Thylacosmilus: The Sabertooth With A Pouch
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- Опубліковано 12 вер 2024
- This carnivore had the fangs of a Sabertooth Cat, but the pouch of a Koala. It’s a bit of a weirdo. Support Animalogic & Paleologic by signing up for your FREE trial to Wondrium here: ow.ly/GXkW30sb73i Your brain will love it!
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CREDITS
Created by Dylan Dubeau
Executive Producer, Director, and Director of Photography: Dylan Dubeau
Host: Talia Lowi-Merri
Writer, Producer, Camera Operator: Andres Salazar
Editors: Jim Pitts and Cat Senior
Art by Danielle Dufault
Music from Audio Network:
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Mischievous Pixies
Gleeful Mischief
Night Of The Witches
Goblin Kingdom
Additional Images courtesy of Roman Uchytel
Learn more:
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Taking a deep look at the past and the animals that lived in it.
Thanks for watching, and thanks for sponsoring the episode, Wondrium! If you love learning, you’ll love Wondrium. It’s a museum for your mind. Get your free trial to their video service at www.wondrium.com/animalogic
I want thylacoleo now so bad
MAMMOTHS🦣🦣🦣
Please make a video about quetzalcoatlus.
Make a video about the Dodo
Hi my name is Thomas Love. Can you talk about Tasmanian tiger please ?
Loving the addition of the new series. Great personalities and really broaden the channel in a wonderful way. Thank you staff!
Thanks Benjamin! This is what we love to hear.
People underestimate marsupials. Just cuz they have slow metabolisms doesn’t mean they aren’t capable of impressive explosive activity. One time I saw a possum blast out from under my house running faster than a rabbit. The Possum ran down a garbage truck going full speed and jumped 4 feet off the ground and landed in the back of the truck and started feasting it was crazy
Now I want to see a video about Smilodon.
soon!
@@animalogic suspenseful!
Extinct animals are just cooler versions of what we have today.
And any cool ones that did survive we keep killing off.
Extinct animals are the DLC of the modern animal kingdom.
2:01 Macrauchenia is actually a meridiungulate, closer to Toxodon than to the llama. Otherwise, great vid! There's even a hypothesis that Thylie was an anteater-type animal, what are your thoughts on that? Can't wait to see what's next!
Also peep the Thylacosmilus resin model 👀 Must've cost a pretty penny.
@@indyreno2933 *facepalm* my bad. I thought notoungulate was the order that all those South American ungulates belonged to. Thanks for correcting me.
@Mullerornis um, when giving these "fun facts," why don't your type give any sources for said information? 🤔 I've always wondered that, or if maybe you just assumed that everyone would believe you just because you said it with confidence. 🤨
Do you mean Thylacosmilus used those sabers to tear into ant nests, maybe also termite mounds? Seems to me claws would have been better suited for that.
These animals were close relatives of horses, rhinos and tapirs.
@@swaggasaurus_rex That Indy Reno spews outdated taxonomy all the time. Whatever the ignoramus said may be bs.
Man...Thyla was Scary with Those Fangs...
Id Love to see
The Monster-Sized Monitor Lizard
Megalania,
In a future Episode !
Megalanias are cool.
This creature is one of my absolute favorites! Could you do an episode on the ceratopsians?
4:06 While Machairodont Felids like Smilodon, Dinofelis, and Homotherium showed bare saberteeth, Barburofelids did position their sabers against their lower cheeks, just like Thylacosmilus.
I NEED you to tell me more about the carnivorous armadillo
Saaame. I was thinking it might have occupied a niche somewhere between a badger's and a bear's. Would love to know more!
When I was a teenager, I was writing a light novel featuring humanized forms of most ice age animals: from smilodons, mammoths, and short-faced bears, to giant armadillos and sloths. The story is about how the empire of the smilodons, called Gaolyrs in the story, conquered the land that would correspond to South America, and the kingdoms and tribes from there, the most important being the kingdom of the Toxonites, which would correspond to the mixotoxidons. The Gaolyr empire brought within their forces other "peoples", like the Lupians (wolves) and Morlians (mammoths).
I might continue with a trilogy at some point.
Paleologic is fantastic! I'm fascinated by Titanoboa, hope you'll be covering that sometime down the line!🐍
We just did! ua-cam.com/video/J2xPwXxXjaY/v-deo.html&ab_channel=Animalogic
I love the Thylacosmilus! One of the more obscure predators that I was already aware of!
they are a pain in ark
Funny enough, as a kid I found out about Thylacosmilus before the more famous Smilodon. So I have some nostalgia for it! Cool video!
I can’t get enough of the new series “Paleologic” I love historical animals of every kind.
Thank you, Elicia!
This sabretooth has always seemed so weird to me because of the sheaths for his sabers. Smilodon doesn't have those sheaths in its lower jaw, so I couldn't really picture how Thylacosmilus would be able to get those sabers into any prey items because I kept seeing those sheaths getting in the way.
Why would the sheaths get in the way?
They could open their jaws extraordinarily wide, even wider than smilodon. They probably opened wide and stabbed down with strong neck muscles
Aw Yeah! My boy is getting some much needed attention!
I know right.
That Thumbnail picture looks so real! Hats off to the paleoartist.
Scavenging Gut-Slurper is an OP Dungeons & Dragons monster.
It's a perfect name, be it for a monster, a band or as a username
@@High-LordHarza It really is, and you can change it just a bit to make it even funnier depending on what you choose
Paleologic!!! Love it!
Please do one on ambulocetus!!!
P. s. I love how y’all are using miniatures in these videos! Amazing!
2:51
I'm gonna be honest, I thought the animal was taking a piss with how that blade of grass moved 😂😂😂😂
Danielle Dufault's illustrations are like icing on the cake for Animalogic's videos.
Good work team.
LMAO the cheesing trex at 1:22 😂
Also some scientists think that sabertooth in cats is a gene that pops in cycles within felines.
Sometimes house cats get very long front fangs and we make memes of vampire kitty with them lolz.
Also I believe the clouded leopards are on the evolutionary path to become the next sabertooth cats
What if their tooth is entirely not for eating or hunting as it mentions that the teeth is fragile and have weak jaw power. What if it for display? Some of the largest canine nowdays is belong to herbivore animals such as hippopotamus and gelada baboon.
Excellent work on Thylacosmilus atrox (Marsupial Sabertooth cat) my friend! I read about it in my book called: National Geographic book of Prehistoric Mammals by Alan Turner, Illustrations by Marcio Antón and introduction by Richard L. Cifelli. Truly a one of a kind book too. And also one of the most deadliest marsupial predators in Prehistory.
2:04 -There might have been giant llamas, but that is a recreation of Macraurchenia to the right, wich was not related to llamas.
2:26 -The 'Great American Interchange' began 2.5 mya.
4:13 -We don't know if sabertoothed cats had displayed canines or had them in concealed by lips.
5:26 - Smilodon kind of famously had a relatively weak bite, compared to pantherines. Evidence suggests it used it's neck mucles to sink it's massive canines into the neck of it's pray.
Are the saber-toothed cat marsupials the ones that are also known as marsupial lion? Or was that a separate species that was also a cat-like marsupial?
Separate species. Unlike the sabertooth marsupial, the marsupial lion had rodent like incisors (front teeth) similar to a rat, a rabbit, or a kangaroo in which gave them the advantage for a powerful bite that can break bone and chop flesh easily.
@@elmono6299 thank you, I wasn't sure cuz I was like there really were two separate genus or species of marsupial cat like things? LOL I appreciate the info :-)
Fantastic video! I also would like to point out how particularly awesome and epic the music is in this episode! The music is _always_ great on this channel, but there's something extra special about today's that caught my ear a few times- I even had to rewind to catch what had been said once because I had been listening to the music and didn't notice the narration pick back up again! That's my fault, though- the background music is appropriately subdued when the host speaks and only picks up between narrative points. To whoever chose and edited the music: very well done! 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼😊
i remember one palaeoartist suggested a diet similar to a sloth bear , ripping open termite mounds and sooking up the insects. its definitely an interesting hypothesis, given the giant termite mounds in the cerrado today
It's gonna be so cool if you guys do a section for the "First Ever Predator", the Animalocaris
Anomalocaris. But many predators preceded it.
What a badass marsupial! Too bad we missed it by a few million years lol
Remember the maned wolf? Well it's closed relative is dead, and I would like to learn more about that animal
I hope that the informal name "pouched gut-sucker" sticks, and that future documentaries reconstruct them vocalising more like Tasmanian devils rather than big cats.
I saw an Art post from HodariNundu that suggested a Sloth Bear-like lifestyle and I honestly Adore this idea! It makes this already bizarre animal even more bizarre! And considering how large Sloth bears get, it's not impossible that a Thylacosmilus could sustain itself in this fashion.
It really does just blow my mind that we are basically living in the "last age" of the marsupials. Not that they're all going to die out anytime soon (hopefully). But I mean like, in a geological sense. This entire different category of mammals that used to be as diverse and omnipresent as the placental mammals just got widdled away and outcompeted a tiny bit at a time until only a single species of possum and the denizens of australia and surrounding islands remained. Like we as a species came in to see a snapshot of the tail end of a great biological dynasty.
Love the drawings from Danielle
I just love the cast of women that you have. Its very empowering in a way to me. I love to see it. Keep dishing out these great quality videos. Im loving it.
I would love to see video on other south american oddities like terror birds, toxodonts, ground sloths, and titanoboa
I was hoping for a full-on documentary or animated film that takes place in Cenozoic South Amarica.
ua-cam.com/video/J2xPwXxXjaY/v-deo.html&ab_channel=Animalogic Check out Titanoboa!
2:00 pictured on the right is a Macrauchenia, a species of litopern nowhere even remotely related to llamas & camelids. Meridiungulates were there own very unique group of convergently evolved South American ungulates.
I would like to learn more of the prehistoric animals of Australia cause there are just so many that I want to learn of my local prehistoric animals of this country
To me, the main question is: "Why did they have the lower jaw extension to match the upper sabre teeth?".
Mam in video at the duration of 2.03 you said Lama's are twice the size of modern day relative but at someone's video I learnt that the prescribed animal having neck like camel and trunk like elephant is actually one of closest relative to Rhinos or Horses.
Does she mean 15 centimeters (6 inches) long for the section extended outside of the skull? Counting the saber length inside the skull it looks about twice as long as that. Even the skull she holds looks like it has a saber longer than 6 inches.
Its markings look like The Thylacine (Thylacinus cynocephalus: dog-headed pouched-dog). Better known as the now extinct Tasmanian Tiger.
Smilodon didn’t bite bones, their Sabre teeth were too fragile so they used them to slice instead
Smilodon and its relatives had weak jaws too, and did not bite into bone.
This was super interesting and well presented, thank you
I remember this creature from jurassic Park builder
It would be interesting to explore what's known regarding the jaw articulation. It is difficult to picture the animal getting anything past those incisors without a considerable gape, hinted at in footage of the thylacine. The soft organ scavenger hypothesis is an attractive one.
Are we sure about the "canine pouches"? In time they would become very dirty and filled with debris that would cause inflammation and possibly infections.
You have so much history on this animals sometimes I wonder if you taking us for a ride 😂😂😂😂 …just kidding…thanks for the content
The thylacine or the Tasmanian tiger
I love learning, then Wondrium.
I suggested Hummingbirds on a previous episode and a lot of people agreed! I'm surprised Animalogic hasn't done an episode on them yet; really hope you do! If you want to see it too you can suggest it too in the comments :)
The whole sheath arrangement seems super awkward though. It only works if your teeth are perfectly aligned. Any animals with an under or overbite would do themselves some serious damage.
Excellent video! I have been considering doing a video about Thylacosmilus on my channel, I recently did one that covers why the Dinosaurs didn't take over again after the Kpg extinction event and I briefly mentioned the Terror Birds in that video. 🙂
Can we do a crossover with second nature and palaeontology episode about the amount of animals that have evolved sabre teeth? I mean there have been so many random animals over pre history that have independently evolved this feature
The intro music bought back the memories of my childhood and it definitely helped with the prehistoric vibe
She must have made the mistake about Macrauchenia being a prehistoric llama relative because its original discoverers thought it actually was a type of llama or early camelid.
True. It was actually in a separate, not closely related order known as the Litopterna. Convergent evolution.
The swoosh noise scared the 💩 out of me
At 2:02 to 2:04 there is an error on the prehistoric llama relative. That is not a prehistoric giant llama relative. It is a Macrauchenia, a notoungulate, not even in the same order as that in which llamas are as they are ungulates.
Correcting myself, Macrauchenia was in the order Litopterna, within the superorder Meridiungulata, and related to the order Notoungulata, of which Toxodon was a member. All these taxa are a kind of hodgepodge, the superorder Meridiungulata being itself something of a mixed bag, so future fossil finds and anatomical research on them may result in some changes.
I really dig all the different Animalogic series!! 🫶
They're the most equiped animal ever
show starts near 1:47
Omg this is the best new series! I love it
I've never heard of these animals before, how fascinating!
You say their teeth were sheathed. Yet I don’t see how this would look in any of the illustrations. This leaves me a bit confused; were they sheathed inside the bone of the lower jaw, or in pouches of skin along the sides?
Estaban en Argentina hace 9 - 3 millones de años, que piooolaaa
Did I hear "smiley dogs" a couple of times? I sure did!
Fascinating! So much we don't know, and get to learn!
Another episode I would like to see. Let's talk about Astrapotheria.
They have outward facing eyes and a postorbital bar which isn't typically found in carnivores. Is it possible they were actually herbivores or at least omnivores? And the long canines being more for defense?
There was actually a really interesting article about this called: "Seeing through the eyes of the sabertooth Thylacosmilus atrox (Metatheria, Sparassodonta)" also isotopic analysis already showed that the animal definitely fed on notoungulates (and likely hunted them too).
Those teeth seem like they'd be more of a hindrance then a help.
Please do a video on that Carnivorous Armadillo that you were talking about in this video. Would be really interesting
any Cenozoic South American animal would make a good video.
Love it! What a weird creature!
You guys should definitely cover Spinosaurus and its insanely long history of depictions and discoveries 😁
Omg thylacosmilus now all we need to do is get Safari Ltd to make a figure of this, I had to custom make my own
Talk about the other Sabertooths other than smilodon and this one . This was very interesting 🤔 👌 🙂 👀 👍
Know about palaeoloxodon namadicus please
I love these, keep up the good work! I would like to hear more about prehistoric birds!
I don't want to contest paleontologists, but.... how a scavenger find soft organs? That would be the first thing a predator eat, no? ^^'
@@bkjeong4302 Thanks, it seemed weird to me XD
Plus, I remember that the same critics (that their fangs were too fragile to crush bones) were made against smilodon too ^^'
Not all predators eat viscera, wolves for example leave them.
Do one on Thylacoleo carnifex.
Please do an episode on the sabertooth salmon.
Ark fans know how dangerous these are
Gut sluper.
Best description ever.
Thylacosmius has come out from thylacine [tasmanian tiger] also thylacoleo the small mammal that used to live in the trees
alright well these guys dont need light sabers unlike Kangaroos
I love the overcooked music at the beginning
CONVERGENT Evolution @ it's finest
You are WRONG.
Llamas/camels evolved in North America and were only able to invade South America when the Panama isthmus was formed about 3 million years ago.
The picture you showed was Macrauchenia, a species of Litoptern once found only in South America.
That is so crazy! Thanks a bunch.
Carnivorous Armadillo please.
6:00 "Oh man, that's one beautiful ca-OOOOOOOOOOOOHHHH!!!!!!!........Oh.......... Oh maaaaaan..."
Those fighting Tasmanian Devils were so adorable
Enjoyed your video so I gave it a Thumbs Up as a support
Amazing!, can you do a video on Dinocrocuta gigantea please!
I'd like t hear more about that carnivorous armadillo.
Now we have a land animal, plant, bird *and* fossil segment
The stripes, the thick tail, the shortish lower back legs, being marsupial, even the name resembles Thylacine.