Here are some of the mistakes: 1. Thylacines first evolved during the Pliocene an survived until Anthropocene 1936. 2. Like everyone is saying,smilodon populator was only in South America. Smilodon Fatalis Was Mainly North American and a little bit of South American.
For anyone just finding this video who is curious, Kawasaki's website relocated to paleontology.sakura.ne.jp/ where all these illustrations can be found.
Tell that to the salt water crocodile. salt water crocs can weigh 1 tonne! Also, no reptile or animal today is like dinosaurs, the closest relatives are birds but birds lost their tail and have a zig zag leg posture which greatly limits their size on land.
@@trvth1s crocodilians are the closest reptiles that are related to dinosaurs and crocodiles are technically more closely related to birds than they are to other reptiles
I think you mixed the Fatalis and the Populator one. Plus I think you forgot to add the largest mammal in the world. The Palaeoloxodon Namadicus. But overalll good effort.
In Asia you need to add three sub species of H. Denisovns, H/ D. Denisova, H. D. Altai, and H. D. SE Asia. It is now known that there were three branches of Denisovans in central and SE Asia that H. Neanderthal and H. Sapiens, interbred with. Each subspecies was separate and distinct from each other genetically and had 99.99% identical gentics. Closer to each other than to H. Neanderthals and H. Sapiens. H. Neanderthal bred with two of the subspecies, and H. Sapiens with all three. Very nice of you to add early Hominids into the mix.
Ancient humans were definitely darker in Africa but once they started pouring out into Asia & Europe skin color would start lightening to absorb more sunlight for vitamin D synthesis. Most of the animals & landscapes depicted were northern, cold...
There's a little mistake there. Smilodon populator is from South America and fatalis is from the North .
waiting for earth patch 1.4
The guy who makes the creatures in painting is a legend
That’s Julius Cstonyi.
@@cesaralcaraz819 dawg thanks for letting me comeback to dis
I drawing the animals in ediacara - quaternary full drawing!
@@Kevin_drawing damn replies to a 2 year old comment
We need the modern species to show what's still with us.
The smilodon's body build was like more of a bear than a cat
Absolute tank!
Here are some of the mistakes:
1. Thylacines first evolved during the Pliocene an survived until Anthropocene 1936.
2. Like everyone is saying,smilodon populator was only in South America. Smilodon Fatalis Was Mainly North American and a little bit of South American.
First thylacine is extinct the quartenary and two you forget the land bridge
For anyone just finding this video who is curious, Kawasaki's website relocated to paleontology.sakura.ne.jp/ where all these illustrations can be found.
THANK YOU! I thought it was gone for good
Criminally underrated channel
It's now megalochelys.
I recommend watching this high , I don't even know how I got here but this video is amazing
Where did you get such amazing animal pictures,please leave a link.
Its de circle of lyfe
And as of now, we’re still living in it.
Nice job, those were fun to watch. Thanks
Откуда вы взяли эти картинки и все животных полный рост?))
We need a modern species video.
Weird to know we’re still in the Quaternary periods
지구의 모든 생물들의 똑같은 진화 마지막 이야기: 제04기
why reptile is not big anymore like in dinosaur period
Because they all been kill off accept for the Crocodiles and smaller ones
Because it's cooler now
Tell that to the salt water crocodile.
salt water crocs can weigh 1 tonne!
Also, no reptile or animal today is like dinosaurs, the closest relatives are birds but birds lost their tail and have a zig zag leg posture which greatly limits their size on land.
Well the Cenozoic is the age of mammals not the age of reptiles like it was in the Mesozoic
@@trvth1s crocodilians are the closest reptiles that are related to dinosaurs and crocodiles are technically more closely related to birds than they are to other reptiles
I think you mixed the Fatalis and the Populator one. Plus I think you forgot to add the largest mammal in the world. The Palaeoloxodon Namadicus. But overalll good effort.
You got your Smilodon's mixed up, Fatalis is North American, Populator is South American
2:53-3:21-Had any of these animals coexisted with humans?
Will there be more?
Pawel no
Yes
The Ice Age and the age of the Mega Mammals
um i think you forgot to add the steep mammoth in the asian continent
1:02 E foi aqui que toda desgraça começou
Verdade o mundo era muito melhor sem o ser humano
The Evolution of Life part 14 present this is gonna be a long video
Camelops hesternus was the common camel in North America during the pleistocene titanotylopus died out at the end of the pliocene.
Because he is stupid
Still no fossils from Antarctica?
Because it's coverd with a thick layer of ice it take week to dig it up
and you fogot to add European cave wolf
Great auk sea cow mammoth palaeoloxodon coelodonta elasmotherium imperial mammoth megaloceros homotherium mastodon bison latifrons smilodon arctodus megatherium glyptodon moa dodo megaladapis mamo diprotodon thylacoleo thylacine
Why there a dodo in Africa and beside is it dodo already entinct?
Dodo lived on an island in africa
The king kong of the quaternary sure was named black, because look at it.
In Asia you need to add three sub species of H. Denisovns, H/ D. Denisova, H. D. Altai, and H. D. SE Asia. It is now known that there were three branches of Denisovans in central and SE Asia that H. Neanderthal and H. Sapiens, interbred with. Each subspecies was separate and distinct from each other genetically and had 99.99% identical gentics. Closer to each other than to H. Neanderthals and H. Sapiens. H. Neanderthal bred with two of the subspecies, and H. Sapiens with all three. Very nice of you to add early Hominids into the mix.
Quateruary the end of periods the frist human come
04:14, but Aepyornis are only from Madagascar
Madagascar is part of africa
1:10 ursus
There is no dodo in the ice age
Of course, that's why it's "Quaternary" and not "Ice age" even if this cold period is highly representative of the Quaternary
First you missed crocuta crocuta speala and second you repeated some
Where's homo sapiens?
malay ko ba
@@oumistula6204 к сожалению, я тоже поэтому и спрашиваю
@@IFW72 ambot nimo wa ko kasabot sa imo ha
@@oumistula6204 я тебя тоже
bobo mo
Teori Darwin?
dodo
why are all the human depictions so White?
I knew there would be someone to bring skin color into this.....Why does it matter? You think all the colors of the dinosaurs in here are correct?
@@KaiPurge ik not all the colors of the animals are correct, but we kinda have a history of making ancient humans white, like the Simpsons or Jesus...
Ancient humans were definitely darker in Africa but once they started pouring out into Asia & Europe skin color would start lightening to absorb more sunlight for vitamin D synthesis. Most of the animals & landscapes depicted were northern, cold...
John Kelly correct.
@@aldlkj cant you look down commets
2 sus