Ice Age Tier List (TierZoo Reaction)

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  • Опубліковано 30 вер 2024
  • The Ice Age animal tier list, as explained by TierZoo. It is confirmed that the Giant Deer is also known as the Irish Elk. As far as I have read, coyotes are not in Hawaii. Hawaiians, weigh in.
    Original Video: • The Ice Age Tier List
    Literary Recommendation:
    A Song of Ice and Fire Series by George R.R Martin:
    Book 1 (paperback): amzn.to/3ZRQt15
    Book 2 (paperback): amzn.to/3GWJont
    Book 3 (paperback): amzn.to/3D5mNUt
    Book 4 (paperback): amzn.to/3iWEKhd
    Book 5 (paperback): amzn.to/3Hmjgn6
    Dire Wolves relation to Jackals:
    www.nbcnews.co...
    Dire Wolves & Jackals: arstechnica.co...
    Dire Wolves, continued:
    www.nps.gov/ar...
    IG: @noprotocol_official
    Tik-Tok: @noprotocol_official
    Business only, please: noprotocol404@gmail.com
    Feel Free to drop a video recommendation via Instagram message!

КОМЕНТАРІ • 224

  • @CMF-qh1rw
    @CMF-qh1rw Рік тому +58

    Referring to mass extinctions as a "balance patch" is still my favorite thing about tier zoo.

    • @KaitouKaiju
      @KaitouKaiju Рік тому +5

      The game is about due for an update

  • @McKavian
    @McKavian Рік тому +124

    Wolly Mammoths were still around when they started building the pyramids in Egypt.

    • @Jiff321
      @Jiff321 Рік тому +13

      The Great pyramid *

    • @bombomos
      @bombomos Рік тому +3

      What???

    • @aeternavictrix7861
      @aeternavictrix7861 Рік тому +8

      Could it be possible we’re older then we think and our history had been lost?

    • @McKavian
      @McKavian Рік тому +8

      @@aeternavictrix7861 I read somewhere, a long time ago, that we are actually closer to 3023, not 2023, since calendars and record keeping were terrible for a long time.

    • @bendover9813
      @bendover9813 Рік тому +8

      @@McKavian That’s a veeeery basic version of the events, but record keeping wasn’t just terrible; it was ACTIVELY unreliable, and changed at the whim of the Pope for over a thousand years of European history.

  • @mattz459
    @mattz459 Рік тому +84

    I really enjoy your videos. Useful, insightful commentary, no long tangents and you even provide references to pique interests. Of course, no obnoxious introductions and everything is kept in context and on subject.
    You’re a diamond in the rough.

    • @jaipoh3965
      @jaipoh3965 Рік тому +6

      I agree, Matt.

    • @ordinarybear7037
      @ordinarybear7037 Рік тому

      try seeing the other story, of our Hi'Story........
      autodidactic might be better than msm info.
      machine de marly ??
      starforts ?? Starcities ??
      city maps of 1500 through to 1700, look at these engineering marvels that scale appears to show bigger systems exist beneath......... much of our cities go many layers DOWN...
      kind regards Legends

  • @jakewhite1760
    @jakewhite1760 Рік тому +49

    Yessss always excited for more Tierzoo reactions. Such an amazing channel with so few people reacting to it lol

    • @NoProtocol
      @NoProtocol  Рік тому +18

      I’m liking this channel so far!

    • @isaiasramirez8224
      @isaiasramirez8224 Рік тому +5

      I did not know about this channel but thanks to NP, I'll be binging this channel for the next few days 🤣

    • @ordinarybear7037
      @ordinarybear7037 Рік тому

      try : autodidactic or go deep with : archaix !!
      much has been HIDDEN.
      kind regards

    • @crowttubebot3075
      @crowttubebot3075 Рік тому +1

      Tier Zoo doesn't post much lately, but remains one of my favorites.

  • @kevinnorwood8782
    @kevinnorwood8782 Рік тому +24

    "This looks like an armadillo." That's cause they are. Glyptodonts are literally giant armadillos.
    Tier Zoo has a lot of really cool videos. Hope to see you react to more in the near future!

    • @ordinarybear7037
      @ordinarybear7037 Рік тому

      mega-fauna ..... moa bird giant example of species hunted near to extinction if you believe Ai media much has been edited.
      photos in 1800s show a different narrative.....
      kind regards

  • @traian2041
    @traian2041 Рік тому +10

    There were social cave bears in Europe, in the Carpathians. In Romania there is a cave where close to 100 bears died when during a storm the entrance caved in and they couldn't get out anymore. They were social animals that lived in packs apparently. A pack of bears is pretty much the most OP build there was.

  • @jordanchristeson2872
    @jordanchristeson2872 Рік тому +10

    The local museum here in Daytona Beach, FL has complete skeletons of both the Giant Ground Sloth and Glyptodon. The GGS stands at least 1.5 stories tall and the Glyptodon is like a bowling ball the size of a dinner table. Cool stuff!

  • @darklordofroses8406
    @darklordofroses8406 Рік тому +2

    Roughly a week ago, a small channel by the name of Charlie Cheon released a video that skyrocketed to more than 1M views. It's called "What are we doing to white people?" and it's incredibly reaction worthy. I would love for you to check it out.

  • @N7Nihlus
    @N7Nihlus Рік тому +13

    Love your channel, such a beautiful combination of eloquent dialogue and insightful commentary. I'm a big fan of the no nonsense introduction and the clear passion you show when learning and also sharing your own knowledge.
    Every video of yours helps me either refresh my memory or learn new things and i’m very thankful.

    • @ordinarybear7037
      @ordinarybear7037 Рік тому

      go search.. picture hunted giant 1800s !!
      A DIFFERENT PAST HID...
      kind regards

  • @jaykaufman9782
    @jaykaufman9782 Рік тому +7

    Tier Zoo is one of my favorite channels. Patrick Lacey's writing is some of the best on the internet, and his tongue-in-cheek style of expressing everything in gaming terms just works. It's not just a clever conceit. In matters of species' thriving or not, gaming terminology really does capture the "survival of the fittest."

  • @JoJoArci
    @JoJoArci Рік тому +3

    You’re very intelligent and beyond beautiful! Also, I gain an abundance of knowledge after every video you react to. Thanks and keep it up Love!❤️

  • @Jag0h
    @Jag0h Рік тому +5

    Loved the video! Hearing that old school runescape music will always bring me back to being a kid and exploring that world

    • @davidoriggan
      @davidoriggan Рік тому +1

      Holy crap I knew that sounded so familiar!

  • @granthill1760
    @granthill1760 Рік тому +2

    Before the colonization on North America, coyotes were only found from the west coast to the Rockies. The great plains was full of wolves and grizzlies making it impassable for the coyotes. Many of the coyotes found in where wolves went extinct are wolf/coyote hybrids making them larger and more dangerous.

  • @danielhurst8863
    @danielhurst8863 Рік тому +7

    Most deer lose their antlers every year, as do reindeer.
    Reindeer does also have antlers, and they lose them later in the year than the bucks. Only female reindeer still have antlers at Christmas time. Which is why the joke is that all of Santa's reindeer are female.
    Most of the antlers that are purchased as dog treats are dropped antlers. Another oddity, is that both sides don't drop at the same time, so one side will fall off, and it could be another week before the other side drops. This makes finding matched antlers much rarer, and they command a premium price, as they are used in many folk arts.

  • @socket_error1000
    @socket_error1000 Рік тому +1

    Antlers are shed, horns are permanent. Easy way to remember it.
    The only issue I have with blaming humans for the disappearance of all megafauna in North America is that humans were in Africa much longer than anyplace else and in much larger numbers and the megafauna there did just fine (until recently at least but that is another argument). African elephants are a serious threat to humans and I have a hard time imagining Mammoths running like scared cattle from a bunch of humans with pointy sticks and rocks when a single bull elephant in Africa will level a village if it feels threatened and young bulls regularly attack and kill people. These are not dumb animals either. They remember dangerous situations and will avoid them. So they would not make a habit of walking near cliffs if humans were always chucking boulders at them, lol. Unless we have reason to believe mammoths are the dumb gullible cousins of African elephants than it just does not fit the mold of how they would behave. Something else must be at play. Not to mention the giant wooly rhinoceros or Giant Bison, all who would not be a tamer version of their smaller cousins but rather bigger and scarier versions of animals that kill humans.
    We also have to consider that the American Bison thrived in NA and survived the ice age easily as well as contact with humans while being preyed on as a regular food source by North American natives for at least eight millennia after all the rest of these animals were long gone. While their larger cousin, the giant bison, an animal we know humans hunted because we have found kill sites, died off with all the rest of the megafauna. If humans were such terrifying hunters, hunting everything to extinction, then why did the smaller bison survive for so long after everything else was supposedly killed and eaten by the wasteful human hunters? It just doesn't add up.
    I am more inclined to think that other factors like climate and environmental change, disease, loss of specialized foods attributed more to the die offs of these animals than human predation. Loss of adequate grazing with the onset of climate change causing drought would affect the food supply of the largest animals first. Considering that we now know humans were in North America much longer than we previously thought and in contact with many of these animals for longer, it seems more likely they were utilizing them as a food source for a long, long, time and not over-hunting them. The megafaunas' final mortal blow may have come at the hands of the humans or not, but only after climate change had doomed them in North America as well as the megafauna in Northern Asia. The rather stable climate in Africa at the time would explain why the megafauna there survived despite the presence of humans.

  • @dragonfly.effect
    @dragonfly.effect Рік тому +1

    zoologist Lindsay Nikole recently did an "iceage iceberg" video that only partly overlaps TierZoo's: ua-cam.com/video/lZbQwM8WOVw/v-deo.html
    also geologist GeoGirl has a long playlist on history of the Earth that covers animal evolution as well as rocky stuff: ua-cam.com/play/PL69bBhmsrgfvxffzspQPyWJtvs20f8v7e.html
    this includes the recent iceage under "pleistocene & holocene epochs":
    ua-cam.com/video/-YGD4VcnKEQ/v-deo.html
    Stay Curious!

  • @ThePittsburghToddy
    @ThePittsburghToddy Рік тому +7

    I have read all five of that series. Here’s to hoping that the sixth edition comes before I pass. I love your channel!🖖🏼

    • @NoProtocol
      @NoProtocol  Рік тому +3

      I’m waiting on the sixth as well!!

    • @chriswhinery925
      @chriswhinery925 Рік тому

      Temper your expectations, it won't. At least it won't before G.R.R.M. dies, maybe they'll get someone else to finish it after he's gone. Most likely at some point he'll just declare that the show ending is canon and move on.

  • @Flastew
    @Flastew Рік тому +4

    It's cool how mammals really came into their own after the big die off blamed/caused by a meteor impact. Using game stats for these animals was fun and worked. Thanks for another great video.

  • @ravenward626
    @ravenward626 Рік тому +1

    Fun bit of trivia: due to climate changes in the north the habitat for Polar bears and Grizzly bears now overlap. There also ( iirc credible) reports of hybridized bears. No recollection if they were sterile or not.

  • @cadleo
    @cadleo Рік тому +1

    Quest for Fire is an excellent Ice Age, Early Human evolution movie that I think youd really like.

  • @ChicoMuya
    @ChicoMuya Рік тому

    Here is a video you might find interesting…. It’s called: “Evidence to rewrite history”. It’s on After Skool (UA-cam channel). It’s unbelievably fascinating. If you see this, please react to it!

  • @LeftUntilRight
    @LeftUntilRight Рік тому +2

    Clan of the cave bear. great book, i dont recall how many books in the series but thats the name of the 1st in a line of 4,5 maybe 6 books, worth looking into :)

  • @Algorythmfpv
    @Algorythmfpv Рік тому +2

    Yeah, it's crazy how many people don't know that deer shed their antlers. Elk, moose, and reindeer as well.

  • @honorelpk54
    @honorelpk54 Рік тому +1

    First here?

  • @billwhipple9039
    @billwhipple9039 Рік тому +1

    I'll be here for a lot of your videos but I will absolutely be here for every tierzoo video; love his shtick, lots of fun

  • @clicheguevara5282
    @clicheguevara5282 Рік тому

    The idea that humans wiped out all the ice age animals with spears is so absurdly ridiculous. Lmao
    I'm glad that archaeology is finally being forced to step away from this theory and address the Younger Dryas event.

  • @BigWolf130
    @BigWolf130 Рік тому +1

    Antlers have to be regrown every year while horns are typically permanent unless lost.

  • @KevinSigman
    @KevinSigman Рік тому

    Hi, new subscriber here. I don't know if you've checked out CGP Grey's UA-cam Channel, but I highly recommend that you do. If you liked Kurzgesagt ("In A Nutshell"), you'll probably like CGP Grey. He's another one of those informative edutainment channels. Love your channel so far, by the way. Keep up the great work!

  • @KarmasAB123
    @KarmasAB123 Рік тому

    I have a video suggestion: The Science Behind the Unproblematic Nature of the Capybara by Casual Geographic

  • @timhall5229
    @timhall5229 Рік тому

    I’ve lived my 71 years in Kentucky, but have done some traveling. I once visited the Brea Tar Pits in California. You would love the giant sloths! And the Saber Tooth Tigers.
    Love your channel and your intelligence, you are very gifted and well read. My Great Pyrenees Wendell loves you too. Regards from Kentucky 🐎.

  • @beneficent2557
    @beneficent2557 Рік тому

    If you like paleobiology, you might enjoy EDGE or Ben G Thomas' UA-cam Channels.

  • @towelcupphone
    @towelcupphone Рік тому

    This is conjecture, but it is likely true. George R R Martin was a writing professor at Clarke College in my home town of Dubuque, Iowa when he was writing the "Game of Thrones" books. There is a competing Christian College in town called Loras Collage. The joke (for whatever reason) in the late 80's/early 90's was that only homosexuals attended Loras College. Therefore, since George R R Martin was a writing professor at Clarke College he made the character of Loras in the books a homosexual.

  • @johnmalcolm8885
    @johnmalcolm8885 Рік тому

    Try the book and videos of 'Your Inner Fish' by Neil Schubin. Also the book and video of ' Why Evolution is True ' by Jerry A. Coyne ' Amazing stuff.

  • @erikjrn4080
    @erikjrn4080 Рік тому

    There were several mammoth species, of various sizes. Most mammoth species were larger than the Asian elephant, but smaller than the African elephant; the Woolly mammoth was about the size of African elephants; and the Steppe mammoth was twice the size of African elephants. The Steppe mammoth lived on the Eurasian steppe (big surprise), and went extinct just as the first humans left Africa. I'm sure that's a coincidence. We'd barely set foot in Eurasia; surely we had a few things on the to-do list that took precedence over wiping out the biggest species we'd ever encountered! For one thing, we had to make it onto the steppes, which is a mountainous hike. The largest Elephantimorpha species we know to have been seen alive by humans, is the mastodon (Mammut americanum; not a "true mammoth", which are _Mammuthus,_ not _Mammut)_, which was about 50% bigger than the African elephant. Some scientists are trying to shift the blame onto dogs, who, apparently, may have infected the mastodons with deadly diseases while barking at them. I say we go with that. Nothing to do with us. Not our fault that those fleabags kept hanging around us. Right? Right!

  • @sashacoe25
    @sashacoe25 Рік тому

    Was just watching your Al Murray reaction and you said you like dark comedy, I suggest Frankie Boyle. You have the most beautiful smile by the way, kind regards..

  • @rf4569
    @rf4569 Рік тому

    You should check some mangas o Manhwa to get more gaming terms. I loved Solo Leveling. Now I'm following The Greatest Estate Developer.

  • @dontrelldurant3450
    @dontrelldurant3450 Рік тому

    Speaking of coyotes.... There is a casual geographic video on coyotes.

  • @demonicrebellion6903
    @demonicrebellion6903 Рік тому

    Certainly can't speak for everyone, however, I'm definitely game for binging a bunch of Ice Age animal videos lol

  • @nihartley5265
    @nihartley5265 Рік тому

    Idk how you take recommendations, but I'd like to recommend a video. I know that most of your videos are science and history based, but this video is more based on human psychology.
    It's called "Sympathy for the Villan" by EmpLemon. I think you would enjoy it because it highlights how interesting morality is to the human mind and story writing.

  • @pizzacough4555
    @pizzacough4555 Рік тому

    So there are tons of ice age animals he didn't include. He just used the most commonly known ones.. what about the flying terror, Quetzacoatlus? The giant kangaroos, Procoptodon? The giant elk, Megaloceros? The humongous half giraffe half elephant, Paraceratherium?
    I call the video cap. It looked like little research was done, or he only included the ones he was personally interested in. If the later is the case, then nevermind. It's all good

  • @L0rdL0ki
    @L0rdL0ki Рік тому

    This has nothing to do with this video, but I don't know where else to request -
    It would be fascinating to see your reaction to "Ren - Hi Ren". It's a wonderful piece of art, and touches on internal psychological warfare in a very unique way. I think you'd enjoy it! 😊

  • @krw73
    @krw73 Рік тому

    Bears were the only ones that humans were not responsible for their extinction? BULLSHIT.

  • @thejoelrooganexplosion2400
    @thejoelrooganexplosion2400 Рік тому +1

    Malazan: The Book Of The Fallen. A book series you'll love. Erikson use to be an anthropologist. Huge series I reckon you'd love

  • @awonderfulfeeling8588
    @awonderfulfeeling8588 Рік тому

    How do you find the motivation to read so much? Were you brought up in an environment where the majority of entertainment was literature? By definition, though I'm not super proud to admit it, I grew up relatively spoiled. That being said, I'd love to invest a little more time reading, but I can never really bring myself to sit down and commit to such a still and silent activity. However, it just seems as though the correlation between intelligence and reading is a well supported one, and I'd love to do as much as I can to ensure that my brain is just as well fed as yours. Please trust me when I say, that I don't mean any of this in a pandering or patronizing way: The intelligence and the personality that you weild while disecting these videos, genuinely makes you one of the most breathtaking women I've ever had the pleasure of listening to. What an angel, they write songs about people like you. If I didn't know any better, I'd say I was in love. You are so perfect ❤
    Please do with this what you will, I just wanted you to know that you are an absolute heart breaker ❤
    May the sun shine on you forever,
    even when it isn't ❤☀️

  • @TheKingsKrown
    @TheKingsKrown Рік тому

    You’re 100% right about coyotes being so adaptable but they aren’t limited to North America, South America has them as well and other variations exist throughout the world.

  • @zf5656
    @zf5656 Рік тому

    One night when I came home it sounded like my neighbors had dogs, and that they were maybe being attacked by coyotes. To help the dogs, I grabbed my hawkbill knife and a hammer from my trunk, one in each hand. I make my way to the neighbors but couldn’t hear commotion or see animals.
    The next day I find out the neighbors did (still do?) have dogs, but not from them. After the fact it was kinda crazy thinking back on it. Not even so much the readiness to fight coyotes, but going into my neighbors yard with weapons at night. I was in protective mode for the dogs.

  • @joemono4727
    @joemono4727 Рік тому

    Huh... You watch tierzoo too?
    Surprising. You're too awesome.

  • @pizzacough4555
    @pizzacough4555 Рік тому

    Narrator talking about science in gamer terms really threw me off. I'm like, elk build? Nerfed? It's nice he's trying to connect with the younger generation but I worry that he'll talk like this in conversation in everyday life. That would be unfortunate.

  • @ORagnar
    @ORagnar Рік тому

    When you think of it, bears today are incredibly versatile. They are huge (the largest land predators), powerful and fast. They can run across rough terrain at high speed. They can climb trees adeptly and fast. They have massive claws. They can eat both vegetation and meat. They are smart. No wonder they are so prevalent.
    2/2/23

  • @johnnyb8412
    @johnnyb8412 8 місяців тому

    UK used to have wolves and bears but we kinda killed them especially with being an Island you can control the wildlife, we've reintroduced the otter to certian places and the closest thing we've got to a predator is the Fox which is a bueatiful animal itself, unless you keep chickens😂😂 and we do have snakes but none poisonous and very rarely you'll come across a snake or fox.

  • @thomasvieth578
    @thomasvieth578 Рік тому

    Here’s something you may like: Tier is the German word for animal, any animal and not just mammals. Zoo comes from the Ancient Greek zoon, meaning animal once again. Isn’t language fun?

  • @CassieMichael
    @CassieMichael 10 місяців тому

    Yes, the Irish Elk and the Giant Deer are the same species scientifically known as Megaloceros giganteus. I think the reason it was the IRISH elk was because they first found the skeletons of this deer in Ireland, but it spans from Ireland all the way to Siberia in range.

  • @alanlong2121
    @alanlong2121 Рік тому

    Ice age book, Clan of the Cave Bear series. A small female modern human is adopted by Neanderthals. As for human extinction of large mega fauna of the ice age, this idea is losing favor in the scientific community. Habitat destruction is favored now. The average person can easily see that the mega fauna die off was in the northern latitudes where people were least populated. Southern latitudes, not so much.

  • @henkschrader4513
    @henkschrader4513 Рік тому

    If you see a coyote in the middle of the day in a inhabited area it might (PROBABLY) has rabies especially if they ain't scared but i assume yoi already know this😅

  • @BennoWitter
    @BennoWitter Рік тому

    Oh, they are talking about tiers as in ranks. I was thinking about the German word for animal, which is "Tier". So, TierZoo looks like animal Zoo to me.

  • @alanthompson2753
    @alanthompson2753 Рік тому

    I love that you're reading ASOIAF Moqorro is my favorite right now..

  • @crabLT
    @crabLT Рік тому

    You must take a look at wanderers(the short film) by Carl Sagan. So much hope in one video.

  • @MrEdwinThuku
    @MrEdwinThuku Рік тому

    I was watching this interesting video. ua-cam.com/video/BTQd1RrL1sk/v-deo.html .... I thought it's something that would interest you!

  • @dalleravn
    @dalleravn Рік тому

    gotta love the intro! barley time to mention who, or what you are watching:D
    "its in the TITLE!!" :D

  • @strangequark3897
    @strangequark3897 Рік тому

    I do appreciate how this video didn't simplify the Irish elk's extinction to "its antlers were too big" like often happens and pointed out the other drawbacks of having huge antlers. For a long time people thought they went extinct because of expanding forests at the end of the ice age that they couldn't navigate with their antlers, but ironically, we now think it might be the opposite--their numbers started declining earlier in the ice age when forests shrank and left them with fewer hiding spots from predators.

  • @Harry_Tuttle
    @Harry_Tuttle Рік тому

    Hi love your channel for the variety of content, can I recommend Adam Curtis HyperNormalisation or Can't get you out of my head documentaries a very good spin on post war history

  • @blackeagle4700
    @blackeagle4700 Рік тому

    I am not a scientist so don’t yell at me if I am wrong, I am basing this on observation. Antlers are made of bone and drop every year and re-grow larger each year. Horns are made of a “hair” covering over “bone” and grow continuous and are similar to finger nails and do not drop, except for pronghorn antelope which drop the outer part and grow new ones for some reason. (maybe there are others I have not observed them all) Crazy nature

  • @robertstorr1680
    @robertstorr1680 Рік тому

    Suggest you have a look at Brian Cox. I am sure he would interest you with his explanations of science

  • @scottedwards33
    @scottedwards33 Рік тому

    Antlers are shed every year. Horns are permanent.
    I don’t believe ancient humans could have had a lot of effect on animal populations.

  • @KarmasAB123
    @KarmasAB123 Рік тому

    1:52 That click sounds like you're right next to the mic. You must have great acoustics.

  • @guantou2520
    @guantou2520 Рік тому

    As per Rudolph the Red Nosed Raindeer, "he" is actually female, male raindeer shed their antlers prior to winter and grow them back in the spring

  • @novAviator01
    @novAviator01 Рік тому +1

    Love me some tier zoo

  • @frankiesanchez2319
    @frankiesanchez2319 Рік тому

    evil laughed at the overwatch kill sound effect lol caught me by surprise , also bears = human death lol

  • @dmschoice2571
    @dmschoice2571 Рік тому

    I would love to see some PBS Eons reacts from you. That channel need some reacts! :D

  • @beneficent2557
    @beneficent2557 Рік тому

    The Dire Wolf is no longer considered a true Wolf, I believe its called Aenocyon Dirus now?

  • @thomasvieth578
    @thomasvieth578 Рік тому

    Reading suggestion: Anything by Konrad Lorenz

  • @GrimFom34
    @GrimFom34 Рік тому

    Bruh why she so attractive prolly cause of her intelligence, very gorgeous intelligence

  • @joemono4727
    @joemono4727 Рік тому

    Can I recommend you to looking into polyphonic overtones if you haven't done so? I think youd get a kick out of that.

  • @doragonsureia7288
    @doragonsureia7288 Рік тому

    Glyptodon look like Armadillos, because they are related

  • @shefchenko111
    @shefchenko111 Рік тому

    React to " Kurzgesagt and the art of climate greenwashing " , please

  • @chuckcreasy243
    @chuckcreasy243 Рік тому

    Dire wolves...after the ice age, but well before game of thrones, middle earth.

  • @Supiragon1998
    @Supiragon1998 Рік тому

    This video of his is mostly still accurate/not outdated (other than the Megaloceros/Irish elk part, since it's up to 40 kg antlers compared to it's up to 700 kg body weight actually wasn't really disproportionally heavy compared to it's closest living relative the fallow deer, though it's true that it had a too large of a span for forests). His dinosaur tier list is a different story though. Also, to add to your comment, while woolly mammoths (the most famous mammoths) were about the same size as African bush elephants (the average European wooly mammoth is estimated to have been 3.15 m at the shoulder and 6 tonnes in weight, which is ever so slightly shorter and bulkier than the average African bush elephant, which is about 3.2 m tall at the shoulder and 6 tonnes in weight), other mammoths like the Columbian, southern and steppe mammoth were bigger, with the Columbian mammoth having an estimated average weight of 9.5 tonnes, and the southern and steppe mammoth having and estimated adult size of 4 m at the shoulder and a weight of 11 tonnes, with the largest known specimen of the Steppe mammoth having an estimated size of 4.5 m at the shoulder and a weight of 14.3 tonnes.

  • @Smooth1028
    @Smooth1028 Рік тому

    7:05 Perfect note to segue into TierZoo's City Animal Tier List video

  • @daviddios1619
    @daviddios1619 Рік тому +1

    Oh , I love your way of seeing the world and your eclectic interests too learn about the world. Your a rare jewel of a woman. I look forward to experiencing every single bit of your content. Thank you so much 🖖😉

  • @NickHobbs
    @NickHobbs Рік тому +4

    Love your reactions!

    • @NoProtocol
      @NoProtocol  Рік тому +4

      Thank you Nick!

    • @NickHobbs
      @NickHobbs Рік тому

      @@NoProtocol I watch a LOT of reaction videos - particularly from Americans. The reason I watch your is that you come across as WAY more intelligent than the average American, and I love your insight on things :)
      I'm from the UK so if you ever want to react to anything here, feel free to message me - I got lots of stuff to react to!
      This is a lot different for you, but if you want to - here was our new years fireworks - they were awesome! ua-cam.com/video/2FcDNi1HkfI/v-deo.html
      Something I think you'd appreciate more though is this: ua-cam.com/video/ZM7TBKD3a5U/v-deo.html
      Hope you find those useful!
      Have a great day!

  • @Relinkosed
    @Relinkosed Рік тому

    Hey, do you have a Goodroads account? Would love to see your reviews and recommendations.

  • @steviemac2681
    @steviemac2681 Рік тому

    I like how you feel sorry for the mammoth getting hunted by humans.

  • @beneficent2557
    @beneficent2557 Рік тому

    There is a movie called Alpha about a boy and his dog in the Pleistocene.

  • @bugvswindshield
    @bugvswindshield Рік тому

    so, what your saying is....
    we need to introduce coyotes to Hawaii.
    sure , why not.
    ha ha

  • @brandonlevy8680
    @brandonlevy8680 Рік тому

    love the picture behind you. All the greats.

  • @jakeand9020
    @jakeand9020 Рік тому

    All deer lose their antlers annually, that's the difference between antlers and horns.

  • @kain7759
    @kain7759 Рік тому

    Not only deers loose the antlers every year and regrow them but the number of branches on the antlers are based on the age, even if not always 1 to 1.

  • @unclestevemoves
    @unclestevemoves Рік тому +2

    Always entertaining and informative!

  • @treble8s673
    @treble8s673 Рік тому

    I think you would enjoy akalas talk at Oxford

  • @bobbypastriquin421
    @bobbypastriquin421 Рік тому

    All deer lose their antlers, that's one of the main differences between antlers and horns. Antlers are shed every year

  • @theflamerises499
    @theflamerises499 Рік тому

    This tier zoo speaks gamer for sure. This is cool.

  • @beneficent2557
    @beneficent2557 Рік тому

    Short-Faced Bear was a genuine menace.

  • @4kays160
    @4kays160 Рік тому

    Dont all deer that grow antlers shed them every year, and grow new ones to prepare for the rut? Ive never heard of a deer that doenst lose its antlers yearly

  • @shawnjunker1420
    @shawnjunker1420 Рік тому

    You're great! Do more Tom MacDonald

  • @passingwind2681
    @passingwind2681 Рік тому

    First of all your smile is enchanting. I have become an avid watcher of your videos. Secondly, you might try checking out the computer game a RK, survival of the fittest, it put you in a world that’s primitive, and there are dinosaurs and other extinct species that you can tame, and eventually learn to ride, and each one has its attribute to help you such as a pteranodon would allow you to fly. I believe you would enjoy it.

  • @terryhughes7349
    @terryhughes7349 Рік тому

    Hard to believe there were wollly rinoasours running around northern Europe.

  • @Littlekoji-df1cf
    @Littlekoji-df1cf Рік тому

    Clyptodons are related to armadillos.

  • @SPak-rt2gb
    @SPak-rt2gb Рік тому

    Tara Bird is the Shoebill Stork of today

  • @sulevturnpuu5491
    @sulevturnpuu5491 Рік тому

    So I kinda remember reading that new thinking is humans were not so much responsible for killing off the ice age megafauna. The bigger reason for their extinction was probably the climate warming. Warmer winters have more snowfall and it made for herbivores harder to reach food in winter.

    • @NoProtocol
      @NoProtocol  Рік тому +1

      There are many articles on this in recent years that I’ve read as well

  • @XYZincPlays
    @XYZincPlays Рік тому

    Love the Runescape music.