u have nine seconds for animal in 13 mins 80 so why 40 seconds in u didn't even mentioned one . interested how u will menge that if not u just a lyng one
@arturkierzenkowski13422 күн бұрын
fit goes hard
@StormiidaeBlogspot2 күн бұрын
Thanks for this, I really enjoy your presentations.
@MeanBeanComedy4 күн бұрын
Thank you so much! I've been looking for a great video on brachiopods for weeks!! 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻
@MeanBeanComedy4 күн бұрын
Keep uploading!!
@MeanBeanComedy4 күн бұрын
Wasn't it Atlas who held the world?
@pocketsnacks5 күн бұрын
Excellent
@philippe-I6 күн бұрын
reading necessary in any canon
@kimberlykalenske76458 күн бұрын
I want to be a paleontologist for real life
@ingridcc1-1238 күн бұрын
Thanks for this video. I'm looking forward to perusing your other videos. Also thanks for your wikibooks Essential Guide to Planet Earth.
@headlessspaceman56819 күн бұрын
This is a great explainer for a topic that most people are completely unaware of, even rockhounds and fossil collectors. And seeing less than 4k views after 7 years, I would guess a lot of people are still completely unaware.
@redwatch110011 күн бұрын
Geology is so complex I find it maddening and un-study-able.
@Doryory11 күн бұрын
Thank you. I learned a lot!
@jedavisLV42616 күн бұрын
I see video of allosaurus, I subscribe
@jedavisLV42616 күн бұрын
Big Al is my all time favorite fossil specimen :)
@johnscanlon846718 күн бұрын
Various groups of reptiles got from Asia to North America around the early Oligocene, so there must have been intervals when the Bering land bridge existed (usually attributed to glaciation lowering sea level) but had a warm enough climate for e.g. coral snakes and pitvipers. Why not rare primates?
@secondbeamship19 күн бұрын
There are so many lost links in this chain to explain the whole story.
@secondbeamship19 күн бұрын
What did the tentacles and atriopore become in later vertebrates?
@Darth_Critikal22 күн бұрын
Ohh now I get it 😂 Fuck You Oppenheimer!
@TjBerry-d8m22 күн бұрын
Hey I'm in 11th grade and I'm so happy I found this Utah state is likely the best paleontology program in the country it's honestly my dream collage
@tennicksalvarez907923 күн бұрын
Im only learning about this guy because gould is used by yec
@arundabholkar492226 күн бұрын
How correct is to say the bone preserves the morphology of bones? It should be morphological Shapes. Good series!!
@otonanoCАй бұрын
oldest flowering plant THAT WE KNOW OF
@Chinstrap-99Ай бұрын
Thank you for this advice!
@roninscholar4515Ай бұрын
"these fenestra"? You mean fenestrae... you are literally saying "these window"
@roninscholar4515Ай бұрын
ok Benjam, an-ee-apsid?
@margaretsmith6393Ай бұрын
Thanks my kid love …This.
@bensantos3882Ай бұрын
Why did you leave us Dr. Burger? We miss you so much.
@julienrockingham-ip4coАй бұрын
This is awesome
@Westbound100Ай бұрын
Is he dead?? 💀
@genelynacacio8195Ай бұрын
Whare did you find it? If it’s in the hell creek formation that will be the biggest mammal in the formation
@PaulTheSkepticАй бұрын
Since scientists seem to have this need to put everything on one side or the other of a line, they consider this an avian dino or a bird. I guess that's the reason why creationists argue that it's all bird and no dino. But if they were clever they'd argue that it was all dino and no bird because it is so clearly transitional. If birds and dinosaurs are not related, why does this "bird" so closely resemble a therapod dinosaur and not a hippo or a turtle or something? If it was created to fly why doesn't it have the huge breast muscles that allow modern birds to fly?
@leosailor2514Ай бұрын
I just googled this term and it didn’t register as a real word. Ben, you’re right, only the super successful animals like dinosaurs, stem mammals, etc get recognition. Fortunately I was able to find some artist renderings, specifically that of Psittacotherium. I hope more research comes out and that these animals will be popularized
@GregsGeologyChannel2 ай бұрын
I was by there Thursday (10-10-24). I found the American Gilsonite factory. It was guarded like Ft. Knox. However, wherever I went, I was confounded by private property signs. Do you remember where you went to find the raw Gilsonite? I'll be back out here next year and I'd like to find some "in the wild." Coordinates or directions would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
@joelweidenfeld4712 ай бұрын
Just the TIME scales alone are beyond human comprehension and beyond certainty of anything... based on LITERALLY tiny bits of information ANYONE who acts with certainty describing EVENTS over 10s of millions of years is a fool... meanwhile out own knowledge of certain history doesn't REACH back more than 1000 years.....humans are dangerous jokes led by psychopathic DEMONS
@joelweidenfeld4712 ай бұрын
Not proto mammals???
@bensantos38822 ай бұрын
Dr. Burger why did you stop posting now over a year ago!? You were the chosen one, the paleontologist who would bring Mr. Beast to his knees!
@jong.82032 ай бұрын
Great video, thanks for uploading!
@QuickStrikes842 ай бұрын
That menacing grin in the thumbnail makes you the primary suspect for their extinction. 😰😱
@GastropodGaming20062 ай бұрын
I'm doing spec evo on Paranthropus (What if they survived today?) & I'm guessing that since Paranthropus (Who'd count as "early Paranthropus") was larger than early Homo, assuming they kept going down their pre existing path they'd evolve to be slightly bigger (by maybe 0.5-1ft) than Modern Humans, would you agree with this or no?
@GastropodGaming20062 ай бұрын
I'm also guessing they'd possibly get a small pair of 4th molars & evolve longer jaws (convergent evolution with Horses & other Equines)
@BenjaminBurgerScience2 ай бұрын
@@GastropodGaming2006 maybe, although difficult to say. Many animals molar-ize there 4th premolar, we have pretty omnivorous look teeth, but have reduced the size of teeth as we started cooking food. If they cooked those had veggies and milled floor, maybe even reduce their teeth too! It is sad they aren’t around today.
@albertmorrissette36402 ай бұрын
very enjoyable and intuitive
@glenwarrengeology2 ай бұрын
No Glaciers, sounds like paradise.
@andruwxx2 ай бұрын
I’m a pretty simple man, I just think Chinle rocks are pretty. Moenkope a little prettier 😂
@jadedmastermind2 ай бұрын
Onion Creek is a great little 4x4 trail!
@Justinbruno222 ай бұрын
Thanks teach!
@vintagehulk19623 ай бұрын
Question? marija kimbutas found 1 million year old African female bone Supposedly? I don't find any peer review of any such thing ?
@markcutter2013 ай бұрын
It has no connection at all to T rex
@ibrahimkuyumcu26493 ай бұрын
It's like he's teaching an alien about Earth species 😫
@rosshopkins20633 ай бұрын
Bros over here pretending he knows this stuff pronouncing it like leonardo decaprio in catch me if you can
@jethroe.davids1323 ай бұрын
I love encephalartos love and respect from South Africa