The new biggest predator ever
4:22
Where did turkeys come from
5:55
2 ай бұрын
Giant primates of prehistory
8:11
How should we imagine dinosaurs?
4:47
Thylacoleo, the marsupial lion
6:07
Пікірлер
@RajRaja-wo3uu
@RajRaja-wo3uu 5 сағат бұрын
@adamtruong1759
@adamtruong1759 10 сағат бұрын
I'd argue that the available prey items for Azhdarchids if they were place into the modern world wouldn't be limited to what they can swallow. These flying giants undoubtably could deal some serious damage by pecking at potential prey or threats, with Hatzegopteryx having a more lethal bite because it evolved in an environment where it didn't need to compete with large therapods that dominated most food webs (similar to today). What would make their presence felt even more is if they exhibit flocking behavior, and hunted like in Prehistoric Planet season 2.
@2001septeleven
@2001septeleven Күн бұрын
just a theory but because fire would be more effective back then, wouldnt the dinosaurs of the cretaceous be more resistant?
@thenerdbeast7375
@thenerdbeast7375 3 күн бұрын
For the South American coasts, its all fun and games until the Orcas start grabbing Azdarchids.
@safeysmith6720
@safeysmith6720 6 күн бұрын
To the people who keep bringing up that humans would just kill them all. 🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️ Not the point!!
@Dead_skeleton01
@Dead_skeleton01 7 күн бұрын
"No, they cant survive!" 🤓👆 The same animal that bullyed T-rex
@ianryan5225
@ianryan5225 10 күн бұрын
So your discord invite on the channel about page is invalid you want to reply to this comment with a new one?
@user-xx4ye8jr1o
@user-xx4ye8jr1o 11 күн бұрын
🤠🌲🍄🌾🥳💞🌊🌺🌳🏇🐎🐴🦄💝🌙💗💚☘️💓🥀🌻🌷🏵️💖💟😘♂️♂️💌🍀🧠🧠🥰😍🤩😋😇🤕
@guitarest452452
@guitarest452452 12 күн бұрын
H2o levels were greater which = greater animals or... humans..... giants mayber?
@commodoor6549
@commodoor6549 12 күн бұрын
They'd be hunted to extinction within one year unless we protected them.
@The_Primitive
@The_Primitive 13 күн бұрын
allosaurus would probably destroy the entire ecosystem, leaving only the the smaller/more agile species alive. It would kill the larger animals and steal kills from other predators
@NodosaurNoso
@NodosaurNoso 17 күн бұрын
Azdarchids would absolutely thrive in open areas and nothing would threaten them due to their intimidation ability, also azdarchids were actually pretty agile, they had the ability to gallop like modern horses using their dynamic head for maneuverability and their powerful wings for direction but they most certainly lacked the stamina to do that for long.
@allancastellon9248
@allancastellon9248 17 күн бұрын
I read the title snd immediately thought "Welp Lions are going extinct"
@trebigsby5602
@trebigsby5602 19 күн бұрын
Sometimes this gives me the idea of why so many human cultures have creatures like ogres, giants, and trolls. The mirror of a creature almost like you but obviously not defiantly left a genetic scar on us.
@imadnakhleh
@imadnakhleh 19 күн бұрын
Yabba Dabba Doo!!!!
@laurachapple6795
@laurachapple6795 22 күн бұрын
Hmmm... time to pull DDT out of retirement.
@greenkoopa
@greenkoopa 24 күн бұрын
5.56
@cambuxton6835
@cambuxton6835 25 күн бұрын
The rodents live mice and rats could.
@Firefocus-fz2we
@Firefocus-fz2we 26 күн бұрын
Welp, .50 cal would be allowed, I guess.
@jalenjordan7219
@jalenjordan7219 Ай бұрын
This a very infesting thought experiment. I think out of all the midrange to large theropods, Allosaurus would fair the best in the modern day. They had the right combination of size, speed and power to take advantage of Africa’s larger herbivores. And at younger ages, they would be age to hunt the plethora of small to medium sized ungulates (Oryx, Kudu, Antelope, Wildebeest, ect.). After reaching their adult size of 1-3+ tons, literally no other predator would try to steal a kill from them. And they can use that size to steal and scavenge from other predators when needed. I can imagine an Allosaurus just walking up on an entire pride of lions and steal their kill and they’d just let it. Not wanting to be on the businesses end of it jaws or claws. I also feel like people underestimate Allosaurus when it comes to the match up against Elephants. While true the average Elephant outweighs Allosaurus by 2-3 tons, it’s not like Allosaurus wasn’t familiar with hunting prey in this size range. One species of Stegosaurus that it loved alongside and likely hunted, weight about 5 tons as well. Then of course there the many sauropods it lived alongside in the Morrison Formation. Allosaurus wouldn’t have gone after adults, but juvenile and subadults were fair game. Heck, even at those young ages these sauropods already reached sized that were either equal to or even surpassed modern day elephants. Allosaurus also had the physical tools needed to hunt the African megafauna. It had a powerful bite force that surpassed modern day crocodiles, and it’s blade-like serrated teeth were perfect for slashing deep into flesh and causing heavy bleeding. Long, fishhook-like claws on powerful forearms perfect for grappling prey. Had decent binocular vision and could run between 20-30 miles per hour at its full adult size. It’s should also mentioned that new studies show that Allosaurus feed in a manner to hawks and kestrels. They’d pin prey down with their powerful clawed forearms and/or feed, and start stripping of chunks of flesh while the prey was still alive. Letting blood loss and shock to the rest. When it comes to large prey, Allosaurus could have been “flesh grazers”. Taking bites of flesh out of sauropods that were enough to sustain them without causing lethal damage to the prey to it can heal, while also not having to expend the energy to outright kill it. Allosaurus could have very easy done the same with Elephants, hippos, rhinos, ect. Of course there’s also the subject of pack hunting. Other then tyrannosaurids, Allosaurus and it’s relatives have the most evidence for cooperative hunting. Even if it’s just a pair, or maybe three fours adults, there wouldn’t be ANY manner of Africa’s megafauna that could stop them. Also there’s also the option of gregarious mobbing, where they just gang up to boost their odds in manner similar to Komodo Dragons. Allosaurus was the most successful theropod in the Morrison Formation and likely Late Jurassic North America for a reason. And if they were brought into the modern day, I think they would be just as successful if not more so.
@cro-magnoncarol4017
@cro-magnoncarol4017 Ай бұрын
Brandon Scott Pilcher artwork... Ew...
@glory2cybertron
@glory2cybertron Ай бұрын
Apparently this animal had the proportions of a Grevy's zebra without the big ears.
@sgtstr3am785
@sgtstr3am785 Ай бұрын
Im in the Horse God camp. I want to believe a genetic freak was preserved for us to find
@ericwethington
@ericwethington Ай бұрын
Saying dogs had more of an effect on humans than horses is quite frankly BS
@dawsonj5823
@dawsonj5823 Ай бұрын
I had Clydesdale horses years ago and their power was incredible. Now imagine a wild horse this size with the aggressive temperament similar to a zebra from having to contend with the various ice age carnivores. It must have been extremely dangerous.
@dallasmoorenumberone
@dallasmoorenumberone Ай бұрын
They would almost certainly target large theropod eggs and drive them extinct rather quickly as that's more or less what hominids did to all large predators. Hominids wouldn't take a single egg or a single nest like most egg stealers would they would ravage entire populations and use fire to force the large animals away from those nests. Between egg theft and the increased competition for medium and small game hominids would very quickly shape the ecosystems to their liking.
@yalejohnson4687
@yalejohnson4687 Ай бұрын
It’s “horses.” Apostrophes don’t pluralize things.
@Corndogg316
@Corndogg316 Ай бұрын
Sounds like a real champ! Thanks for the killer video 🙏
@dinogoldie9716
@dinogoldie9716 Ай бұрын
The documentary "Valley of Gwangi" showed us that an Allosaurus would easily pone an elephant then sit on a church organ before ultimately being burnt alive in that church.
@AndrewDavis-sj6mb
@AndrewDavis-sj6mb Ай бұрын
Horses are some of which called "Adroit'' creatures❤
@kaibalfour2318
@kaibalfour2318 Ай бұрын
They were hunted by Deerbras
@unterdessen8822
@unterdessen8822 Ай бұрын
There were 4 natural variants of wild horse in Eurasia: - The Przewalski in northeast Asia, that you already mentioned - The Tarpan in northwest Asia and Europe - The Northern Forest Horse in northern Europe - The Polar horse in northern Asia (further north than both the Przewalski and the Tarpan) Except for the Polar horse they are all recognised as separate ancestors of modern horses and have their own scientific names. Tarpans were the first to be domesticated about 6.000 years ago in the region between rivers Dniepr (now Ukraine) and Ural (now Russia). They existed in 2 variants: Forest Tarpans (Europe) and Steppe Tarpans (West Asia and Central Asia) and are the ancestors of the early domesticated types 1 (resembles an Exmoor pony), 3 (Akhal-Teke, still present) and 4 (Caspian horse, still present). Domesticated type 2 is a hybrid between Tarpan and Przwalski (Mongol pony, still present). The Brothers Heck, who were in charge of the Hellabrunn Zoo in Munich, recreated the Tarpan and the aurochs from primitive horse and cattle breeds in the 1930s, so there is sort of an artificial Tarpan (aka "Heck horse"), that is often kept together with artificial aurochs (aka "Heck cattle") in wildlife parks. But there are also still horses, that resemble the original Tarpans very closely. The Polish Konik horse is most likely a surviving population of Forest Tarpan, and the Russia Vyatka horse is an only slightly modified Steppe Tarpan. Domesticated type 1 also still roams Europe in many local variants, whether it's the Exmoor pony, Fjord horse, Sorraia, Skyros pony or Estonian hobune. These are primitive pony and small horse breeds, that were directly formed from Forest Tarpan stock. The most well-known pony breed, though, the Shetland pony, is not a Tarpan descendant, but a miniature Northern Forest horse. This original horse variant is the ancestor of heavy draft horses (and the smallest, yet strongest pony). The Polar horse is also still around: It's now known as the Yakutian horse now and survives some of the coldest temperatures on the planet in northeast Russia. There's speculation, that it may have influenced Asian breeds, but apparently it hasn't been thoroughly researched yet. So let me correct you from the sidelines: The Przewalski horse wasn't and isn't the only natural wild horse population. At the very least you have to count the Yakutian horse and the Konik as surviving Polar horse and Forest Tarpan. And as the Shetland pony is essentially just a Northern Forest horse, that suffers from insular dwarfism, add that one, too.
@Vallibonavenitrix
@Vallibonavenitrix Ай бұрын
Love this!
@Sedimented.Studios
@Sedimented.Studios Ай бұрын
thank you!
@alexanderbrownbill3405
@alexanderbrownbill3405 Ай бұрын
How do you know all of this. Like sure little evidence, geography, and speculations. But again, I would have never been able to explain what the heck happened or was happening all those millions of years ago, just crazy the way you perfectly explained all of this!
@homelesskoopa1308
@homelesskoopa1308 Ай бұрын
It’s a combo of using modern comparisons and fossil evidence, combine the two and we can get pretty close, like for example we compare T.rex to the lion because it’s the apex predator of today and with that knowledge we can make educated guesses how previous examples of such niches may have behaved, sadly not perfect though.
@001AndrewTAT
@001AndrewTAT Ай бұрын
Biggest crocodile ever lived on planet Earth. ❤❤❤❤❤ It was trex of water.
@mikerelva6915
@mikerelva6915 Ай бұрын
Horses have had a much, much, much bigger impact than dogs. It's not even questionable. More people may have dogs, and maybe we.have emotional attachments to them, but how did they change the course of humanity? Helping with hunting a little? Horses radically shifted the course of humanity - just look at what happened to the Native Americans after they got the horse. Horses are the reasons we were able to populate America, they plowed our fields, they led us into war, they hauled out firewood to keep warm - humans are still living in the stone age without the horse.
@robertsonmcnaughton4850
@robertsonmcnaughton4850 Ай бұрын
Imagine the difference both American horses and dogs would've made, natives hunted American horses to extinction( why they looked at European horses in awe, it would be like seeing a live dragon) and last documented American dog was a food source to its tribe in Alaska, parvo killed the rest, different cultures looked at animals differently your statement is bold, and horses only expedited north American colonies.
@JamesWillmus
@JamesWillmus Ай бұрын
Good god, how would someone even ride that thing? You’d feel like a little kid sitting on the back of a draft horse. Not so much piloting the horse as just being along for the ride.
@prowlus
@prowlus Ай бұрын
That explains Raol’s horse from hokoto no ken
@JustAnotherRandomGuy-_-
@JustAnotherRandomGuy-_- Ай бұрын
Chalicotherium is the most weirdest horse for me.
@yojimbo103
@yojimbo103 Ай бұрын
Missed out the Filfla shark of 1987 - largest ever recorded at 23ft.
@eatsblades
@eatsblades Ай бұрын
OK that makes sense....everything was huge and so were horses.
@decem_sagittae
@decem_sagittae Ай бұрын
Octopus eyes look so cool
@jamesblackshaw132
@jamesblackshaw132 Ай бұрын
Titanic??
@Cody38Super
@Cody38Super Ай бұрын
What is a Duraft/Diraft Horse? Is it like a Giraffe Horse? Hahahaaaaaaaa.
@melhawk6284
@melhawk6284 Ай бұрын
Is it bad that i hope they find one frozen somewhere and CLONE IIIITTT. They are trying for Mammoth, why not Eqqus Giganteus?!
@garrettriddle3706
@garrettriddle3706 Ай бұрын
This was a cool and interesting video. You know what I would find interesting, the evolution of the Wildebeest.
@nonyobussiness3440
@nonyobussiness3440 Ай бұрын
Could it be that these teeth belong to a species of Giant Ass instead?
@michaelalvermere6532
@michaelalvermere6532 Ай бұрын
What about Shadowfax - Lord of Horses?
@i.eduard4098
@i.eduard4098 Ай бұрын
I think if humans could establish a perimeter and have some kind of society they would stealth and hunt certain species to extinction. T-rex newborns could be a great source of food. Their parents can be trapped while coming to save their newborn. They could set on fire entire habitats. Humans are a nasty species because they can manipulate the environment and have tools. I think if any of these current apes start to build huts we already feel we have competition.