I've met people who thought that the big bang, the meteorite impact that wiped out the dinosaurs, and the separation of the continents that made up pangea were all the same event, so...
Yes, but it's also clear that modern birds and dinosaurs are more closely related to each other than Dimetrodon is to modern day mammals, so much so that modern day birds are currently classified as dinosaurs, just as a lower classification of the overall group. This is especially clear when you see that prehistoric birds already existed at the time when other classifications of dinosaurs were still running around, and I'm not just talking about animals had dinosaurian teeth but also had feathers, by as early as the Jurassic you had bird species capable of flight and that showed distinctive features like beaks. You also had birds evolving to fit specific niches that made them more distinct than just arboreal feathered dinosaurs that learned how to glide or had the ability of powered flight. You had birds that lived in the forests, the coasts, and even sea birds that could not fly but swam through the water like horrifying monster penguins (hesperornis if you are wondering, a 6 foot tall sea bird with teeth that swam in the cretaceous oceans).
soylentgreenb Clade ornithodira/avemetatarsalia begs to differ. That said, as a highly derived branch, saying that pterosaurs are "stem birds" is fairly inaccurate. So, a little right, a little wrong.
I am stunned. What is wrong with you people?? I read all the comments. Where are insults? Where are the diatribes of ignorance?? Where is the intolerance of disagreement??? Very odd. Very refreshing.
Dimetrodon lived around 295-272 million years ago, when earths continental mass was assembled and formed "pangea". It might be worth mentioning when talking about the geographical spread of this animal and the biomes it lived in. 4:29 Love the work you do! Keep it up Eons!
Use maps of the time era so that way we have more information on where they were found today and where they most likely lived on their continent of their time
Mongis Lort That extinction event, the Quaternary or Holocene extinction, already started a few thousand years ago with the rapid extinction of, most notably, most of the megafauna of most non-African continents. Of course it is full speed now, with species going extinct literally by the hour.
One thing I always found weird about Dimetrodon is how it and its main prey item share the exact same sail trait. Just one of those really strange phenomena in nature.
2:21 the emphasis on 'Oklahoma' in the way this is phrased contorts the meaning of the sentence to 'Dimetrodon made Oklahoma'. Brought a smile to my face.
William Webb 😳 Are you asking about ‘insects’ ? Bugs are a specific subset of them with tube mouths and no jaws. PS. You could try visiting a science museum or library for further information . . .
There's also the theory that about half of Dimetrodon's "sail" was actually covered by a sort of hump - similar to a rhino's heavy back that is also supported by sail-like elongations on its vertebrae. This would provide more space for powerful muscles to run down its prey.
SKy_the_Thunder But for what would these muscles have been useful, if larger animals like Sphenacodon apparently didn't need them? What if instead Dimetrodon used its hump for fat-storage?
There was another theory that the upper half of the hump was actually exposed bone, because sail-injuries would probably be deadly if they had a membrane, while the exposed broken bones would heal much easier.
Large hump of muscle, grizzly bears also have the same things and they are large predators. Though grizzly bears eat mostly plants, maybe dimetrodon was also happy to eat vegetable matter every no and then. It's not too unlikely, wolves eat berries and leopards will eat grapes and melons
But how did they deal with the torsional forces that the sail (membrane or no) could cause on the spine? Twisting a single vertebra can't be good. Most muscle-based vertebra extensions are focused close to the shoulders (for quadupeds) not the centre of the back - as I believe dimetrodon's was, though maybe this could be explained by it's not-quite mammal & not-quite lizard gait.
Ooh, I love the freaky Permian creatures. Mainly BECAUSE they were so weird--when you look at them, your brain tries to tell you (for example) "lizard" and "dog" at the same time, and eventually leaks out your ears. We humans don't do so well with almosts and in-betweens, we like to just (snaps fingers) put things we look at in a definitive little box. And it's so cool to think that these weird things were actually our direct ancestors. I'm also fascinated with creatures of this period because (a) you hear far less about them than other prehistoric creatures (so...what, I'm a paleobiology hipster? "Dinosaurs? Cenozoic mammals? Pff, I'm into synapsids these days. You've probably never heard of them.") but seriously, the fact that we DON'T hear about them so much makes them more interesting and (b) ...the fact that their story had such a tragic end. The Permian-Triassic extinction took away WAY more diversity than any of the other major disasters on Earth, and it was probably caused by something from within the planet itself, rather than a meteor from space...which makes it even scarier. Brrr. And I think we're all kind of suckers for a good Impending Doom story. And if you think about it, these guys are kind of _our_ "dinosaurs". Like, just as the bird-like reptiles (dinosaurs) aren't around anymore but their true bird descendants are, the "mammal-like reptiles" are completely gone but we have true mammals. Like that. Both in-between versions are now all dead (unless you count large scary flightless birds or platypuses), but were fascinating while they were here.
I'm all for you being into Permian creatures. They are thoroughly awesome. Out of curiosity, are you aware of pseudosuchians? If you are, awesome. If you aren't, definitely learn something new and cool.
This episode made me more emotional than I expected. It's like I was watching a video of my grandfather growing up, or something like that. Maybe it was the sentimental, atmospheric music.
Hank, huge fan. I've always wanted to figure out what is known is about the evolutionary process of when mammals stopped laying eggs and began giving birth. My main question is how quickly did this change occur. How would an animal I'm the middle of that long transition give birth. Would love to hear you discuss this.
So glad I found this channel. It’s great to see that there are people who are interested in evolution who can explain the topic in a correct and simple way. These synapsids are more interesting than the dinosaurs because some of them could be the early ancestors of the mammals. I subscribed to your channel, thanks for making these educational videos.
By recent researches, his spin was not like sail - upper half was naked, spikes on spine, that often went broke by accidents/defence. And other half was covered by muscles (look at Rhino's skeleton for example) and fat on top of that (to collect energy).
Lay-z Alburrito no it’s not lit if it was it would die even though it did die it wasn’t by being lit on fire and even if it did then I wouldn’t even say because it would be very sad
I've been enjoying this show so much! I would love to learn more about early mammal evolution! Where do marsupials and animals like platypuses and echidnas fit in?
do should do an episode on the evolution of venom and toxins as hunting and defense mechanisms, like how for decades we thought komodo dragons had septic bites, until someone did the testing and found out they had venoms mixed in the bacterial soup.
I love seeing things about dimetrodon. I was assigned the Permian period in my 7th grade science class and chose to highlight dimetrodon. I don’t remember anything I wrote about it because there just wasn’t much info available about them online in 2003/2004. I was also assigned Pluto...shortly before its status was downgraded lol.
Terror Birds. Definitely an episode about Terror Birds.
6 років тому+3
oh yes, it is a very interesting case of convergent evolution which almost borders on reincarnation as terror bird hunting styles almost seem like an improvement on what tyrannosaurs perfected. I would love to see a terror bird discussion.
I have always loved Dimetrodon. :) One of the first "dinosaurs" I knew the name of. And yes, I actually knew it wasn't a dinosaur. I was very proud of that fact as a kid.
I always enjoy a good bask in the morning sun, maybe it's a distant primal memory of the quick solar sail fin warm up - followed by running about biting meaty chonks out of all the other animals who were not early risers. Maybe that why why we still say stuff like "Don't skip breakfast, it's the most important meal of the day . . . " : )
Episode ideas: Placorderms: how do they relate to the surviving lineages? Why did they come to be/die out, etc) Therizinosaurs: what can I say, I find the pot-bellied turkeys hilarious) tiny theropod arms Trees and lignin: how a single organic compound became so successful and so abundant and why is it so hard to digest? I'm sure there are others but those are a good start
Infernoraptor Evidence is accumulating that a species of placoderm was actually the ancestor of all jawed fish that live today (and consequently of all tetrapods). So technically placoderms aren't extinct, because we are their descendants.
That's the first i'd heard of that hypothesis. Interesting, but that's not to say an episode about them wouldn't be interesting. Plus, what you are saying is somewhat odd. If placoderms, which definitely had true bones, are the ancestors of all gnathostomes, does that mean chondrichthyans evolved from bony fish or did jaws evolve twice?
Yes, I have a question. Is it true that an expedition to an unknown mountain region in the artics lead by Professor Lake bored to a discovery of strange creatures whose bodies were shaped like barrels, heads were shaped like starfish with 5 eyes, and strange tentacles for feet? Apparently, they date back to the pre-Cambrian era. That's apparently in the Arkham newspaper, but who knows it could just be mountain madness. :)
Let's keep it simple. The Dimetrodon sail was..... a sail. 1. The sail would be used to help it cross wide rivers. Catching the wind and tacking its way across. 2. Female Dimetrodons would select her mate from the winners of sailing races that would take place every Thursday in local lake, with the females lounging on the beach, giggling and talking about the size of the male's sails. Yes, the Dimetrodon was definitely ahead of its time.
You know you're a nerd when you get excited knowing there's more Eons videos for you to catch up on Also I think Hank covered dimetrodon not being a dinosaur in his other channel SciShow I remember that was my first video and it was like 10 minutes long ... ahh memories
Me: "Wow, this video is really interesting and educational. I wonder what is next on the Recommended page..." *Why Starscream Can Never Die by Transformers Facts*
I still remember when I was little and everyone tried to tell kids that the dimetrodon lived with the dinosaurs. Which they didn’t. They lived LONG before technical dinosaurs lived
I saw a lecture by the Paleontologist Bob Barker about Dimetrodons bite efficiency. It showed how the relatively more efficient bite of mammals was already in Dimetrodon and the other stem-mammals. Which was the exact opposite of what Barker said he learned at Harvard, where the accepted theory was bite efficiency evolved over time and mammals bite efficiency was relatively newer thing. But the part Barker left out and no one in the audience brought up was what that bite efficiency meant. That the late Permian competition amongst the stem-mammals must have been incredible. Either from environmental pressures or from competing members of other species or just other Dimetrodons. That also starts to give a picture of the late Permian and perhaps the reason for the sail on Dimetrodons back. Barker is a big believer that the sail on Dimetrodons back was a sexual display, which the efficiency of its bite lends credence to this. Since if evolutionary pressures were so great that Dimetrodon developed that efficiency of bite, and we know most Dimetrodon fossils are missing tails and those tails seem to have bitten off by other Dimetrodons. Now it may have been opportunistic scavenging, but it might be something else. That pressures on Dimetrodon were so intense, that it also manifested in mating habits. That sexiual displays like the fin and possibly killing rivals in fights (because so many Dimetrodon fossils are missing tails might mean, it was the most deadly among male Dimetrodons than most animals before or since) to the death were common, especially if Dimetrodon females were very choosing about their mates or if a harem system existed where a dominant Dimetrodon male had a harem and only lost it when a younger or more powerful male killed him. Since again evolutionary pressures were so high on Dimetrodon that mating opportunities were hard to come and fought for regularly if not always to the death.
In your videos, like this one, you sometimes state that while these animals or others are related to humans, they are not our direct ancestors. Instead we share a common relative. Is there a list of species from which we know humans directly descend, irrespective of how far in the past? I didn't have much luck simply googling this. Thanks!
In short, yes, long windedly, yes but it's a very fragmented pathway. Because the fossil record can actually Never be 100% complete there's direct lineages we can never trace because the fossils just aren't there and going back further and further direct lineages are harder to define, more so we know that because we have these traits and these hyper ancient fossils also show it, these fossils are a distant ancestor of all mammals. Like we don't know what the first actual hominid is we only know what the earliest fossil hominid we've found is and I think I've seen videos that say that the earliest know hominids aren't even direct ancestors to us just cousins.
The sail was obviously used to tell time. Functioning as a crude sun dial, the sail allowed the Dimetrodon to coordinate events and indicate impatience by looking at the sail every few moments while high walking about.
I'm interested in the primordial soup stage. Rapid diversification after the mass extinction events would be cool. Another goodie would be the branch leading to marsupials and the apparent convergent evolution where they filled the same roles as other mammals. Apparently horseshoe habitat species, where the ends of the horseshoe don't interbreed, is a classic topic in evolution of life as well. It's another way to go into species diverging. The middle of the horseshoe getting knocked out basically turns one species into two separate species.
Thanks for the great video. I have a question that I've been unable to answer with mulltiple searches and hoped you can help. What was the population size of these different species? And as we get closer to our time, what is the possibility that an early primate fossil we unearth is a direct ancestor of a random person today? To me it's fascinating and humbling...
I've stuck a picture of one on my mirror so I can spot the similarities. I think we're very alike around the eyes... Especially in the mornings. Love these snippets of deep history, eon day at a time 😉 K x
Missed out on mentioning the evolution of a single jawbone for the placement of lower teeth, the migration of other jawbones to what become the bones in the ears for improved hearing for hunting & detection & evasion of predators, and the formation of palate to separate the nasal cavity from the mouth so that we can breathe as we chew out foods
That's really cool! I think that one of those creatures (maybe not Dimetrodon) eventually became people. But it is very interesting to think that maybe even such an animal like Dimetrodon is my grandfather from millions of years ago!
"... you might see a little bit of yourself."
*smiles as a sail raises from inside my shirt*
Lmao
Is that your sail or are you just happy to see me
are you a Spinosaurus
@@tylerjones7592 watch the video
@@tylerjones7592 did you watch the video
Awwwwwwwwwww, it's our great great great²⁰·⁰⁰⁰·⁰⁰⁰ *grandma* !
your granma²⁰·⁰⁰⁰·⁰⁰⁰'s ugly bro.
Great-Aunt Dimetrodon! (according to Minute Earth) :)
20 million generations, I think.
looking at my dry skin. I can see why we are related. wish we have more ability like them.
When dry, our skin really looks a very reptilien.
Grandpa is that you
Damn 😂😂😂😂
No, because it's not our ancestor, it's a relative of our ancestors but not exactly our ancestors.
your pfp scares me
Looks like mine. Scaly bastard, he was. Hands like a lizard.
Oh God i-🤣😭💀💀
Someone told me I was stupid because I said dimetrodon wasn't a dinosaur.
100chocobo You were most certainly right! Show 'em this. ;-)
I've met people who thought that the big bang, the meteorite impact that wiped out the dinosaurs, and the separation of the continents that made up pangea were all the same event, so...
Vigilant Sycamore ..And it all happened no more than 5,000 years ago.
100chocobo let them be stupid, you know the truth by yourself
OR
why not educate people like this video does ?
If non-mammalian synapsids can be called stem-mammals, can dinosaurs be called stem-birds?
Yes, as can pterosaurs.
JuneeThylacine That's weird (btw, nice name)
Pterosaurs are absolutely not related to birds.
Yes, but it's also clear that modern birds and dinosaurs are more closely related to each other than Dimetrodon is to modern day mammals, so much so that modern day birds are currently classified as dinosaurs, just as a lower classification of the overall group. This is especially clear when you see that prehistoric birds already existed at the time when other classifications of dinosaurs were still running around, and I'm not just talking about animals had dinosaurian teeth but also had feathers, by as early as the Jurassic you had bird species capable of flight and that showed distinctive features like beaks.
You also had birds evolving to fit specific niches that made them more distinct than just arboreal feathered dinosaurs that learned how to glide or had the ability of powered flight. You had birds that lived in the forests, the coasts, and even sea birds that could not fly but swam through the water like horrifying monster penguins (hesperornis if you are wondering, a 6 foot tall sea bird with teeth that swam in the cretaceous oceans).
soylentgreenb Clade ornithodira/avemetatarsalia begs to differ. That said, as a highly derived branch, saying that pterosaurs are "stem birds" is fairly inaccurate. So, a little right, a little wrong.
I just found this channel and I'm so happy that I did.
Dodo Bird same I am sure to sub to these guys
Go back to bein extinct dodo bird.
Dodo Bird
same
Ssme
Same
"These kids and their 2 legs. Back in my day, we had to walk on 4 legs and had fancy looking sails on our backs."
Stem-mammal strut sounds like a gimmicky dance from the 90s
It sounds 90s AND naughty.
"You and me baby ain't nothin' but stem mammals ..."
Stray cats lesser known hit.
This comment brought to you by r/rareinsults
@@greenninjaihyt5461 how is that an insult?
"When you think about life before the dinosaurs"
...bacteria?
"Dimetrodons!"
...oh.. that's not a dinosaur? *grabs popcorn*
I am stunned. What is wrong with you people?? I read all the comments.
Where are insults? Where are the diatribes of ignorance?? Where is the intolerance of disagreement???
Very odd.
Very refreshing.
Craig Dillon I think its because we are all curious nerds lol.
Keep scrolling.
Because this page serves things which are tougher for ignorant people
Harl garl snarble wunf? Growl hiss roar! Incoherent prejudices hatred!
Does that seem more familiar?
Craig Dillon you’re looking for the cardi-B and lil pump channel. They’re two icons down.
This is for studying more advanced life forms than those.
Dimetrodon lived around 295-272 million years ago, when earths continental mass was assembled and formed "pangea". It might be worth mentioning when talking about the geographical spread of this animal and the biomes it lived in. 4:29
Love the work you do! Keep it up Eons!
I have loved Dimetrodon all my memorable life. I can sometimes see in my minds eye Dimetrodon running after it's prey using the stride of an iguana.
YOu forgot to mention that if you upgrade their melee, then they can act as pretty decent air-conditioners. You welcome
Nice ark reference
Lol underrated
Wait, I’m supposed to be upgrading their melee?
What
yeah, saves engram points for other stuff
Use maps of the time era so that way we have more information on where they were found today and where they most likely lived on their continent of their time
Oh, they used the time era map... the map of the Victorian Era. For whatever reason.
@@martinmortyry7444 it would be pretty funny to see big lizards with back sails running around Victorian castle hallways
Duh dinosaurs didn't have maps back then.
“And these are my grandparents, about a million or so times removed.”
Grandparents aren’t removed
@@Asdf-wf6en they are from life
@@MasterGX oooooooooooo
I love this new series!!! 10/10!
Can you do one going over all the extinction events?
There is one extinction event right around the corner, so they should wait a little longer to include it
Mongis Lort That extinction event, the Quaternary or Holocene extinction, already started a few thousand years ago with the rapid extinction of, most notably, most of the megafauna of most non-African continents. Of course it is full speed now, with species going extinct literally by the hour.
Marxist Alpha
Let's kill ourselves, that should save the planet
jarrett p All six of them please!
One thing I always found weird about Dimetrodon is how it and its main prey item share the exact same sail trait. Just one of those really strange phenomena in nature.
maybe it disguised itself as its prey
"there is 1 dimetrodon among us"
"sus"
2:21 the emphasis on 'Oklahoma' in the way this is phrased contorts the meaning of the sentence to 'Dimetrodon made Oklahoma'.
Brought a smile to my face.
How long did bugs have free reign of the skies before the first vertebrate flyers took to wing?
+
@William Webb
I'd say about 70 to 80 million years.
William Webb 238 million years ago
A long time before that.
William Webb 😳 Are you asking about ‘insects’ ? Bugs are a specific subset of them with tube mouths and no jaws. PS. You could try visiting a science museum or library for further information . . .
There's also the theory that about half of Dimetrodon's "sail" was actually covered by a sort of hump - similar to a rhino's heavy back that is also supported by sail-like elongations on its vertebrae. This would provide more space for powerful muscles to run down its prey.
SKy_the_Thunder But for what would these muscles have been useful, if larger animals like Sphenacodon apparently didn't need them? What if instead Dimetrodon used its hump for fat-storage?
There was another theory that the upper half of the hump was actually exposed bone, because sail-injuries would probably be deadly if they had a membrane, while the exposed broken bones would heal much easier.
Seems similar to Bison and Buffalo.
Large hump of muscle, grizzly bears also have the same things and they are large predators. Though grizzly bears eat mostly plants, maybe dimetrodon was also happy to eat vegetable matter every no and then. It's not too unlikely, wolves eat berries and leopards will eat grapes and melons
But how did they deal with the torsional forces that the sail (membrane or no) could cause on the spine? Twisting a single vertebra can't be good. Most muscle-based vertebra extensions are focused close to the shoulders (for quadupeds) not the centre of the back - as I believe dimetrodon's was, though maybe this could be explained by it's not-quite mammal & not-quite lizard gait.
I loved studying Earth history. This channel is so refreshing to me. Keep it up guys, please. I can't wait to share this with people as dorky as me.
We are NOT Dorks! ......We are Orks! nanoo nanoo, Shazbot!
My son would love one on the placoderms (esp dunkleosteus). We're LOVING these-- thank you so much! He asks every AM if there's a new one 😊
Ooh, I love the freaky Permian creatures. Mainly BECAUSE they were so weird--when you look at them, your brain tries to tell you (for example) "lizard" and "dog" at the same time, and eventually leaks out your ears. We humans don't do so well with almosts and in-betweens, we like to just (snaps fingers) put things we look at in a definitive little box. And it's so cool to think that these weird things were actually our direct ancestors.
I'm also fascinated with creatures of this period because (a) you hear far less about them than other prehistoric creatures (so...what, I'm a paleobiology hipster? "Dinosaurs? Cenozoic mammals? Pff, I'm into synapsids these days. You've probably never heard of them.") but seriously, the fact that we DON'T hear about them so much makes them more interesting and (b) ...the fact that their story had such a tragic end.
The Permian-Triassic extinction took away WAY more diversity than any of the other major disasters on Earth, and it was probably caused by something from within the planet itself, rather than a meteor from space...which makes it even scarier. Brrr. And I think we're all kind of suckers for a good Impending Doom story.
And if you think about it, these guys are kind of _our_ "dinosaurs". Like, just as the bird-like reptiles (dinosaurs) aren't around anymore but their true bird descendants are, the "mammal-like reptiles" are completely gone but we have true mammals. Like that. Both in-between versions are now all dead (unless you count large scary flightless birds or platypuses), but were fascinating while they were here.
I'm all for you being into Permian creatures. They are thoroughly awesome. Out of curiosity, are you aware of pseudosuchians? If you are, awesome. If you aren't, definitely learn something new and cool.
We are all but children of lizard-dogs
Look at Scutosaurus it's technically a Turtle.
My mind is now consumed with images of Dimetrodon poodle-strutting about, looking absolutely fabulous.
An episode on flowering plants and their relationship with pollinators would be great
This episode made me more emotional than I expected. It's like I was watching a video of my grandfather growing up, or something like that. Maybe it was the sentimental, atmospheric music.
Me: "Hey guys meet my grandfather, couple million years removed."
My sister: "Try a couple _species_ removed."
I understood that reference
@@SitInTheShayd
Dinosaur 2000
Just saw that movie the other day lol
Dear Hank, this episode was beautiful, thank you.
Hank, huge fan. I've always wanted to figure out what is known is about the evolutionary process of when mammals stopped laying eggs and began giving birth. My main question is how quickly did this change occur. How would an animal I'm the middle of that long transition give birth. Would love to hear you discuss this.
Eons has a video on this if you’re still interested (:
@@leeleaman8057 thanks! I have seen it since posting this comment.
So glad I found this channel. It’s great to see that there are people who are interested in evolution who can explain the topic in a correct and simple way. These synapsids are more interesting than the dinosaurs because some of them could be the early ancestors of the mammals. I subscribed to your channel, thanks for making these educational videos.
By recent researches, his spin was not like sail - upper half was naked, spikes on spine, that often went broke by accidents/defence. And other half was covered by muscles (look at Rhino's skeleton for example) and fat on top of that (to collect energy).
I am always delighted when people teach about the pre-Triassic past. Dinosaurs are great, but there is so much cool stuff from even earlier.
Dimetrodon is lit👌
Big AL Yeah, it is!
Lay-z Alburrito no it’s not lit if it was it would die even though it did die it wasn’t by being lit on fire and even if it did then I wouldn’t even say because it would be very sad
doge_ It was lit
When it was going extinct.
@@galil5386 I sense your IQ is getting lower every year by your litterations being ignored by jokes.
@@galil5386 dumbass
That was a very well made video. I mentioned Dimetrodon on Quora and I fancied watching a video about him. This video was great. Going to subscribe
So many great shows you are in (or have a hand into) and so many responsibilities which leaves me so little time to watch them awesome work.
I forgot all about this one!! Ty for this,I was mesmerized by this creature in my school days
Thank you for this ! My heart and brain are smiling , I love dimetrodon.
Thanks for putting the ad at the end
Dimetrodon is one of mine favorite creaturs
The Script in this video is incredible. The music is great. This video is one of production quality out of UA-cam.
Earliest I've ever been to an Eons episode. Great job, I love this channel!
I am absolutely addicted to this channel!!!!
i f'ing love the music in this. makes me feel focused/productive
I've been enjoying this show so much! I would love to learn more about early mammal evolution! Where do marsupials and animals like platypuses and echidnas fit in?
I am loving this series! Consistently fascinating and well presented.
Dimetrodon is one of my favorite ancient animals. So many thanks for this video. I take it that we re related but provably not direct descendants.
Juveniles' sail grow faster than their bodies
The sail could've been used to attract mates
Confirmed Dimetrodon went through puberty lolz
I'm loving the new music you are using!
Does anyone else really love his voice and like want a playlist of just the videos he does. Just me ok cool
This is my new favorite channel! I wish you guys would put out more than one video a week.
do should do an episode on the evolution of venom and toxins as hunting and defense mechanisms, like how for decades we thought komodo dragons had septic bites, until someone did the testing and found out they had venoms mixed in the bacterial soup.
I love seeing things about dimetrodon. I was assigned the Permian period in my 7th grade science class and chose to highlight dimetrodon. I don’t remember anything I wrote about it because there just wasn’t much info available about them online in 2003/2004. I was also assigned Pluto...shortly before its status was downgraded lol.
Terror Birds. Definitely an episode about Terror Birds.
oh yes, it is a very interesting case of convergent evolution which almost borders on reincarnation as terror bird hunting styles almost seem like an improvement on what tyrannosaurs perfected. I would love to see a terror bird discussion.
Happens most women every month.
Such an amazing channel, thank you!
I have always loved Dimetrodon. :) One of the first "dinosaurs" I knew the name of. And yes, I actually knew it wasn't a dinosaur. I was very proud of that fact as a kid.
This is one of my favorite videos on this channel
''Stem mammal strut'' is a term that deserves to be used more often
After hearing that I can’t stop imagining a dimetrodon walking on a runway in a fashion show lol
I always enjoy a good bask in the morning sun, maybe it's a distant primal memory of the quick solar sail fin warm up - followed by running about biting meaty chonks out of all the other animals who were not early risers. Maybe that why why we still say stuff like "Don't skip breakfast, it's the most important meal of the day . . . " : )
Episode ideas:
Placorderms: how do they relate to the surviving lineages? Why did they come to be/die out, etc)
Therizinosaurs: what can I say, I find the pot-bellied turkeys hilarious)
tiny theropod arms
Trees and lignin: how a single organic compound became so successful and so abundant and why is it so hard to digest?
I'm sure there are others but those are a good start
Infernoraptor Evidence is accumulating that a species of placoderm was actually the ancestor of all jawed fish that live today (and consequently of all tetrapods). So technically placoderms aren't extinct, because we are their descendants.
That's the first i'd heard of that hypothesis. Interesting, but that's not to say an episode about them wouldn't be interesting. Plus, what you are saying is somewhat odd. If placoderms, which definitely had true bones, are the ancestors of all gnathostomes, does that mean chondrichthyans evolved from bony fish or did jaws evolve twice?
Infernoraptor I'm sorry, I looked it up again and you are right. Only bony fish evolved from placoderms.
Placoderms are the ancestors of all fish.
T. Rex arms were pretty strong.
Great video ! Dimetrodon was so cool, i imagine this awesome creature alive in our era...wow !
I love this new series & maybe for a new topic for a future episode maybe if you guys talked about T-Rex's size & weight range.
Okay the images of Beaver, Sabertooth, and then cheesin’ Hank really got me. 😂
I’m not huge on “science” in general but must admit this is a great channel.
I didn’t know about the Permian until 5 months ago, and I’m now discovering dimetrodon
I'd like to know what the latest research says about per-Cambrean life.
Missa Dixon I know quite a lot about pre-cambrian, more precisely Ediacaran, life. Got any questions?
Yes, I have a question. Is it true that an expedition to an unknown mountain region in the artics lead by Professor Lake bored to a discovery of strange creatures whose bodies were shaped like barrels, heads were shaped like starfish with 5 eyes, and strange tentacles for feet? Apparently, they date back to the pre-Cambrian era. That's apparently in the Arkham newspaper, but who knows it could just be mountain madness. :)
Unexpected Lovecraft
Mrvoid Pasta
The 'Pre-Cambrian Super-Eon', not the 'Pre-Cambrian Era'.
._. you have bested me. BUT CAN YOU HANDLE MY TENTACLES OF TORMENT?
Love this channel. Very informative and accurate, compared to most other dinosaur-related content on UA-cam.
A bit condescending but sure
@@ulfberht4431 Woah yeah I wrote that 4 years ago that is pretty condescending.
Let's keep it simple. The Dimetrodon sail was..... a sail.
1. The sail would be used to help it cross wide rivers. Catching the wind and tacking its way across.
2. Female Dimetrodons would select her mate from the winners of sailing races that would take place every Thursday in local lake, with the females lounging on the beach, giggling and talking about the size of the male's sails.
Yes, the Dimetrodon was definitely ahead of its time.
Amazing video as always, I love the illustrations!
Since I was little I’ve always thought Dimetrodon was cool !
😎❤️
This one has a great pace. Very energetic. and OMG, we're related to Dimetrodons....
And I thought dimetrodon was the ancestor of spinosaurus.....
Da Dragon Durp .....huh....
Da Dragon Durp well I used to think that dimetrodon was a species of spinosaurus so you’re smart by my standards
omfg XD
Crocoduck, before I saw this video I thought this thing was a dinosaur and I didn't know what is was called, so you're both doing better than me.
I used to think the same thing as a kid
I like the idea of the Dimetrodon being bouyant and using the sail for propulsion.
You know you're a nerd when you get excited knowing there's more Eons videos for you to catch up on
Also I think Hank covered dimetrodon not being a dinosaur in his other channel SciShow
I remember that was my first video and it was like 10 minutes long ... ahh memories
I will always like Dimetrodon. It's just the coolest animal ever.
Me: "Wow, this video is really interesting and educational. I wonder what is next on the Recommended page..."
*Why Starscream Can Never Die by Transformers Facts*
Starscream: literally dies all the time
Eons videos comments are the only ones where people actually discuss and not insult each other
Now I know where my aunt Agatha got her looks from!
I still remember when I was little and everyone tried to tell kids that the dimetrodon lived with the dinosaurs. Which they didn’t. They lived LONG before technical dinosaurs lived
Proto-doggo!
It's also our proto-grandma and grandpa
scientists be like, let's call this primus canis. Yes cool name we're awesome lol
(primus latin for proto, canis is latin for dog)
I saw a lecture by the Paleontologist Bob Barker about Dimetrodons bite efficiency. It showed how the relatively more efficient bite of mammals was already in Dimetrodon and the other stem-mammals. Which was the exact opposite of what Barker said he learned at Harvard, where the accepted theory was bite efficiency evolved over time and mammals bite efficiency was relatively newer thing. But the part Barker left out and no one in the audience brought up was what that bite efficiency meant. That the late Permian competition amongst the stem-mammals must have been incredible. Either from environmental pressures or from competing members of other species or just other Dimetrodons. That also starts to give a picture of the late Permian and perhaps the reason for the sail on Dimetrodons back. Barker is a big believer that the sail on Dimetrodons back was a sexual display, which the efficiency of its bite lends credence to this. Since if evolutionary pressures were so great that Dimetrodon developed that efficiency of bite, and we know most Dimetrodon fossils are missing tails and those tails seem to have bitten off by other Dimetrodons. Now it may have been opportunistic scavenging, but it might be something else. That pressures on Dimetrodon were so intense, that it also manifested in mating habits. That sexiual displays like the fin and possibly killing rivals in fights (because so many Dimetrodon fossils are missing tails might mean, it was the most deadly among male Dimetrodons than most animals before or since) to the death were common, especially if Dimetrodon females were very choosing about their mates or if a harem system existed where a dominant Dimetrodon male had a harem and only lost it when a younger or more powerful male killed him. Since again evolutionary pressures were so high on Dimetrodon that mating opportunities were hard to come and fought for regularly if not always to the death.
In your videos, like this one, you sometimes state that while these animals or others are related to humans, they are not our direct ancestors. Instead we share a common relative. Is there a list of species from which we know humans directly descend, irrespective of how far in the past? I didn't have much luck simply googling this. Thanks!
In short, yes, long windedly, yes but it's a very fragmented pathway. Because the fossil record can actually Never be 100% complete there's direct lineages we can never trace because the fossils just aren't there and going back further and further direct lineages are harder to define, more so we know that because we have these traits and these hyper ancient fossils also show it, these fossils are a distant ancestor of all mammals. Like we don't know what the first actual hominid is we only know what the earliest fossil hominid we've found is and I think I've seen videos that say that the earliest know hominids aren't even direct ancestors to us just cousins.
The sail was obviously used to tell time. Functioning as a crude sun dial, the sail allowed the Dimetrodon to coordinate events and indicate impatience by looking at the sail every few moments while high walking about.
Life is so beautiful, just the beauty of evolution am i right
Amazing video! I love this channel, always bound to learn something very interesting, it keeps me tuned in.
Could you please do a video on how turtles evolved?
ooz went down the drain into the sewer.
How? All the way down!
The sails are adaptations to be used as wind catches while the Dimetrodon rode logs and other floating masses out to sea.
and Dimetrodon remains my fave prehistoric animal.
I'm interested in the primordial soup stage. Rapid diversification after the mass extinction events would be cool. Another goodie would be the branch leading to marsupials and the apparent convergent evolution where they filled the same roles as other mammals. Apparently horseshoe habitat species, where the ends of the horseshoe don't interbreed, is a classic topic in evolution of life as well. It's another way to go into species diverging. The middle of the horseshoe getting knocked out basically turns one species into two separate species.
Thanks for the great video. I have a question that I've been unable to answer with mulltiple searches and hoped you can help. What was the population size of these different species? And as we get closer to our time, what is the possibility that an early primate fossil we unearth is a direct ancestor of a random person today? To me it's fascinating and humbling...
The perfect channel for people who love scientifically accurate facts on prehistoric organisms.
Giant sloth episode seconded! And mega-fauna for sure. And extinction events other than the much discussed dinosaur extinction asteroid theory.
So interesting. I remember as a kid buying a pack of plastic dinosaurs and Dimetrodon was in there. I thought they were dinosaurs.
I've heard there is exactly one creature that has survived intact since the (pre-)Cambrian. How about a video on long-term survivors?
Horse shoe crab?
I've stuck a picture of one on my mirror so I can spot the similarities. I think we're very alike around the eyes... Especially in the mornings.
Love these snippets of deep history, eon day at a time 😉 K x
I saw those turtles all the way down.
T B Skyen i love your videos ❤️ i hope you have a great day
Missed out on mentioning the evolution of a single jawbone for the placement of lower teeth, the migration of other jawbones to what become the bones in the ears for improved hearing for hunting & detection & evasion of predators, and the formation of palate to separate the nasal cavity from the mouth so that we can breathe as we chew out foods
That's really cool! I think that one of those creatures (maybe not Dimetrodon) eventually became people. But it is very interesting to think that maybe even such an animal like Dimetrodon is my grandfather from millions of years ago!
The music in these videos is so good!
you've mentioned the Permian extinction event (the great dying) many times in your episodes. You should do an episode about it.
Thank you , d!!