I live east of Pittsburgh Pa and we have a huge amount of fossils from the Pennsylvanian and the formations are the Glenshaw Casselman and Monongahela all within the area and the museum gave me a map of the rock formations. I have never found any animal fossils from this time but foot prints and plants in coal and rock and even found black shale with fossils but I don’t play with it because it’s radioactive ☢️. Not enough rads to hurt you but it has lead and other toxic things in it. But I might have found a centipede fossil where it is rolled up unless it’s a fern
It’s funny and awesome that here around western Pennsylvania we have a huge amount of Glenshaw and Casselman formation and Monongahela formation with a lot of fossils. I have found a bunch just in the rocks and coal all around my neighborhood and have been talking to the museum for information about these plants 🌱. I would have never thought that the rock around me is 300 to 305 million years old.
Aren't Quillworts a better comparison than club mosses for the lycophytes? At least in terms of relatedness. Fascinating discussion of the flora through the late Paleozoic I look forward to the Mesozoic I remember listening to a uploaded talk on the End Cretaceous Flora of North America and the effect of ecological niche partitioning on what survived or didn't a few years back as part of the Royal Tyrell speaker series but otherwise plant content is pretty rare to see discussed. The robot voice is pretty monotonous but it's tolerable.
My West Virginia property is littered with Carboniferous age fossils. Some Calamitie (Giant Horsetail) trunks are so large it would take a dozier to move.
The content seems reliable but the artificial voice is awful, with odd, inappropriate breaks and a robotic tone. If the video maker is worried about speaking English with an accent, please don't worry. All anglophone countries are very accustomed to immigrants and second-language English. I personally love different accents, and they are much, much more authentic than AI!
What is the purpose of the robotic voice? It's so distracting. I'm saying that because I like your content but find it hard to listen to. Just wondering if there's a reason for it.
Yep, it's because English isn't my main language and it seems lots of non Anglo-saxon people appreciate that generic voice! But it has bad points, it can be boring and I don't know why the ponctuation doesn't work evertime. Thanks!
@@Nic01a modernity refers to the phenomenon as Plate Tectonics. Continental Drift is just a sort of imprecise and archaic phrase, it remains accepted. At least I think that's what I meant, I left the comment over a year back and haven't rewatched the video...
Finally, a channel that discusses the evolution and biology of plants.
have you not seen "TOP 10 FUNNIEST DANGEROUS PLANTS OMG!!!!11!1"
Carboniferous plants are beautiful.
I live east of Pittsburgh Pa and we have a huge amount of fossils from the Pennsylvanian and the formations are the Glenshaw Casselman and Monongahela all within the area and the museum gave me a map of the rock formations. I have never found any animal fossils from this time but foot prints and plants in coal and rock and even found black shale with fossils but I don’t play with it because it’s radioactive ☢️. Not enough rads to hurt you but it has lead and other toxic things in it. But I might have found a centipede fossil where it is rolled up unless it’s a fern
i love this channel and its videos so much, i just wish it was a real person narrating
Keep up the plant content!!!
I hate the computer voice, very interesting content. I would subscribe if you drop the computer audio
He actually can't speak. Has some sort of birth defect.
Great presentation containing lots of magnificent imagery.
Thank you contnuing the series on the evolution of plant life. I was waiting for this.
It’s funny and awesome that here around western Pennsylvania we have a huge amount of Glenshaw and Casselman formation and Monongahela formation with a lot of fossils. I have found a bunch just in the rocks and coal all around my neighborhood and have been talking to the museum for information about these plants 🌱. I would have never thought that the rock around me is 300 to 305 million years old.
Спасибо большое Вам за запись.
Amazing series but I'd literally narrate this for you just so that I wouldn't have to listen to robot voice
Or step up to a premium computer voice like Morgan Freeman or Sir David Attenborough.
Great video! Than you so much for taking the time and organizing information.
What app are you using that lets you look and move around in the period swamp?
Fantástico trabajo!!👏👏👏👏👏💪💪
Gracias!😃😃
Suscrito!!!💪😉
Your work is just incredible! Thanks for All!
Aren't Quillworts a better comparison than club mosses for the lycophytes? At least in terms of relatedness.
Fascinating discussion of the flora through the late Paleozoic I look forward to the Mesozoic I remember listening to a uploaded talk on the End Cretaceous Flora of North America and the effect of ecological niche partitioning on what survived or didn't a few years back as part of the Royal Tyrell speaker series but otherwise plant content is pretty rare to see discussed.
The robot voice is pretty monotonous but it's tolerable.
My West Virginia property is littered with Carboniferous age fossils.
Some Calamitie (Giant Horsetail) trunks are so large it would take a dozier to move.
Please do a video on why these plants went extinct/evolved
prehistoric plants are Underrated
Great video. Thanks!
Where do the sound effects come from? It reminds me of some of the tracks I found when searching UA-cam for 'dinosaur music'!
What game are you using to walk around the Carboniferous?
I don't know, I've found it on UA-cam. I was kinda glad 😅
Search Carboniferous Forest Simulator it's free
Thanks Lepiodendron you powered my phone to watch this video on your domination of the earth
The trouble is their gone. Thanks for a video that I like , please make more
Is there a video on middle mesozoic plants?
Remember to leave comments to help the algorithm!
Long overdue!
Love it!
Where can I find this Paleozoic forest simulator?
Sorry, I've found it on UA-cam, I don't know the name
The content seems reliable but the artificial voice is awful, with odd, inappropriate breaks and a robotic tone.
If the video maker is worried about speaking English with an accent, please don't worry. All anglophone countries are very accustomed to immigrants and second-language English. I personally love different accents, and they are much, much more authentic than AI!
Grazie
10 points to gryffindor
I want to know if they were edible.
What is the purpose of the robotic voice? It's so distracting.
I'm saying that because I like your content but find it hard to listen to. Just wondering if there's a reason for it.
Yep, it's because English isn't my main language and it seems lots of non Anglo-saxon people appreciate that generic voice!
But it has bad points, it can be boring and I don't know why the ponctuation doesn't work evertime.
Thanks!
@@Anthönypain Thanks for explaining. Do you mean that you have a heavy accent to native-speaker ears?
We appreciate you creating these videos!
I understand the glaciers of the Karoo Ice Age did not touch North America. Then what was North America like during these times?
What's with the text-to-speech?
"continental drift"?? Are these sources 100 years old?!?
What's not accepted about continental drift?
@@Nic01a modernity refers to the phenomenon as Plate Tectonics. Continental Drift is just a sort of imprecise and archaic phrase, it remains accepted. At least I think that's what I meant, I left the comment over a year back and haven't rewatched the video...
@@LukeCampbellBrennan thank you for explaining
Quand les fougères étaient des séquoias !!
I just don't like the robot voice
What is the evolution and biology of cannabis?
bruhhhhh 😭😭😭
🙄
Feed the algorithm
Forking ferns
Is there way how to know get to know more about gigantitarids mentioned in the video? Google fails miserably. Maybe alternative name?
♥️♥️♥️👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
your background sound is horrendous...i can't bear to hear it
Just for the algorithm.
I am speed