 1 billion views!
Congrats on the channel growth, and thank you for the great content.
I really enjoy your videos. Well done and well researched. cheers
Thank you for your amazing content. It’s why I subscribed in the first place.
Paleo rewind is how I found you last year and I love your channel
Dude. Love your channel! Entertaining with interesting content!
Congrats on your rapid evolution!
Love u bro glad UA-cam algorithm did me a favor for one this year
I've just come across this series and absolutely love it! As much as I enjoy normal factual videos, hearing about current research is something few and far between on youtube, particularly in this sort of lay term format. Its really refreshing and a great end to the year, thank you!!
Thanks for teaching me dinosaurs might have been warm blooded 😊
I'm already subscribed.. But I like the channel so much, I'm going to push the subscribe button a 2nd time!
8:22 I have to wonder how many times this has happened, but was ignored by *early* paleontologists since they didn't really know what they were seeing yet. (particularly if the contents were almost completely digested)
Paleontology really needs the folks retreading the same ground constantly. SO MUCH gets missed even today just because people don't realize what they've found because they have no context for it until they find something else decades later that makes it click in place.
It's like trying to understand Batman, but we aren't even finding full pages and we certainly aren't getting the bits we do have in any contextual order.
I found your channel maybe a week ago, and I'm happy that I did! I hope your channel will grow in 2023. I especially love videos about Triassic animals and The complete history of the Earth series.
A few things I would like to know more:
- How do you do your research? What sources you use? Where and how you find pictures? I would love to learn new things about ancient animals, but I really don't have anough previous information to check if the source is good. I'm going to check your videos again for source links, at least this SciNews looks amazing. No need to video, just link list would be amazing. If you already have something like that, I missed it.
- I have wondered what ancient Indian animals looked like. It was a continent when it left Africa and before it crashed with Asia. Australia and South America have/had interesting animals because of isolation, so I wonder if India was the same. I know about Deccan traps in 66 million years ago, so where there animals after that?
SUPER NICE
4:54 He said the thing!
I actually found this channel because of last year's Paleo Rewind. I liked the video style, so watched a couple of other videos on the channel and liked them, so subscribed. So I'm confident that I subscribed before the channel has 2K subscribers. My how things have grown.
Thanks bud!
Fav channel
Where's the July video of Prehistorica ? Do anyone know what happened to him ?
Happy New Year 🥳 Really enjoy & appreciate all you do. 🦖
I wonder how EDGE is going to make the compilation video since we're still missing Prehistorica's July
Oh noes!
I was wondering how hard it must be to get 12 content creators all on the same daily schedule and not have any hiccups.
Hopefully it works out eventually
@@apexnext this was prepared with weeks in advance. So far only one posted a day late, Henry the Paleoguy, and Prehistorica has yet to post. It's not hard, it just takes work, but at least they should tell us when to expect Prehistoricas upload.
We came for the dinosaurs, but we stayed for the beard.
Thank you for a great video. ^^
I love this channel. Thank you for all the awesome content!
Many greetings from Germany. I just love your channel, you are just fantastic, TimTim … oh, of course also my Kudos to your weird permanently mutating assistant 😇.
Love ur videos man!! ♥ 🦕
Yay November is my birth month
I would love you to make a side video covering just small bird like dinosaurs that didn't have beaks those things look creepy as hell when you look at them thinking they're burning they turn around and you see a mouthful of teeth
This!!!
Great video and greetings from Serbia
Hopefully this channel grows! The content you make deserves more attention!!
You are doing great work. Come up to alberta to visit some dinosaur museums!
Shame there's no July link. Maybe I'll see that contribution in the collab link when it's added to this video description.
I will add it as soon as it exists.
Congrats on your channel's growth! You deserve it!
first, congratulations on the subscriber bump. Second, I'm surprised that I am surprised we're still discovering new stuff. I know it's a big, old planet, but how are we still finding new animals?
Quite consistently actually
Whenever I see discoveries like the fossilized intestines or the skin impressions, I can't help but wonder how many other times we've encountered similar remains - but, because the discoverer didn't recognize them, they were lost.
I think I originally found this channel through a previous Paleo Rewind and I'm very glad I did, you've become one of my favourite paleo creators. So thank you for making such well put together, informative videos, and I hope the sabre tooth in your logo never manages to close it's jaws or you'll be left with a really unfortunate channel name!
Check out PBS EONS episode on hatzag Island
1🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Do Late Permian
Really? Daspletosauras was a bigger discovery than preserved fossil intestines? I realize that might come off as a rude reply, but I don't mean it to be more than a honest question. I realize you have a personal affinity for Daz. Thanks for your hard work, dude
19:18 ??? Because clouded leopards are in the genus Neofelis, they certainly cannot, by any stretch, be counted as members of the genus Panthera.
I guess, by the mention of the clouded leopard, you mean to say that six species are in the subfamily Pantherinae, but that’s still slightly incorrect: there are agreed to be not one but two species of clouded leopards (one in mainland Indochina and the other in the Sunda Islands), so there are seven species in Pantherinae and still just five in Panthera.
Show me a sauropod nesting site and I would bet that somewhere nearby will be a theropod nesting site too. Theropods would want their young feeding on baby sauropods because they cannot fight back effectively. I would imagine that the older theropods would do a stampede run through the sauropods to chase a group of young towards their own for the young to get some practice at killing and eating their favorite foods as they followed the herd on their yearly migrations. Large heads of sauropods probably followed the same routes year after year so life would be one big rinse and repeat for the circle of life.
Did you take down 3 history of earth episodes? The list shows 3 are hidden.
I don't know why it's showing that, there are currently 9 videos in the History of the Earth Playlist.
Hadean
Archean
Photerozoic
Cambrian
Ordovician
Silurian
Devonian
Carboniferous
Early Permian
All fixed :)
Nothing about PBS Eons?
I missed the premiere and chat bc I've been so sick (and lazy) that I ran out of clean dishes 🧼🪣 Not a great excuse but at least I got to it. Nice to see Narratorsaur 🤣❤️
(1:25) Did you mean Holy Coprolites ?
As a german I cant take the name (Nevadadromeus) Schmitti serius.
What's the bird
well, that´s not how to pronounce "schmitti" but happy new year^^
UA-cam Algorithm
Dig your channel. What happened to this years Paleo Rewind....?......its sucked, we're missing months(July, Aug, Sept, Oct), the videos have been short, wtfh?! Good Luck! TIA.
Oooops,found Aug.
A couple of the presenters have said that they were asked to keep the videos short this year (like 15 minutes tops) which is understandable for the compilation video at the end.
@@Adasaur250 I think 10 has been the tops. Last year was longer/ as long, plus divided in to two parts. It just seems like nothing was really covered, or covered in any detail this year. Its been weak. That's just my opinion, I could be wrong.
niiiiiiiiice🦕🦖🦜
Bleh
I am unimpressed by EDGE
Let’s go
im looking forward to showing your channel to my 8yo
I just subscribed about a week ago and I love this content