Physiological based capacities might just be universal, eyes, mouth, eyes above mouth, legs for running, two legs two arms for fighting and object manipulation. Hair, capacity to be sensitive to sonic stimulations in form of pair of cavity... Ears. The movie aliens makes me think of xenomorphs as a movie that's either well thought out or there's something we're not being told. Oviparous psychology. Skipping the adaptation of mammals. Where colder temperatures, like ice age might've caused egg shoots to seal shut. Infections leading to skin to adaptations as to alleviate inflammation, Mammary glands. Maybe even from softening egg shells allowing for energy to be handled by the blood supply etc. Anyway the part where infants are ejected out the viviparous lifeform with the smell of blood. The memory of surviving siblings seeing predators targeting them, perhaps influence sticking together, as Mammalian life forms had to stick together with allies. All that to say for oviparous extraterrestrial being a vicious life forms if they ever get around to being intelligent. In the movie they're introduced to humans... I forget how. I guess in a way of saying, now that you're space-faring species. Some of the most vicious life forms out there
We just got one and it's amazing! I'm pregnant and idk if I'd be able to do third trimester without it. Also I love your videos, I've been following this series for a while and I love it!
When I was a kid in the '70s, they said the dinosaurs died out 65 million years ago. These days they say 66 million years ago. Really makes me feel old.
@@aidanbrumsickle afaik its more just a change in specificity and how we handle rounding in large numbers. rounding to the nearest 5 is a perfectly acceptable standard, especially in large numbers. but its not as precise. as scientific education has advanced, the accuracy we expect and teach has also likewise increased.
@@aidanbrumsickle In the 70s there was no consensus what killed the dinosaurs, and one possibility was a decline over several million years. Hence the inexact date. When Alvarez published his meteorite strike hypothesis in 1980, and correctly connected it with the iridium layer, it was seen as excentric and unlikely. He did not know where the crater was back then. The Chicxulub crater has been identified around the same time by scientists working in the oil-drilling business, but nobody paid much attention to their publication, and it took until 1990 when Alvarez' team learned about it, and drew the right connections. With the crater found, and more and more new research confirming Alvarez' hypothesis, for the first time a consensus was reached among scientists that this is the best explanation for the extinction of the dinosaurs. While you were learning from old textbooks, researchers were hammering out the details of the new consensus theory. We can date the impact quite precisely, to 66.043 plus/minus 0.043 million years ago.
Im so happy she mentioned when the asteroid hit. A lot of videos don’t add the detail of that it happened in spring time. How do we know this? On the extinction line, scientists found fossilized seeds from plants, and fish who were experiencing spring growth.
To think that spring, the season we associate with growth and life, is the season when an asteroid we associate with widespread death and extinction hit the Earth...
hii lindsay, i know this is totally random but im a disabled teen (that we know of) who’s always in and out of hospitals and totally loves all things extinct and still living, and your videos have been absolutely carrying me throughout the past few months. keep being you and doing what makes you happy cause it makes a lot of other people happy, too! mutualism, woo
Disability sucks (especially right after you're diagnosed as unable to work). So many doors are closed to you and nobody opening windows (that we know of). I really struggled when I was told I couldn't work anymore and spend some time in a ward. I just wanted to pass on to anyone who is going through this bit that it gets better, and the dreams you lost can be replaced with new dreams if you set your mind to it.
My boyfriend and I have been watching this series since it started and never missed an episode, luckily coming out on or around our date days. Today is our one year anniversary and we still absolutely love these videos.
"Hallucinochrysa Diogenesi" likely referring to Diogenes, the ancient greek father of Cynicism. Known for living on the streets out of a wine pot, barking at rich people, and throwing plucked chickens at philosophers. He lived in trash, so thats probably the reference for the specific name
I mean, who else could be cooler than the guy that insulted Alexander the Great to his face and get away with it. When Alexander visited his wine pot to see the philosopher after hearing about his antics, Diogenes reportedly said something along the lines of "You're blocking my sunlight" even after learning who his visitor was, and Alexander was so impressed with the raw confidence radiating from Diogenes that he was spared any punishment, and Alexander thought his antics were the funniest shit he's ever heard of.
Yea the hell ants is the reference for the man eating ants in Indiana Jones and other movies with those ant hills almost as large as a car they were 2 inches long and a inch in height and if you run into a colony with thousands or more they can kill anything as large as a cow or smaller most of the dinosaurs were safe but we wouldn't be that's why I hate them and the carboniferous the most I just don't know what I fear more them or the carboniferous when giant insects ruled the world😂
I’ve been sick with pneumonia for the past two weeks and I’ve probably watched/listened to the entire that we know of series up to now five or six times. Thanks for helping me get through it, and really looking forward to this one! 😷🤒❤
@@LindsayNikole For some reason, I don't have the "comments" box on the main feed, so this is the only place/way I can comment. That being said, love your content. You make a difficult topic very interesting and really bring it to life. Thank you.
50:23 imagine someone 3d printing a replica of the head crest and terrorizing towns by blowing into it and making this absolute hellspawn of a noise in the middle of the night💀
Oh, hey!!! I've seen Kallie on Eons!! That's so cool! I love these collabs!! Kallie totally brings a calm, school house vibes which contrast beautifully to Lindsay's punk rock energy! I love the idea of these two just kicking it at a brewery! 😄😁
I got rid of lawn grass 20 years ago by snatching out every single blade and root of it ruthlessly .I then replaced it with native grasses ,groundcovers, herbs ,mosses and wildflower meadows on my farm .I regret nothing in doing so either .Far different experience entirely walking on mint with butterflies, songbirds ,reptiles and other wildlife in abundance everywhere .I only have to run the mower over the fields in the early Spring ,no fertilizing ,watering or planting once and I am done .The wildflowers don't need my help ,it is everchanging from season to season but always something blooming .The native snakes really love it and it provides winter food for songbirds also .It was worth all the work involved when I got to put up signs stating Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake/ Gopher Tortoise Conservation Area .I have an abundance of Gopher Tortoise burrows here hence the 6 venomous species, 21 and counting non venomous snake species hanging around here .I even do prescribed burns every few years in the Longleaf Pine forests to provide better habitat and save my giant and old hardwood forests from wildfires just like nature intended .So yes I set the woods on fire on purpose deliberately for a very good reason .
girl ive been taking notes on each of these and it already takes me like 2 hrs per video then you release THIS??? ilysm but this is gonna take days 😭😭❤️
Endearing? Dude imagine they were still around today and you're mowing your lawn and you hear whatever hellspawn of a noise they make and you gotta hurry and get to the basement and lock a 3 foot thick steel door behind you for the next hour because a giraffe sized flying lizard thing is in the area and could easily pluck you off your riding mower and swallow you whole before you comprehend what just happened.
Oh my goodness I was kind of joking last time about the episodes getting longer but they really are getting longer. Maybe the Quaternary period video will be two hours long after all. I mean I'm not complaining at all, it allows Lindsay to get more crazy stuff in the video.
Hey Lindsay, awesome work as usual. I had the pleasure of seeing Borealopelta when I took the kids to Drumheller a couple of years ago, and believe me, I really did cry. It's magnificent.
It's the age of the flowers in the same way that the Devonian is the age of fishes: they diversified and became very ecologically successful, but they originated much earlier.
First off your voice and way of speaking is very pleasant 👌🏽 second I love how you truly try to educate people with the best/only information available. While I’m very interested and sometimes knowledgeable at time I’m still pretty unknowledgeable and uninformed…I love to try! You set nice facts/disputes in a wonderful manner❤ please continue your work! I’d love to show my children someday how science actually is and you’ll be my top pick of modern science 👌🏽
You've got one of the best vibes on youtube, hands down! I love the no nonsense speaking style, littered with jokes and asides- it really is awesome. Thank you for making these videos!
I love all the previous mass extinctions were just "well, here's our best guess based on what we can glean from the climate of the period." and "All of this would have taken place gradually as species would die off one by one". Then we have this: "Shit got messed up in like, an afternoon."
29:34 I'd like to add something. The thing about the Batrachopus ichnofossils isn't just that they belonged to croc relatives, but they belonged to croc relatives that were doing weird stuff. Generally speaking, bipedality in Crurotarsians was common during the Triassic as that Archosaur lineage was diversifying to various niches and developing numerous body plans that would be revisited by their dinosaurian kin. By the time of the extinction at the end of the Triassic, the only groups to survive were either aquatic predators or terrestrial, opportunistic quadrupeds. The idea of a bipedal species to appear so late in the Mesozoic, let alone a sizeable species, is a surprise not only because such locomotion was thought to have been lost around 90 million years prior, but that the conditions were exceptional enough for these animals to be formidable predators. The question now becomes were these som relic from a Triassic ghost lineage or a weird member off the Neosuchian class? Hopefully there are fossils from the site that can shed light on this mystery.
36:56 Yes and I can Imagine something even scarier. 1000 Humboldt Squids flashing like a christmas tree while establishing your direct connection to heavens WiFi.
The genuine excitement I felt when I saw this. I just worked 3 12’s in a row and I need something to relax to. Thank you for all the fun facts I get to tell my residents😁💖
Dude! You're giving the wasps a bad name. The paper wasps that build large nests & are aggressive aren't cool. I have some Mud Daubers in the back. They pick bugs out of my garden. They make cool nests out of mud. Normally it's just one nest stuck to a wall or rock. Found about 7-8 individual nests formed into a wasp apartment. They do stuff the little mud holes with paralyzed spiders & bugs. Then the larvae hatches, chubs the poor bugs & eventually breaks out of the tiny mud nest. It is kinda messed up that the paralyzed spiders & baby caterpillars get eaten. I placed the nests on a table to show my nephew. Then realized that the wasps were reusing the mud nest apartments. After they've filled them up again, I'll move them to a more suitable location. These wasps are mostly solitary & don't bug people too much. They don't like getting watered with the garden though. They do keep bugs that eat my plants down. A few months back, one wasp grabbed a caterpillar that was too big to fly with. Climbed a chair to take off from higher up. I was watching as the wasp had tried to climb my leg before it decided to go for just the chair. Then this anole comes out of nowhere. Runs & stops on my shoe. Then ninjas to the wall. Up the wall to the back of the chair. Wasp is still battling its lunch & unaware. The anole strikes!!! It grabbed the caterpillar from the wasp. Wasp hits the afterburners & gets out of there. Anole gives me the eye as it chomps its lunch. The wasps put in a lot of work in the garden. Also have dragon fly perches out there. They eat a ton of mosquitoes. Everyone looked at me like I was crazy with all those sticks around the garden. Mosquito levels are down big time.
Hi Lindsay. I just wanted you to know I have spent every one of my exam study breaks this week watching a part of this video. Thank you for the extremely high effort and quality content! This is the stuff that the internet should be.
Would heavily recommend looking into Basidomycete (Club Fungi) and Ascomycete (Bag Fungi) fungi. Specifically how they spread their spores differently, but it's also just a fun and interesting split in the fungi tree. The basic is that Ascomycete basically have all their in spores in bags that open up and that Basidomycetes use a mix of condensation and water tension to fucking sling shot their spores. That, the nematode nooses, and how they divide their cells given their 2 nuclei are probably the coolest things I know about those little weirdos
in my heart I think more Americans would believe in evolution if the phrase "and then the scientist hit the fucking jackpot" showed up every 20 pages or so.
@@alexism9656 The US seems to be the only place that evolution is considered controversial by significant amounts of people. Even the Pope believes in evolution.
@@Mrtheunnameable that sounds like a lot of assuming though. I'm sure a lot of places in the world, especially less advanced places, also would prefer to believe that a god made all life.
I've been reading 'The Rise and Reign of Mammals' and it turns out there were a BUNCH of really cool mammals around and despite being small they were really diverse in their ecologies and diets
Honestly, love your videos and this length is IMHO quite right. After all, there´s a lot to talk about! I think as a general rule (and it seems quite logical too) the closer we get to the present, the more detailed and complete the fossil record and the knowledge regarding them gets, so of course you have more things to say. Trying to parse among all the information to make an interesting video out of it while not getting excessively long is hard work! Kudos!
Aww, I miss Missoula. I grew up in Polson, and Missoo-town was where we did our big school shopping as a kid. I really liked eating at HuHot when I visited. Also, (warning, will be talking about dead human bodies) for my job I transport the dead. Sometimes, I get to pick them up from an organ/tissue donation place after they collect from the deceased donors. Often times, their bones have been removed. When I arrive for pick up, I hear Lindsay's voice yelling in my head, "THIS IS A NO BONEZ ZOOOONE". So, thanks for that.
I'm so happy I discovered your channel. I really enjoy your videos! I love how excited you are about zoology and biology, it's like science class with Jenna Marbles vibes ☺️💗🙌
The whole Cretaceous Period was simply nightmarish. Giant Azhdarchids are to me the most heinous creatures of them all. An animal as tall as a giraffe, with a beak longer than a grown man, with a wingspan larger than a F-35 fighter jet and potentially with the same attitude as a pelican. Even as an Australian dealing with the standard nonsense that comes with living here, that’s a step to far nature. No thanks. Absolutely heinous!
I love the Morrosaurus, very excited to see it on the list! They're relatively newly discovered. They weren't discovered in Argentina they were discovered on James Ross Island, Antarctica. They were discovered by a group of Argentinian palentologists. Thought some people might be interested. There's a surprising number of dinosaurs discovered in Antarctica, and there's sure to be much more it's just not possible to do digs in most of the continent
when i was little i had a passion for dinosaurs and since i have drifted from it but watching this series has made me re-spark that passion not just for dinosaurs but for prehistoric life
Augustinolophus Morrisi, state dinosaur of California, not mentioned among your hadrosaurs?! *sigh* Well, you were correct that there are just too many to get though. Well done.
5:55 -The joy you musy have felt when you rwlaized you were saying "-sperm explosion." Your professional expeession is vettayed by your wildlry exciteded arm movements. Not many get to utter phrasing like that without consequence. 💛
Despite your fast speech and insertion of other video fragments for humor, I have no problem in understanding what you're saying and your videos move in an easy to follow flow. Thank you for presenting biology in a clear, concise, and even fun way.
28:35 ah, yes, most people don't know, but the modern domesticated pancakes lacks the slender jaws and pointed teeth of their ancestors. This is thanks to John Pancake who bred the modern flapjack from the wild variety in the 19th century
@@bubblingbubztheklown5902 yes but looking at the WRETCHED pterosaurs while she was silent is too harsh of a reality. I do NOT want to live on the same planet as Quetzalcoatlus and I can pretend like he’s the hat man.
Hi Lindsay! I often get overwhelmed by our world's recent horrifying events like wars everywhere, people dying for nothing, economy failure, existentialism, and for me it often leads to dissociation, depression and lots of anxiety, which is absolutely not pretty. But i just watched this video and i thought. Why do people want to do all of this instead of studying their land, learning about life on earth, our past heritage? Isn't it so interesting and exciting? Isn't this what really matters, and not creating more sacrifice and fossil record, of us, people who are all one kind?... Anyway, i just wanted to thank you, and all the people that work with you, and help you, for everything you do. It is magical. Your content is one of the few things that truly brings me happiness and relief, and it helps me feel like i can be one with nature again. Thank you, Lindsay ❤ really, truly, thank you. And i love longer video format, the more information the merrier!! Learning with you is hella fun
Man i love how the eagle shark looks. Also Ankylosaurus, patagotitan huinculensis and Therizinosaurus are best dinosaurs from this period in my humble opinion.
does anyone else here play path of titans? cause when lindsay talked about psittacosaurus, kapro, conca, sarco, deino and other kind of niche extinct creatures, i get kind of excited. im like "i know them!" idk prolly dumb but still.
Thank you Helix for sponsoring! Visit helixsleep.com/lindsaynikole to get 20% off your Helix mattress. Offers subject to change. #helixsleep
Physiological based capacities might just be universal, eyes, mouth, eyes above mouth, legs for running, two legs two arms for fighting and object manipulation. Hair, capacity to be sensitive to sonic stimulations in form of pair of cavity... Ears. The movie aliens makes me think of xenomorphs as a movie that's either well thought out or there's something we're not being told. Oviparous psychology. Skipping the adaptation of mammals. Where colder temperatures, like ice age might've caused egg shoots to seal shut. Infections leading to skin to adaptations as to alleviate inflammation, Mammary glands. Maybe even from softening egg shells allowing for energy to be handled by the blood supply etc. Anyway the part where infants are ejected out the viviparous lifeform with the smell of blood. The memory of surviving siblings seeing predators targeting them, perhaps influence sticking together, as Mammalian life forms had to stick together with allies. All that to say for oviparous extraterrestrial being a vicious life forms if they ever get around to being intelligent. In the movie they're introduced to humans... I forget how. I guess in a way of saying, now that you're space-faring species. Some of the most vicious life forms out there
The GOAT is finally BACK 🎉
We just got one and it's amazing! I'm pregnant and idk if I'd be able to do third trimester without it. Also I love your videos, I've been following this series for a while and I love it!
I live on the north east bit of Scotland, on the coast, where the golf comes from and those grasses are native and cool.
You should do a colab with miniminuteman that would be awesome you guys kinda give off the same vibe
Figures, when a bug carries trash around all day its 'cool' and 'valuable to science' but when I do its 'weird' and 'ruining the wedding.'
smh en right now
Ever since I was a kid in boy scouts I've made a habit of picking up trash and pocketing it till I find a garbage can.
Being human has too many human rules.
haha
😂😂😂😂
Milo and Lindsay premiers on the same day. Happy Halloween
Who's milo?
@@Morrison-saber-tooth miniminuteman they have done colabs in the past
@@Morrison-saber-tooth Milo Rossi
youtube.com/@miniminuteman773?si=46gZJfsf9onfHtWG
Shit! I missed Milo?! .. looking that up straight after this!
@@hollieBlu303 it was on vampire burials. It was awesome
When I was a kid in the '70s, they said the dinosaurs died out 65 million years ago. These days they say 66 million years ago. Really makes me feel old.
I learned the same thing in the 90s. I don't remember seeing 66 mya until fairly recently. I was just wondering about this - when did it change?
@@aidanbrumsickle afaik its more just a change in specificity and how we handle rounding in large numbers.
rounding to the nearest 5 is a perfectly acceptable standard, especially in large numbers. but its not as precise. as scientific education has advanced, the accuracy we expect and teach has also likewise increased.
@@aidanbrumsickle In the 70s there was no consensus what killed the dinosaurs, and one possibility was a decline over several million years. Hence the inexact date. When Alvarez published his meteorite strike hypothesis in 1980, and correctly connected it with the iridium layer, it was seen as excentric and unlikely. He did not know where the crater was back then. The Chicxulub crater has been identified around the same time by scientists working in the oil-drilling business, but nobody paid much attention to their publication, and it took until 1990 when Alvarez' team learned about it, and drew the right connections. With the crater found, and more and more new research confirming Alvarez' hypothesis, for the first time a consensus was reached among scientists that this is the best explanation for the extinction of the dinosaurs. While you were learning from old textbooks, researchers were hammering out the details of the new consensus theory. We can date the impact quite precisely, to 66.043 plus/minus 0.043 million years ago.
@@aidanbrumsickleDating methods improved, for the most part.
Even in the early 2000s it was 65 million years ago
"I was soo fuckin' high when I wrote that..." You're killing me.
This moment had me dying, I just sparked up when she said that
When?
Meme potential...?
@@Whosaskin 19:42
@@simonrobert6675 very possibly
Im so happy she mentioned when the asteroid hit. A lot of videos don’t add the detail of that it happened in spring time. How do we know this? On the extinction line, scientists found fossilized seeds from plants, and fish who were experiencing spring growth.
That is literally so cool!!
Just a fun bonus about fish some fish in the area were found to have literally choked on debris
To think that spring, the season we associate with growth and life, is the season when an asteroid we associate with widespread death and extinction hit the Earth...
1:33 Petition for Lindsay to do a tier list ranking the Land Before Time movies
@everyone THIS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
And the characters
They made like 20
First one is the 🐐.
Yesss!!!!!
hii lindsay, i know this is totally random but im a disabled teen (that we know of) who’s always in and out of hospitals and totally loves all things extinct and still living, and your videos have been absolutely carrying me throughout the past few months. keep being you and doing what makes you happy cause it makes a lot of other people happy, too! mutualism, woo
Saying "that we know of" after saying that made me laugh so hard lol you have a kick@ss sense of humor. Keep doing you cause you make people happy too
As a disabled adult (that we know of) diagnosed late, I, too, enjoy Lindsay's content. And your comment made my night ❤
You, as well as anything on this planet; are absolutely awesome.
❤
Disability sucks (especially right after you're diagnosed as unable to work). So many doors are closed to you and nobody opening windows (that we know of). I really struggled when I was told I couldn't work anymore and spend some time in a ward. I just wanted to pass on to anyone who is going through this bit that it gets better, and the dreams you lost can be replaced with new dreams if you set your mind to it.
A university-style hoodie but it says "Western Interior Seaway" would be the coolest merch and I'd wear it everywhere
I would totally wear that, sounds so cool!
I concur
TAKE MY MONEY!!!
WHO WILL MAKE THIS PLEASE
I'm sure for those in the west it's actually the Eastern Interior Seaway.
I love how you say, "I found X to show you." It's so charming and makes watching the video a very cozy experience.
My boyfriend and I have been watching this series since it started and never missed an episode, luckily coming out on or around our date days. Today is our one year anniversary and we still absolutely love these videos.
Want a relationship like this
That's so wholesome
This is so sweet!!!!
Happy anniversary!
Lindsay, your editor had no business popping off so hard with this video. They absolutely SMASHED it. Keep up the fantastic work you two!
"Hallucinochrysa Diogenesi" likely referring to Diogenes, the ancient greek father of Cynicism. Known for living on the streets out of a wine pot, barking at rich people, and throwing plucked chickens at philosophers. He lived in trash, so thats probably the reference for the specific name
"behold a human"
In a rich man's house there's no place to spit but his face
I'm pretty sure that when they named it, Diogenes (wherever he is) probably did a happy dance
@mayawatkins6073 the great wine casket on Mt. Olympus
I mean, who else could be cooler than the guy that insulted Alexander the Great to his face and get away with it. When Alexander visited his wine pot to see the philosopher after hearing about his antics, Diogenes reportedly said something along the lines of "You're blocking my sunlight" even after learning who his visitor was, and Alexander was so impressed with the raw confidence radiating from Diogenes that he was spared any punishment, and Alexander thought his antics were the funniest shit he's ever heard of.
Aw man she didn't mention the Hell Ants. They had these crazy vertical jaws and are like the most unique ants in the fossil record I can think of.
absolutely heinous
I have something to look up now.
@@marmyeaterPBS Eons is calling
I have a tattoo of one! They’re my favorite
Yea the hell ants is the reference for the man eating ants in Indiana Jones and other movies with those ant hills almost as large as a car they were 2 inches long and a inch in height and if you run into a colony with thousands or more they can kill anything as large as a cow or smaller most of the dinosaurs were safe but we wouldn't be that's why I hate them and the carboniferous the most I just don't know what I fear more them or the carboniferous when giant insects ruled the world😂
So happy to see you working with Kallie! I’ve been watching Eons for years! 2 of my favorite creators working together is a thing to see!
I love seeing to creators I love loving each other
50:10 hell yeah! Accurate dinosaur sound, let's go!!!!
That's the most harrowing sound I ever heard. I will never recover from this
I’ve been sick with pneumonia for the past two weeks and I’ve probably watched/listened to the entire that we know of series up to now five or six times. Thanks for helping me get through it, and really looking forward to this one! 😷🤒❤
Immediately YES. Lindsay is the (prehistoric) GOAT!!!❤❤❤
much love, i hope you’re starting to feel better!! 🖤🖤
I have pneumonia too
@@LindsayNikole
For some reason, I don't have the "comments" box on the main feed, so this is the only place/way I can comment.
That being said, love your content. You make a difficult topic very interesting and really bring it to life. Thank you.
I hope you feel better soon!!
50:23 imagine someone 3d printing a replica of the head crest and terrorizing towns by blowing into it and making this absolute hellspawn of a noise in the middle of the night💀
"the crabs really spread their wings"
me imagining a giant spider crab with wings
thanks for the nightmares
Mmm... Chonky land crabs with wings.
As if they aren't bad enough already
I just pictured them trying to fly sideways.
@@BrokePencil hahaha yes
I'm thinking of something like a beetle the size of a car tire with clawed arms... XD
I want one put in Monster Hunter.
I am great at physics and chemistry, but Lindsay and Casual Geographic single-handedly backing my animal science repertoire.
Oh, hey!!! I've seen Kallie on Eons!! That's so cool! I love these collabs!! Kallie totally brings a calm, school house vibes which contrast beautifully to Lindsay's punk rock energy! I love the idea of these two just kicking it at a brewery! 😄😁
I love Callie's laugh. It's so contagious.
Best day ever!!! A video by Miniminuteman and Lindsay on the same day!!!
I know right
Nice!
Ha yes! I watched both too!
And they're both an hour long!!! Great day
pode ser amigo tamo juntos
Having Lindsay and Kallie do a collaboration is like if my mom and my older sister were in a band together.
Ever seen daft punk with their masks off? Didn’t think so.
So if they were LMFAO
@@Psychic.Octopusactually, yes but im not saying anything.
I got rid of lawn grass 20 years ago by snatching out every single blade and root of it ruthlessly .I then replaced it with native grasses ,groundcovers, herbs ,mosses and wildflower meadows on my farm .I regret nothing in doing so either .Far different experience entirely walking on mint with butterflies, songbirds ,reptiles and other wildlife in abundance everywhere .I only have to run the mower over the fields in the early Spring ,no fertilizing ,watering or planting once and I am done .The wildflowers don't need my help ,it is everchanging from season to season but always something blooming .The native snakes really love it and it provides winter food for songbirds also .It was worth all the work involved when I got to put up signs stating Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake/ Gopher Tortoise Conservation Area .I have an abundance of Gopher Tortoise burrows here hence the 6 venomous species, 21 and counting non venomous snake species hanging around here .I even do prescribed burns every few years in the Longleaf Pine forests to provide better habitat and save my giant and old hardwood forests from wildfires just like nature intended .So yes I set the woods on fire on purpose deliberately for a very good reason .
How big is your yard if you dont mind me asking?
@@xHASSUNAx the area around the house about 3 acres woods and other about 40 acres
That's so cool!
I wanted to do something similar on my parents' property, but my mom loves her lawn.
You are, indisputably, THE COOLEST! You are living my dream! :D
Pat yourself on the back why do cha
girl ive been taking notes on each of these and it already takes me like 2 hrs per video then you release THIS??? ilysm but this is gonna take days 😭😭❤️
"I was so high when I wrote that" is a phrase I understand quite well. Excellent prehistory lesson also.
Im calling it, Lindsay is going to mention the Therizinosaurus. Its just way too cool to pass.
I was right. Im so happy that Lindsay included it!
BRO I WAS WATCHING SOME VIDEOS LIKE AN HOUR AGO AND WENT
"man I wish lindsay posted a new video.."
bro i think im magical 😭😭
SAME
Please wish for my mortgage to go away
@@steelbear2063 Instructions unclear, you're now homeless 🤷♀️
Thank you for your service 😂
"Vampyropod" is the best new word I never expected to learn today, I love it
"The fish were heinous." Needs to be a t-shirt lol.
This series has become my favorite way to learn about periods I barely knew anything about before
Spore background music was such a good choice
I KNEW I RECOGNISED IT FROM SOMEWHERE
@@splatboy1408 fr I couldn’t even focus on the video before I figured it out that it was infact spore music
I only ever hear the ksp music...
Im sure that Spore IS one of the reasons we're all hère today 😂
@ True
Quetzalcoatlus is my favorite “dinosaur” who I first learned existed via animal crossing. They’re so goofy looking and I find them just so endearing.
Animal Crossing is the goat
I’m a Hatzegopteryx man, myself. Basically the closest thing to an IRL dragon that’s ever lived (that we know of.)
Endearing? Dude imagine they were still around today and you're mowing your lawn and you hear whatever hellspawn of a noise they make and you gotta hurry and get to the basement and lock a 3 foot thick steel door behind you for the next hour because a giraffe sized flying lizard thing is in the area and could easily pluck you off your riding mower and swallow you whole before you comprehend what just happened.
@ sick. I wish there was more prehistoric animals in present day horror stories.
For me, it was final fantasy 8. It was a lightning summon and was definitely one of my favorite.
Oh my goodness I was kind of joking last time about the episodes getting longer but they really are getting longer. Maybe the Quaternary period video will be two hours long after all. I mean I'm not complaining at all, it allows Lindsay to get more crazy stuff in the video.
21:05 very serene, very serendipitous 😊
Hey Lindsay, awesome work as usual. I had the pleasure of seeing Borealopelta when I took the kids to Drumheller a couple of years ago, and believe me, I really did cry. It's magnificent.
"I Know How Many Fossils You Touched Last Summer." - coming soon to a streaming service near you
The Spinosaurus dragon made me laugh out loud. It looked like such a hobby store plastic toy.
I swear Spinosaurus is the Cthulhu of dinosaurs. Just merely gazing upon any of its forms seems to drive someone insane
Kallie from Eons! This wasn't the collaboration I needed, but it was always the one I wanted.
52:02 wasn't expecting the lorna shore refernce. hell yeah
I love how long this was please upload more like this
This is avengers of paleontology youtubers part 3(first Paleo analysis, then Dinofax and Kalie from PBS eons)
please get michelle from eons next!
@@alveolateor Ben G Thomas
A certain gibbon?
@@DavidSmith-vr1nb what?
"Carnivorous Fungi" is metal as fuck
foot fugus
@@luedog8385fugus
those guys are still out there fucking up nematodes to this day. they lure them to their doom with chemical traps that mimic nematode pheromones.
It's the age of the flowers in the same way that the Devonian is the age of fishes: they diversified and became very ecologically successful, but they originated much earlier.
Mmm, dunkleosteus
Like winning best new artist ten years into your career
I can't wait for the discovery of the Supercalifragilisticexpialimicropachycephalosaurus
First off your voice and way of speaking is very pleasant 👌🏽 second I love how you truly try to educate people with the best/only information available. While I’m very interested and sometimes knowledgeable at time I’m still pretty unknowledgeable and uninformed…I love to try! You set nice facts/disputes in a wonderful manner❤ please continue your work! I’d love to show my children someday how science actually is and you’ll be my top pick of modern science 👌🏽
You've got one of the best vibes on youtube, hands down!
I love the no nonsense speaking style, littered with jokes and asides- it really is awesome. Thank you for making these videos!
I agree!!
This is the best day ever (that I know of)
I love all the previous mass extinctions were just "well, here's our best guess based on what we can glean from the climate of the period." and "All of this would have taken place gradually as species would die off one by one". Then we have this: "Shit got messed up in like, an afternoon."
Love the longer format. I’ve just had it on repeat today
29:34 I'd like to add something. The thing about the Batrachopus ichnofossils isn't just that they belonged to croc relatives, but they belonged to croc relatives that were doing weird stuff. Generally speaking, bipedality in Crurotarsians was common during the Triassic as that Archosaur lineage was diversifying to various niches and developing numerous body plans that would be revisited by their dinosaurian kin. By the time of the extinction at the end of the Triassic, the only groups to survive were either aquatic predators or terrestrial, opportunistic quadrupeds. The idea of a bipedal species to appear so late in the Mesozoic, let alone a sizeable species, is a surprise not only because such locomotion was thought to have been lost around 90 million years prior, but that the conditions were exceptional enough for these animals to be formidable predators. The question now becomes were these som relic from a Triassic ghost lineage or a weird member off the Neosuchian class? Hopefully there are fossils from the site that can shed light on this mystery.
36:56 Yes and I can Imagine something even scarier. 1000 Humboldt Squids flashing like a christmas tree while establishing your direct connection to heavens WiFi.
Whaaaaat
And whats worse, they are still alive
The genuine excitement I felt when I saw this. I just worked 3 12’s in a row and I need something to relax to. Thank you for all the fun facts I get to tell my residents😁💖
Dude! You're giving the wasps a bad name. The paper wasps that build large nests & are aggressive aren't cool. I have some Mud Daubers in the back. They pick bugs out of my garden. They make cool nests out of mud. Normally it's just one nest stuck to a wall or rock. Found about 7-8 individual nests formed into a wasp apartment. They do stuff the little mud holes with paralyzed spiders & bugs. Then the larvae hatches, chubs the poor bugs & eventually breaks out of the tiny mud nest. It is kinda messed up that the paralyzed spiders & baby caterpillars get eaten.
I placed the nests on a table to show my nephew. Then realized that the wasps were reusing the mud nest apartments. After they've filled them up again, I'll move them to a more suitable location. These wasps are mostly solitary & don't bug people too much. They don't like getting watered with the garden though. They do keep bugs that eat my plants down.
A few months back, one wasp grabbed a caterpillar that was too big to fly with. Climbed a chair to take off from higher up. I was watching as the wasp had tried to climb my leg before it decided to go for just the chair. Then this anole comes out of nowhere. Runs & stops on my shoe. Then ninjas to the wall. Up the wall to the back of the chair. Wasp is still battling its lunch & unaware. The anole strikes!!! It grabbed the caterpillar from the wasp. Wasp hits the afterburners & gets out of there. Anole gives me the eye as it chomps its lunch.
The wasps put in a lot of work in the garden. Also have dragon fly perches out there. They eat a ton of mosquitoes. Everyone looked at me like I was crazy with all those sticks around the garden. Mosquito levels are down big time.
True! Thank you!
How did you manage to type out this comment with your tarsus', Mr. Wasp?
I'm curious, how do you manage their nests once they’re full?
@@thosebloodybadgers8499 Wasps are people too! 😂
@@AncientWildTV Just going to move the nests to a spot in the corner that's protected from the weather & not bothered by people very often.
Hi Lindsay. I just wanted you to know I have spent every one of my exam study breaks this week watching a part of this video. Thank you for the extremely high effort and quality content! This is the stuff that the internet should be.
26:53 Vamooo locooo, otra coronación de gloria. Argentina loves you Lindsay!!
Your scriptwriting was on point, this episode. Funny, engaging, and suited your "million miles an hour" style down to the ground.
Would heavily recommend looking into Basidomycete (Club Fungi) and Ascomycete (Bag Fungi) fungi. Specifically how they spread their spores differently, but it's also just a fun and interesting split in the fungi tree. The basic is that Ascomycete basically have all their in spores in bags that open up and that Basidomycetes use a mix of condensation and water tension to fucking sling shot their spores. That, the nematode nooses, and how they divide their cells given their 2 nuclei are probably the coolest things I know about those little weirdos
Heck yeah, heinous pterosaurs for the win!
Really, just disturbing and awesome stuff all around.
Great video!
I love how long this video is, please continue to make them this length or even longer. I can never get enough of this series.
I absolutely love thinking about a world without things that are ubiquitous today. Grass is such a perfect example.
in my heart I think more Americans would believe in evolution if the phrase "and then the scientist hit the fucking jackpot" showed up every 20 pages or so.
In my heart europeans would grow their own military so we could affors to take care of our own medical and educational care ❤
Why Americans specifically?
@@alexism9656 The US seems to be the only place that evolution is considered controversial by significant amounts of people. Even the Pope believes in evolution.
@@Mrtheunnameable oh, i'm american and i didn't know there were places where it wasn't controversial 🥲
@@Mrtheunnameable that sounds like a lot of assuming though. I'm sure a lot of places in the world, especially less advanced places, also would prefer to believe that a god made all life.
Ahh, drunk n stoned on a Sunday You're the best Lindsay.
Seems to be funnier when you have intoxicants in your system.
@@redheadedviking9415 that's what you think until you give sobriety a try ❤
12:44 missed opportunity to say thank you very mush
"And they sound like a mix of Creed and Rezz... and they're terrible" had me dying. Also Rezz mentioned!
I've been reading 'The Rise and Reign of Mammals' and it turns out there were a BUNCH of really cool mammals around and despite being small they were really diverse in their ecologies and diets
I love that book!!!!!! I think the author is working on one about birds 👀 I cannot wait
A UA-cam zoologist at 4:53 : "Flowers are nuts!"
Every botanist watching: "Wait, what? No they ain't!"
Pfff
Man I’m a baked potato right now and opened UA-cam to this ☺️🥹☺️
Rhinconichthyyyss nuuuuttzzz!!!
"rhinconichthys nuts"
S tier humor
Considering it's 2 am and I am positively stoned: "I was so high when I wrote that." Oh, how often have I said that sentence.
@Dudelzack the joke followed by that comment made me laugh so hard. It is so real. You look back and just, sigh.
@@Dudelzack I think that is applicable to everything I did from ages 17-32ish.
HA, GOTTEM!!!
@@BrokePencil Just turned 40, sounds so far away...
Just absolutely love this humble format. Saying "that we know of" is critcal language creators tend to leave out. So awesome!
Every time you post a new video it ends with me having a bunch of tabs open to look up more information about animals you mentioned. I love it.
Please collab with ExtinctZoo!!! He gathers some of the BEST paleo art ever, period!!
Love the long video. And the dancing with your kitty at the end. Always look forward to your content
Don't forget that the kitty is 3 feet long (not counting the tail) because Lindsay is actually 5'4" and we shouldn't ever question that.
length is perfect! QUEEN
I love how Gian edits the videos, makes me laugh even harder. These videos are beyond my favorites
Honestly, love your videos and this length is IMHO quite right. After all, there´s a lot to talk about! I think as a general rule (and it seems quite logical too) the closer we get to the present, the more detailed and complete the fossil record and the knowledge regarding them gets, so of course you have more things to say. Trying to parse among all the information to make an interesting video out of it while not getting excessively long is hard work! Kudos!
A new Lindsay and Milo video on the same day? Woohoo!!!🎉🥳🥳🎉🎃🍁🍁😊❤️❤️
Another very interesting video! Thanks Lindsay 😊❤
"'¿Cuántos Sauropodos tenés?" XD This was such a good video. Thank you for all the effort and time you put in all your videos 💜 You're awesome.
this series carrying my year so far
Aww, I miss Missoula. I grew up in Polson, and Missoo-town was where we did our big school shopping as a kid. I really liked eating at HuHot when I visited.
Also, (warning, will be talking about dead human bodies) for my job I transport the dead. Sometimes, I get to pick them up from an organ/tissue donation place after they collect from the deceased donors. Often times, their bones have been removed. When I arrive for pick up, I hear Lindsay's voice yelling in my head, "THIS IS A NO BONEZ ZOOOONE". So, thanks for that.
6:14 Truth is that they didn’t AFFECT each other, they FECT each other, quite literally.
YOU FINALLY GOT KELLIE TYSM LINDSAY YOU HAVE NOO IDEA HOW HAPPY IAM RN
I'm so happy I discovered your channel. I really enjoy your videos! I love how excited you are about zoology and biology, it's like science class with Jenna Marbles vibes ☺️💗🙌
The whole Cretaceous Period was simply nightmarish. Giant Azhdarchids are to me the most heinous creatures of them all. An animal as tall as a giraffe, with a beak longer than a grown man, with a wingspan larger than a F-35 fighter jet and potentially with the same attitude as a pelican.
Even as an Australian dealing with the standard nonsense that comes with living here, that’s a step to far nature. No thanks. Absolutely heinous!
I love the Morrosaurus, very excited to see it on the list! They're relatively newly discovered. They weren't discovered in Argentina they were discovered on James Ross Island, Antarctica. They were discovered by a group of Argentinian palentologists. Thought some people might be interested. There's a surprising number of dinosaurs discovered in Antarctica, and there's sure to be much more it's just not possible to do digs in most of the continent
when i was little i had a passion for dinosaurs and since i have drifted from it but watching this series has made me re-spark that passion not just for dinosaurs but for prehistoric life
Augustinolophus Morrisi, state dinosaur of California, not mentioned among your hadrosaurs?! *sigh* Well, you were correct that there are just too many to get though. Well done.
Misspelled "Augustynolophus."
Flower Power Time is what I'm calling it from now on.
5:55 -The joy you musy have felt when you rwlaized you were saying "-sperm explosion." Your professional expeession is vettayed by your wildlry exciteded arm movements. Not many get to utter phrasing like that without consequence. 💛
Yours are some of the few long videos that I actually can watch, simply because I'm so mesmerized by it I can't stop watching.
Despite your fast speech and insertion of other video fragments for humor, I have no problem in understanding what you're saying and your videos move in an easy to follow flow. Thank you for presenting biology in a clear, concise, and even fun way.
28:35 ah, yes, most people don't know, but the modern domesticated pancakes lacks the slender jaws and pointed teeth of their ancestors. This is thanks to John Pancake who bred the modern flapjack from the wild variety in the 19th century
I’m pretty high while watching this and I’m absolutely loving it.
You know her shows good when you sober too .. 😅 who woulda thought
@@bubblingbubztheklown5902 yes but looking at the WRETCHED pterosaurs while she was silent is too harsh of a reality. I do NOT want to live on the same planet as Quetzalcoatlus and I can pretend like he’s the hat man.
I may have misspelled him but he doesn’t deserve to be respected like that
This premiers on my lunch you are the best dinosaur professor
Hi Lindsay! I often get overwhelmed by our world's recent horrifying events like wars everywhere, people dying for nothing, economy failure, existentialism, and for me it often leads to dissociation, depression and lots of anxiety, which is absolutely not pretty. But i just watched this video and i thought. Why do people want to do all of this instead of studying their land, learning about life on earth, our past heritage? Isn't it so interesting and exciting? Isn't this what really matters, and not creating more sacrifice and fossil record, of us, people who are all one kind?...
Anyway, i just wanted to thank you, and all the people that work with you, and help you, for everything you do. It is magical. Your content is one of the few things that truly brings me happiness and relief, and it helps me feel like i can be one with nature again. Thank you, Lindsay ❤ really, truly, thank you.
And i love longer video format, the more information the merrier!! Learning with you is hella fun
Man i love how the eagle shark looks. Also Ankylosaurus, patagotitan huinculensis and Therizinosaurus are best dinosaurs from this period in my humble opinion.
19:42 petition for a whole video of stoned Lindsay rambling about whatever the hell she wants to. I think that could fix me...
Imagine being a pterasaur.. and being hit midair.. burnt alive dying instantly by a oversized rock..
12:29 Cooking with Lindsay
does anyone else here play path of titans? cause when lindsay talked about psittacosaurus, kapro, conca, sarco, deino and other kind of niche extinct creatures, i get kind of excited. im like "i know them!" idk prolly dumb but still.