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Extinct Animals The Native Americans Saw

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ExtinctZoo

ExtinctZoo

Күн бұрын

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@ExtinctZoo
@ExtinctZoo 2 ай бұрын
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@HassanMohamed-rm1cb
@HassanMohamed-rm1cb 2 ай бұрын
Why don’t you get to think and make a suggestion creating another KZbin Videos Shows that’s all about the Extinct Prehistoric Amphicyons (Bear Dogs) on the next Extinct Zoo coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
@Roar8384
@Roar8384 2 ай бұрын
I already have a different better browser.
@robertomontini5479
@robertomontini5479 2 ай бұрын
Gojirasaurus quayi of triassic video is coming?
@joelbalsters5352
@joelbalsters5352 2 ай бұрын
Opera is Chinese spy ware the same as tiktok
@subaru69
@subaru69 2 ай бұрын
@@Roar8384 which one
@StrawberyyExe
@StrawberyyExe 2 ай бұрын
These videos make me understand why the Native Americans had so many folklores and scary stories. Love it
@terrelldurocher3330
@terrelldurocher3330 2 ай бұрын
Bear across the board got smaller, you see alot of smaller bears these days.
@john-ic5pz
@john-ic5pz 2 ай бұрын
looks like everything got smaller, the cats too. I wonder why...
@QwoRE112
@QwoRE112 2 ай бұрын
@@john-ic5pzless prey abundance and smaller habitats
@Brown_Bison
@Brown_Bison 2 ай бұрын
​@@john-ic5pz Increasing heat. Also, there was about 35% more oxygen 300 million years ago than today which lead to animals evolving to be bigger. When it decreased and climate changed, animals either adapted and evolved to suit the conditions, or they failed and died off. Or were hunted.
@hia5235
@hia5235 2 ай бұрын
They wiped out all these animals you know.....
@RedXlV
@RedXlV 2 ай бұрын
Modern people: "How did the ancient Native Americans deal with these giant animals?" Ancient Native Americans: "By killing them, obviously."
@hia5235
@hia5235 2 ай бұрын
Nobody wants to even say the truth: they were all hunted to extinction by natives
@TheWolfsnack
@TheWolfsnack 2 ай бұрын
...and eating as many as possible...
@washingtonrl
@washingtonrl 2 ай бұрын
There is only one race of people, that has never been linked to having a connection with nature without destroying nature and it is the greediest race.
@supercheese7033
@supercheese7033 2 ай бұрын
They were the original invasive species...
@theoriginalkyttyn7724
@theoriginalkyttyn7724 2 ай бұрын
And domesticating some of them.
@lithonianinja
@lithonianinja 2 ай бұрын
Dire Wolf bite marks have been reported on human bones. Whether these humans were hunted or if the wolves dug them out of a grave site is the question
@john-ic5pz
@john-ic5pz 2 ай бұрын
"a dingo ate my baby!!!" I'd wager it was a fortuitous hunt. I imagine we'd not have buried a peer in a shallow grave so easily accessed by wildlife. or did they happen to do "sky burials", leaving the corpse in the wilds for animals to eat? I don't know the region and era well enough to say...hence the wager. 😁 wdyt?
@benjamindavis2896
@benjamindavis2896 2 ай бұрын
I think you're going to win this wager
@kerianhalcyon2769
@kerianhalcyon2769 2 ай бұрын
@@john-ic5pz Could have also been a scavenging opportunity. After all, these guys lived in open wilderness with many hazards - a lost/starving hunter, a fall leading to a broken limb, an illness that their immune system couldn't adapt to fast enough, any of these can take a person when on their own before others can get to them. At that point once they're dead and not found by their community the meat's free game for whatever finds it first.
@angelacrabtree2847
@angelacrabtree2847 2 ай бұрын
Could be both. Dire wolves were impressive animals.
@srobeck77
@srobeck77 2 ай бұрын
There hasnt ever been a recorded killing of a human from a healthy wolf, much like with Orcas. Now the occasional near death wolf that has been kicked out of the pack is a different story.
@Obironnkenobi
@Obironnkenobi 2 ай бұрын
Every single CGI generated interaction between the Lions and the Gliptadons is freaking hilarious. Lion: "I just wanna eat you." Gliptadon: "No!" *retracts even further winthin it's shell* Lion: "awww, come on!"
@medicolkie3606
@medicolkie3606 14 күн бұрын
ikr? i imagine its a much more frantic and violent interaction than depicted here
@theosnepenthes8751
@theosnepenthes8751 2 ай бұрын
If they looked up in the sky, they would see flocks of Passenger pigeons, the most common bird in North America, that took hours to pass by and were so dense they actually had the same effect as solar eclipses and dimmed the daylight by blocking out the sun. A single rifle shot upwards without even aiming would down 15 or more birds. Imagine the killing rate that it took to drive 5 billion birds to extinction in less than 300 years.
@HungryCats70
@HungryCats70 2 ай бұрын
...or to wipe out almost all bison in about two decades.
@AEB1066
@AEB1066 2 ай бұрын
American Burbon changed flavour due to the loss of the white oak that needed passenger pigeons to spread its seeds.
@johngalt97
@johngalt97 2 ай бұрын
Weren't nets employed to great effect?
@serahloeffelroberts9901
@serahloeffelroberts9901 2 ай бұрын
I saw a stuffed passenger pigeon in a museum. It was about the size of a parakeet.
@melhawk6284
@melhawk6284 2 ай бұрын
I would rather NOT! Those little birds were gorgeous, and human greed is some bullshit!
@ProfQuibblefingers64
@ProfQuibblefingers64 2 ай бұрын
"A bite only as strong as a jaguar's"? So... Strong enough to crush a caiman skull
@lorinctoth9402
@lorinctoth9402 2 ай бұрын
Yeah.. like that's still a pretty powerful bite, being the fifth strongest bite of living animals, and the strongest of any living big cat. A smilodon's bite strenght being on the weaker side is quite a misleading phrasing.
@IDraw99
@IDraw99 Ай бұрын
​@@lorinctoth9402 living animals is crazy, there's sharks and orcas which can have bite forces bigger than crocs jags are op but the are plenty of animals with crazier bite forces
@SahilK-xx3iy
@SahilK-xx3iy Ай бұрын
Full grown camians solo jaguars
@lorinctoth9402
@lorinctoth9402 Ай бұрын
@@IDraw99 Yes, I'm not saying that, I'm saying that a jaguar's bite force is still strong, and not "on the weaker side".
@billyguyjoe1858
@billyguyjoe1858 Ай бұрын
@@SahilK-xx3iylol no
@sidlazzar1002
@sidlazzar1002 2 ай бұрын
I’m Native American, Muckleshoot from Washington state. I’m so excited to watch this. My hands go up to you 🙌🏼
@madizo9056
@madizo9056 2 ай бұрын
What’s your opinion on the term “native american”?
@sidlazzar1002
@sidlazzar1002 2 ай бұрын
Rather be called Native American or First Nations. Definitely not Indian
@sapphonymph8204
@sapphonymph8204 2 ай бұрын
​@@sidlazzar1002how about Asian immigrant?
@Gyati
@Gyati 2 ай бұрын
@@sapphonymph8204is 12,000 years ago long enough for you pal?
@user-kz6pf5zk6w
@user-kz6pf5zk6w 2 ай бұрын
Native Americans aren't Indians.. Native Americans were placed on reservations by the government while Indians owned the land...You even have full blown white Europeans claiming to be native Americans... Stealing the identity of the true indigenous people will cost some greatly in the near future... People are benefitting from all the lies so they don't want the truth to come out
@itswizardtime63
@itswizardtime63 2 ай бұрын
Idk why, but this part of history always interests me
@orlandowilliamson691
@orlandowilliamson691 2 ай бұрын
I wanna see how the big cats and the trex looked the most.
@wesleyezell2361
@wesleyezell2361 2 ай бұрын
Not that long ago in reality
@MarshalMarrs-eu9yh
@MarshalMarrs-eu9yh 2 ай бұрын
It would be very interesting if the Pleistocene extinctions in the Americas were not as severe as in this timeline!
@DannieKamete
@DannieKamete Ай бұрын
maybe because it's interesting?
@billyshakespeare488
@billyshakespeare488 Ай бұрын
It's not told, the Spanish burned the Aztec books when they colonized. Who knows what knowledge was lost. We're only beginning to piece it together now. Even what we do know the American government will be reluctant to teach in public school as they don't want citizens to sympathize with the victims of their brutal past.
@bradleybeeson6932
@bradleybeeson6932 2 ай бұрын
Bison basically have a single huge lung, an unusual weakness that was exploited by Natives and settlers alike. A single arrow or bullet would collapse their entire respiratory system and they would drop in just a few steps.
@KineticTaco
@KineticTaco 2 ай бұрын
Ah yes. They were all shot… definitely not drove off cliffs in droves by the beloved natives.
@meowmachine9147
@meowmachine9147 2 ай бұрын
​@KineticTaco What are you so smug about? They didn't say all of them were shot, and none were killed in other ways. Also, your comment about beloved natives is really weird, as in sarcastic. What's your issues with ancient Native Americans? They hunted just like virtually all native people
@james.s7133
@james.s7133 2 ай бұрын
No, American bison (Bison bison) have both lungs in a single pleural cavity, which is unusual for mammals. This is because bison have an incomplete mediastinum, which is a condition that separates the pleural cavities. This single cavity is called "buffalo chest", and it can be a life-threatening condition.
@itsdabees
@itsdabees Ай бұрын
​@@KineticTacothis reeks of racism
@ganjalfcreamcorn8438
@ganjalfcreamcorn8438 Ай бұрын
​@@KineticTaco found the racist guy lol
@assimilatedarchivist1173
@assimilatedarchivist1173 2 ай бұрын
Fascinating how the Arctodus Simus recognized Canadian and US borders thousands of years ago
@luisa.acevedo3326
@luisa.acevedo3326 2 ай бұрын
Yeah, referring to the US as America on a science video is lazy. I was confused at first.
@SuperTah33
@SuperTah33 2 ай бұрын
There’s an accurate range map on the Wiki article
@lorinctoth9402
@lorinctoth9402 2 ай бұрын
Yeah it's so bad, it sees the would be US border and teleports to Alaska and Hawai'i. (But honestly it's also funny)
@SolitaryMan41
@SolitaryMan41 2 ай бұрын
It was Mexican
@tohaason
@tohaason 2 ай бұрын
Yeah. Very good video, but the graphics depicting living areas were really bad. Following not just Canadian and US borders, but state borders too.
@AussBosss
@AussBosss 2 ай бұрын
The giraffe lifting up the kid is wild 😂
@cplmpcocptcl6306
@cplmpcocptcl6306 2 ай бұрын
It happened again 2 weeks ago at the drive thru safari in central Texas. The giraffe was going for the food but grabbed the toddler.😅 2min video on YT.
@ganjalfcreamcorn8438
@ganjalfcreamcorn8438 Ай бұрын
I replayed that a few times. To go from family fun to complete panic is pretty funny lol. The dad is like oh shit! 😂
@Methadone4Life
@Methadone4Life 11 күн бұрын
@@ganjalfcreamcorn8438 I think some replayed it for the mama! LOL
@rfjohns1
@rfjohns1 2 ай бұрын
Left out one of the most impressive predators, the American Lion.
@benmcreynolds8581
@benmcreynolds8581 2 ай бұрын
Yeah it's pretty crazy the amount of diversity America had then. Cave lions, American cheetah, a whole array of different saber toothed cats, etc., etc.
@eddysgaming9868
@eddysgaming9868 2 ай бұрын
I did think of the cave lion during the smilodon segment.
@serahloeffelroberts9901
@serahloeffelroberts9901 2 ай бұрын
Pronghorn antelope evolved to be so fast to outrun the American cheetah which has been extinct for a long time
@benmcreynolds8581
@benmcreynolds8581 2 ай бұрын
@@serahloeffelroberts9901 yeah that's a awesome little fact. Pronghorns are so stupid fast. I wish we could have seen what a beast American Cheetah was like. When I was young I was obsessed with cheetahs because of how fast they were. As a kid I was obsessed with trying to be faster than everyone. Then I grew up and learned more about cheetahs and it bums me out. I wish cheetahs weren't so genetically bottlenecked. I wish we could see a more impressive well rounded kind of cheetah. Currently They struggle so much to survive compared to all the other animals around them. It's a bummer how much they are struggling
@robertmartinjr.4537
@robertmartinjr.4537 2 ай бұрын
I was recently at the Labrea Tarpit Museum in Los Angeles. I saw some skeletons of American Lions. Even as a display skeleton you could see how large they were.
@cybernetic_crocodile8462
@cybernetic_crocodile8462 2 ай бұрын
It is honestly very impressive, that prehistoric humans managed not only to thrive alongside all those impressive animals but even outcompeted some of them. You would be suprised how much just a sharpened stick and stones can achieve.
@Highspeedoffset1
@Highspeedoffset1 2 ай бұрын
Human endurance and team hunting with ranged weapons ( Bow and Atlatl) vs. Well, Anything. I'd bet on the Humans.
@Ispeakthetruthify
@Ispeakthetruthify 2 ай бұрын
You mean you'd be surprised how far human intelligence, ingenuity, mastering of fire, weapon making, language/teamwork, etc, etc, etc, etc, etc....can achieve. Modern humans, and our close human relatives, have been the dominant species on this planet for nearly 2 million years for a reason. These animals stood NO CHANCE against our prehistoric human ancestors.
@serahloeffelroberts9901
@serahloeffelroberts9901 2 ай бұрын
Especially a large group of humans armed with pointy sticks.
@billwilliamson9842
@billwilliamson9842 Ай бұрын
you left out how these so called "natives" caused the extinction of these animals. so much for that whole "they only took what was needed bs" the leftys spew out lol
@Jb22372
@Jb22372 27 күн бұрын
@@Highspeedoffset1comet impacts help too
@poogissploogis
@poogissploogis 2 ай бұрын
Gotta give some major credit to the oral traditions of a lot of these tribes. There are cautionary tales about dangerous creatures told to children to this day that describe these ancient creatures. It's amazing that 10,000+ years of telephone hasn't degraded the original memory much at all.
@sapphonymph8204
@sapphonymph8204 2 ай бұрын
Oral traditions of murder and genocide of the mega fauna. Something to be very proud of.
@eddysgaming9868
@eddysgaming9868 2 ай бұрын
One that remains with me are the stories of the Thunderbird. There actually was a bird as large as the legend says (22 ft. wingspan, I believe), who rode the thermal drafts from South to North America. Which must have been terrifying, especially for parents, hence the stories.
@sapphonymph8204
@sapphonymph8204 2 ай бұрын
@@eddysgaming9868 PFFT
@amicableenmity9820
@amicableenmity9820 2 ай бұрын
@sapphonymph8204 pfft yourself, look up extinct giant vultures. I wish this guy had covered them in this video. They were massive.
@KimberlyMartinez-vu2qy
@KimberlyMartinez-vu2qy Ай бұрын
@@sapphonymph8204all humans killed the megafauna in each continent stop acting as if the we were the only ones!
@erinrising2799
@erinrising2799 2 ай бұрын
I was not prepared for what an absolute unit the Giant Beaver was
@johnwingate8799
@johnwingate8799 2 ай бұрын
In texas..
@nathanbaker6033
@nathanbaker6033 2 ай бұрын
They can be quite intimidating and should always be approached with caution.
@Buster_Piles
@Buster_Piles Ай бұрын
Beaver is great. Love 'em.
@CrashNTheBoys2002
@CrashNTheBoys2002 28 күн бұрын
Beavers are still a unit don’t get it twisted, I would rather get chased by a bear instead of a beaver.
@user-rs8ky8hv6s
@user-rs8ky8hv6s 26 күн бұрын
Ah yes, Casteroides. A beaver as big as a black bear. Must've been QUITE a sight to behold when they were alive.
@GatCat
@GatCat Ай бұрын
Video starts around 2:30
@UnknownMystery-yc3mm
@UnknownMystery-yc3mm 10 күн бұрын
Legend
@kingnick6260
@kingnick6260 4 күн бұрын
MVP
@CandyKeshane
@CandyKeshane 3 күн бұрын
Thank you😊💅
@jamemule5326
@jamemule5326 2 күн бұрын
MVP
@John-fo4wp
@John-fo4wp 2 ай бұрын
I don’t know what’s scarier: The fact that they managed to take down these giant Mammoths or the fact that I’m taller than the America Mastodon
@spyrofrost9158
@spyrofrost9158 2 ай бұрын
Well, clearly you know what you must do. Find a great club and ride to glory.
@infinitemonkey917
@infinitemonkey917 2 ай бұрын
Yet it was much heavier than modern elephants.
@reigoemon2229
@reigoemon2229 2 ай бұрын
​@@infinitemonkey917 Not as heavy as CaseOh (Sorry i just had to do it. It was like right there just begging to be turned into a caseoh joke)
@infinitemonkey917
@infinitemonkey917 2 ай бұрын
@@reigoemon2229 Pretty sure I'm too old to get that.
@reigoemon2229
@reigoemon2229 2 ай бұрын
@@infinitemonkey917 Probably. Everyone just likes making jokes about CaseOh being fat
@mjolninja9358
@mjolninja9358 Ай бұрын
Man I wish for the best to all Natives, they have such amazing history and culture.
@livy1962
@livy1962 2 ай бұрын
Love that USA-centric map at 11:23. Looks like they knew about the Alaska purchase in advance of the event.
@thevvitch7585
@thevvitch7585 Ай бұрын
Hawaii pog
@Altraiid
@Altraiid 2 ай бұрын
There is so, so much history and records from native americans (South and North) lost forever...
@katyungodly
@katyungodly 2 ай бұрын
Humans globally have lost a lot of information, I'd love to know what various cultures were in Africa 50,000 years ago
@dillonhillier
@dillonhillier 2 ай бұрын
Records are hard to make when you don't have a written language.
@theratgod8194
@theratgod8194 2 ай бұрын
@@dillonhillier yeah.. though there were still a *few* written languages of sorts before contact, notably in hieroglyphic forms in centeral america and (i think) the northeast had a small hieroglyphic system
@dillonhillier
@dillonhillier 2 ай бұрын
@@theratgod8194 yeah, glyphs and pictographs in mesoamerica. Not sure about the NE. Regardless, nothing that could keep detailed records.
@burrrn___
@burrrn___ 2 ай бұрын
that’s what happens when colonizers also destroy cultures into extinction, destroy literature and history recorded by those ppl
@rickdenesha9473
@rickdenesha9473 2 ай бұрын
I find it interesting as I love this kind of thing, that when you show North American range you stop at the Canadian border then continue once again at Alaska
@CodeCasanova
@CodeCasanova 2 ай бұрын
The bear map was funny af. Bear be like, Ill live in the lower 48 and Alaska, but F Canada.
@orlandowilliamson691
@orlandowilliamson691 15 күн бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@albytross8681
@albytross8681 14 күн бұрын
He didn’t have his international visa, I can relate
@niharg2011
@niharg2011 2 ай бұрын
Last time I was this early, India was still an Island
@MattiasSvanberg1987
@MattiasSvanberg1987 Ай бұрын
Iceland is an island.
@balung
@balung Ай бұрын
​@@MattiasSvanberg1987some early European Explorers thought India was an Island, hence the joke.
@melanimatejak6821
@melanimatejak6821 Ай бұрын
​@balung Who thought that India was an island? First time heard this 🤔
@warmist8197
@warmist8197 2 ай бұрын
I saw a hunter drop a cape buffalo with a compound bow. It flinched when the arrow hit then went back to grazing. Within 10 feet it layed down and passed on. I was MAD impressed 😮
@edie4321
@edie4321 2 ай бұрын
I quit eating meat because of the way the animals are treated. I always questioned how the natives (Earth Honoring) beings did it. You gave me a view, I had not yet imagined. Thank you.
@warmist8197
@warmist8197 2 ай бұрын
@@edie4321 it was incredible. He was just squatting in some thick brush, he popped up, shot the arrow and squatted right back down. The animal probably felt a bee sting at most, looked around like no big deal and went back to its business. The hunter just sat and waited patiently. It was such a calm process it really felt like the cruelty was taken completely out. That's a master level hunter that everyone at one point strived to become.
@edie4321
@edie4321 2 ай бұрын
@@warmist8197, It sounds amazing, and something I would not imagine, but want to. Thank you for sharing.
@stefthorman8548
@stefthorman8548 2 ай бұрын
he used poison, it's not really that impressive, any semi competent hunter can do it
@warmist8197
@warmist8197 2 ай бұрын
@@stefthorman8548 no, he did not use poison. The shot was perfectly placed hitting both lungs.
@tm43977
@tm43977 2 ай бұрын
Native Americans encounter and witness America's big beasts
@beastmaster0934
@beastmaster0934 2 ай бұрын
Lucky bastards.
@patsyleeoswald9912
@patsyleeoswald9912 2 ай бұрын
And hunted them to extinction.
@Galaxia7
@Galaxia7 2 ай бұрын
​@@patsyleeoswald9912probably not, they coexisted with them for thousands of years.
@MrKkoool
@MrKkoool 2 ай бұрын
Now facing peeslamic beasts.
@Secret_Comics
@Secret_Comics 2 ай бұрын
@@beastmaster0934 I don’t think you would want to open your door to the sight of your friends getting brutally mauled by a Saber Toothed Cat or Dire Wolf
@planescaped
@planescaped 2 ай бұрын
They also had to take down fully grown buffalo without the use of horses, as they weren't reintroduced to America until Europeans arrived. Also, it's crazy to think that the great plains once resembled the serengeti with bison instead of wilderbeast.
@jimc4839
@jimc4839 2 ай бұрын
They would herd them off of cliffs in some cases.
@KineticTaco
@KineticTaco 2 ай бұрын
@@jimc4839some? Most.
@Darunia_s
@Darunia_s 2 ай бұрын
​@@KineticTacoSome, if our ancestors had done that for all hunts there wouldn't have been much left for the next hunting season, and different tribes and individuals had different preferences for hunting bison.
@asin8757
@asin8757 Ай бұрын
I was thinking of that when dire wolves having a strong bite to take down horses was mentioned.
@selthafour6948
@selthafour6948 Ай бұрын
There were relatives of horses that they killed off. Long before horses were brought from the old world.
@Kolbjornelenano
@Kolbjornelenano Ай бұрын
15:34 a few years ago during the construction of the new Mexico City airport, near to was once lake Texcoco, the bones of 480 mammoths were discovered, including 70 full skeletons, many of them with marks of being hunted by humans. Archaeologist also found bones of saberthots, gliptodons, camels, horses and humans.
@wuh-huw9950
@wuh-huw9950 24 күн бұрын
Holy shit saber thots
@henriknielsen9674
@henriknielsen9674 2 ай бұрын
Concluding that there was a huge amount of dire wolfs because way more is found in a tar pit, is really not scientific at all. Tar pits are traps with often live bait calling out in desperation, that attracts wolfs
@amicableenmity9820
@amicableenmity9820 2 ай бұрын
What is interesting is that they never found American lions in the tar pits.
@melanimatejak6821
@melanimatejak6821 Ай бұрын
​@@amicableenmity9820I think American lion has been found in tar pits? Just it is very rare, maybe because the animal itself was rare
@johnszoo8460
@johnszoo8460 2 ай бұрын
That's a giant beaver 😂
@patsyleeoswald9912
@patsyleeoswald9912 2 ай бұрын
That's what he said.
@SuperCoolTeenisGuy
@SuperCoolTeenisGuy 2 ай бұрын
you're a giant beaver
@justing1810
@justing1810 Ай бұрын
​@@patsyleeoswald9912dang you beat me to it
@craigthescott5074
@craigthescott5074 16 күн бұрын
Scientists now say Mammoth’s lived up to 10,000 years ago on an Island in the northern pacific.
@Altraiid
@Altraiid 2 ай бұрын
A millisecond long TF2 reference 😻
@patchpasch7147
@patchpasch7147 2 ай бұрын
Time stamp? ❤
@diegoquezada3193
@diegoquezada3193 2 ай бұрын
@@patchpasch7147 13:48
@brianbailey5504
@brianbailey5504 2 ай бұрын
Actually jaguars have the most powerful bite force out of all big cats at 1,500 psi and is double that of a tiger
@jancyvargheese5351
@jancyvargheese5351 2 ай бұрын
Wrong, that is incorrect. Jaguars only have the strongest bite force pound for pound, not in real life. In real life, their bite force is around 750 pounds, which is still impressive for their size, but lions and tigers have the strongest bite force at over 1000psi
@user-wg4tk8xz2j
@user-wg4tk8xz2j Ай бұрын
Do you realize how big a tigers mouth is compared to a Jaguar lol. Cmon
@iPhantom287
@iPhantom287 Ай бұрын
Y’all are arguing about this when Jaguar is P4P big cat king. Tiger crush necks to suffocate, Jaguar crushes the skull to get it over with. That tells you everything you need.
@alvargas5095
@alvargas5095 Ай бұрын
Reportedly they can crush a caiman skull with a single bite. That's impressive
@kelvin4910
@kelvin4910 24 күн бұрын
​@jancyvargheese5351 and when I look it up you're wrong 😂
@dispatcher22z20
@dispatcher22z20 2 ай бұрын
6:42 mistake found, the dire wolf didn't out number other animals as the environment just cant support that but instead 1 prey item would be getting chased by a pack of dire wolfs and all would get stuck in the tar that is why there are so many dire wolfs to not dire wolfs in those pits
@Dragoon..
@Dragoon.. 2 ай бұрын
I think he was talking in relation to other predators granted if so he could have been clearer
@glyptodongaming5629
@glyptodongaming5629 2 ай бұрын
Another mistake is pretending the Native Americans taught Europeans how to farm
@HungryCats70
@HungryCats70 2 ай бұрын
@@glyptodongaming5629 Europeans didn't know how to grow North American crops. Like maize/corn.
@ericschulze5641
@ericschulze5641 2 ай бұрын
​@HungryCats70 it wasn't/ isn't hard to grow & matures quickly, no need to teach anybody
@eddysgaming9868
@eddysgaming9868 2 ай бұрын
I hate to be that guy, but it's "wolves." The plural of "wolf."
@tvbnine793
@tvbnine793 2 ай бұрын
Can we make a petition for Extinct Zoo to make "Extinct Animals The (insert ancient people of a particular place) Saw" a series. Were there any magnificent creatures in North America that went extinct sometime notably after the last Ice Age ended? Ngl I wish American Lions and Camels still existed
@serahloeffelroberts9901
@serahloeffelroberts9901 2 ай бұрын
The horse who evolved in North America also vanished completely, not to return until the Spanish brought the horse back to the continent. Wild horses on the plains undoubtedly were descended from warm blood stock who were bred in desert conditions.
@MatthewTheWanderer
@MatthewTheWanderer Ай бұрын
This is already a series and this isn't the first video they made with that exact format.
@serahloeffelroberts9901
@serahloeffelroberts9901 Ай бұрын
The only members of the camel family in the Americas who survived were the llama, the alpaca and the wild vicuna in South America.
@MatthewTheWanderer
@MatthewTheWanderer Ай бұрын
@@serahloeffelroberts9901 And the guanaco.
@Memmitov12
@Memmitov12 Ай бұрын
​@@serahloeffelroberts9901the llama? Fr?😂😂😂😂😂😂 That thing survived all those monsters like creatures 🤦‍♂️😭
@snr.froggymooopew7781
@snr.froggymooopew7781 2 ай бұрын
Your vids rock man! As a life-long learner and zoology and archeology buff, I love starting my day with your vids. Rock on brother 🤘🏻
@alvargas5095
@alvargas5095 Ай бұрын
Man I love this video. It takes me back to my childhood when I was fascinated by nature and wildlife. I bought every issue of Funk & Wagnells wildlife encyclopedia and the Time/Life series. I wish you would've covered the Passenger Pigeon. The Passenger Pigeon is considered to have been the single most numerous species of bird in North America with flocks numbering in the billions. It is recorded that when they passed over on their annual migration from the northern forest to the south a clear cloudless day would turn to night dark for hours as the innumerable flock would fly overhead raining down guano like a heavy rainstorm. Sadly, its downfall as a species began upon the arrival of European settlers and it went into extinction only 27 years after its scientific classification. If you want to know more about the Passenger Pigeon highly recommend Allen W. Eckert's "The Silent Sky".
@Domzdream
@Domzdream 2 ай бұрын
My favourite bit was the kid feeding the girafs. Up ya Go!
@cplmpcocptcl6306
@cplmpcocptcl6306 2 ай бұрын
😂Love it. Did you see it happened 2 weeks ago in central Texas? The giraffe was going for the food but nabbed the toddler.
@eros5420
@eros5420 Ай бұрын
I saw a giant beaver once. It was big and hairy. Looked unkempt. Smelled of fish. After getting wet, it tried to munch on my wood but a beaver that size has probably destroyed a lot of wood before so I used protection and from my wood, i got it off.
@A_Rainworld_Fan.
@A_Rainworld_Fan. 26 күн бұрын
Huh?? There exctinct.
@eros5420
@eros5420 26 күн бұрын
@A_Rainworld_Fan. Actually they're more common than you think. Just gotta know where to look. Even know a woman who did OF in college but is a game warden now. She took me out in the woods at a local reserve and showed me a massive beaver. I couldn't believe how big it was!
@orlandowilliamson691
@orlandowilliamson691 15 күн бұрын
​@@eros5420Damn I thought you were joking at first that's crazy!! 😂 I can believe it though.
@orlandowilliamson691
@orlandowilliamson691 15 күн бұрын
​@@eros5420How big did it look estimate of weight?
@eros5420
@eros5420 15 күн бұрын
@orlandowilliamson691 Reread my reply slowly 😂
@Fearlesslyobedient
@Fearlesslyobedient 28 күн бұрын
My mom is Cherokee! Most of the time I'm just like my Scottish dad....but when life is difficult or I face opposition that's when I realize there's a strength in me that comes from the things she's taught me through the years. Thanks for posting this video. We're not forgotten and our history is not forgotten. ❤
@superdinotv3298
@superdinotv3298 2 ай бұрын
Suggestion for next similar video: Extinct animals the ancient Roman’s saw
@Varphi_
@Varphi_ 2 ай бұрын
And the first group of humans!! Imagine what kind of creatures were running around then 😳
@angelacrabtree2847
@angelacrabtree2847 2 ай бұрын
Ancient Egyptians go back farther
@glennnolasco6892
@glennnolasco6892 2 ай бұрын
I think I saw a video with that exact title. I would like ExtinctZoo to tackle this topic too, as the Roman Empire caused the extinction of some of these said extinct animals
@darrenshaw6724
@darrenshaw6724 2 ай бұрын
The romans caused the extinction of the atlas lion. So many were used in gladiator fights.
@angelacrabtree2847
@angelacrabtree2847 2 ай бұрын
@@darrenshaw6724 There was a plant that was supposed to prevent pregnancy that they wiped out also.
@CollinDavis-jd1qr
@CollinDavis-jd1qr 2 ай бұрын
My hat goes off to the Native Americans tribes who had encountered the Short-faced bear 🐻 😵‍💫😵‍💫
@hallamhal
@hallamhal Ай бұрын
"Half a ruler in size" is my new favourite Americans using anything but the metric system 😂
@Rockhound6165
@Rockhound6165 15 күн бұрын
Because the metric system is gay.
@weshard1
@weshard1 2 ай бұрын
13:48 “Suffered from island dwarfism" makes it sound like it had a disability, when in truth, it was an adaptation that enabled it to survive and thrive in its insular environment.
@alvargas5095
@alvargas5095 Ай бұрын
Good point Then he should've said, it benefitted from island dwarfism
@Trad_chad1122
@Trad_chad1122 2 ай бұрын
Suggestion for a next similar video: "Extinct Animals The Ancient Norse Pagan's Saw."
@user-ot5ty9mf1z
@user-ot5ty9mf1z Ай бұрын
You mean seen? Not saw
@kellypowell6317
@kellypowell6317 29 күн бұрын
Or Mongols saw
@ZomBeeNature
@ZomBeeNature 2 ай бұрын
I wish Glyptodonts were still around.
@Secret_Comics
@Secret_Comics 2 ай бұрын
Honestly, they’d probably be hella chill
@Secret_Comics
@Secret_Comics 2 ай бұрын
unless some idiot f’ed with one
@luisa.acevedo3326
@luisa.acevedo3326 2 ай бұрын
They got killed to build housing. 😒
@sqrt2295
@sqrt2295 2 ай бұрын
Glyptodonts alongside terror birds and sebecids are some of the few Cenozoic animals that I'd really love to see alive today, they're all so alien when compared to most modern land vertebrates.
@user-rs8ky8hv6s
@user-rs8ky8hv6s 26 күн бұрын
You can thank the ancient people for that.
@Jonnydeerhunter
@Jonnydeerhunter 2 ай бұрын
Natives did not domesticate horses. Europeans brought that concept here.
@andreadamon2197
@andreadamon2197 2 ай бұрын
There is actually evidence that suggests otherwise
@Jonnydeerhunter
@Jonnydeerhunter 2 ай бұрын
@@andreadamon2197 No... There isn't....
@john-ic5pz
@john-ic5pz 2 ай бұрын
there were no horses here before the Europeans brought them, so yes natives didn't domesticate them. they caught & broke feral horses who's ancestors were those horses that came with the Europeans.
@thomasseppala5750
@thomasseppala5750 2 ай бұрын
Correct, but horses were in North America and went extinct far far before Europeans came over
@quack-orange
@quack-orange 2 ай бұрын
Horses were here, horses went extinct in the Americas, Europeans brought horses, horses are back
@sahar3820
@sahar3820 Ай бұрын
Camelops surprised me the most. Camels are the last thing I would imagine being in the Americas. I wish they were still around. They sound and look so chill.
@kerianhalcyon2769
@kerianhalcyon2769 2 ай бұрын
Not surprising at all that camelops would have been largely avoided as a food item. Camels today are usually not liked as a food item - their meat's allegedly really tough and tastes bad. The main reason why they're used as a domestic animal has more to do with their survivability and use as a pack animal than for food.
@5riversdeep628
@5riversdeep628 2 ай бұрын
True. I never heard of anyone wanting to grill up some camel steaks, but I have heard that camel milk is considered a health food.
@kerianhalcyon2769
@kerianhalcyon2769 2 ай бұрын
@@5riversdeep628 I wouldn't know myself, but from what little I do know of what we consider "health food" it probably wouldn't taste very good.
@marlonmoncrieffe0728
@marlonmoncrieffe0728 Ай бұрын
But why didn't the indigenous people domesticate them as beasts-of-burden?
@kerianhalcyon2769
@kerianhalcyon2769 Ай бұрын
@@marlonmoncrieffe0728 Likely something they didn't figure out about doing yet, not to mention it would have required certain tools and an excess of food. Part of what made animal husbandry possible was basic agriculture and the ability to store food that wasn't needed to feed people/their families. It's usually assumed that up until after the passing of the ice age the prehistoric Native Americans were largely hunter-gatherers. By then most of the big megafauna would have died out, including the stuff we normally associate with animal domestication like camels and horses.
@melanimatejak6821
@melanimatejak6821 Ай бұрын
Um no, camels have quite good meat, and are eaten with appetite in their native range.
@paulofearghail9408
@paulofearghail9408 2 ай бұрын
Very well-done video. I especially appreciate the real human narration instead of the annoying machine narration that so many channels use now. Good job!
@GlebNerzhin
@GlebNerzhin 2 ай бұрын
Where did the natives get the buffalo-taking-down horses from?
@HungryCats70
@HungryCats70 2 ай бұрын
Horses that escaped from European explorers, I believe. The horses native to North America had gone extinct some thousands of years earlier.
@Ispeakthetruthify
@Ispeakthetruthify 2 ай бұрын
The Spanish brought horses to the Americas when they first arrived. Those horse became feral, and spread throughout the Americas. But that was roughly 500 years ago. The original horses of the Americas had been extinct thousands of years before European contact.
@ganjahtron
@ganjahtron Ай бұрын
their lives were beyond brutal but they saw some amazing things that will never be seen again.
@jordanguiboche7986
@jordanguiboche7986 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this! The more I learn about my ancestors, the more I find that they were badasses and surely among the wisest on the planet 🙌
@kevinpoe8137
@kevinpoe8137 2 ай бұрын
Pt 2 should definitely include the American lion and the American cheetah
@user-wg4tk8xz2j
@user-wg4tk8xz2j Ай бұрын
Can't forget the American rhinocheraus
@billybimbo985
@billybimbo985 2 ай бұрын
Makes me wish there was a show or movie based around this time
@nigel900
@nigel900 2 ай бұрын
It would be thoroughly bastardized with copious amounts of Political Correctness… Wokeism and CGI. It’s what Gen-Z demands these days…
@meowmachine9147
@meowmachine9147 2 ай бұрын
I'd watch that
@louieo.blevinsmusic4197
@louieo.blevinsmusic4197 2 ай бұрын
20:50 the goose has never and will never be afraid of anything.
@skechers28227
@skechers28227 2 ай бұрын
I just started the video, so i dont know if it features, but the very concept of a giant sloth breaks my brain. Utterly terrifying. I imagine it like some lovecraftian fiction and not like a thing that existed. Lol
@wickedprophet2375
@wickedprophet2375 2 ай бұрын
I just spent an embarrassing amount of time trying to pronounce parapropalaeheplophorus! Bruh who named this!!? 🤯 😂
@UFC_Buffalo
@UFC_Buffalo 2 ай бұрын
I love how you imply that European explorers were used to an easy life, and that somehow the weather is vastly different in Europe. Lol, very funny.
@GhostyMist
@GhostyMist Ай бұрын
Kind of reminds me of Better Call Saul, where the scenes in Mexico have a yellow tint, and when Lalo went to Germany it had a blue tint.
@AlwaysDreaming
@AlwaysDreaming 2 ай бұрын
Great video! Quite lucky to not have been born in prehistoric America 😅 kudos to my ancestors for going through it for me to be here today.
@benmcreynolds8581
@benmcreynolds8581 2 ай бұрын
I really hope we start seeing a bunch of things that cover the Pleistocene era. It's fascinating to learn what things lived during that era. The biodiversity was insane then
@pinchevulpes
@pinchevulpes 2 ай бұрын
Eastern and western coast woodland natives have different names for Bigfoot. These tribes have to our knowledge never shared contact prior to European arrival
@ckkjgc
@ckkjgc 2 ай бұрын
Different European groups had different names for trolls and fairies. Doesn't make them any more real.
@pinchevulpes
@pinchevulpes 2 ай бұрын
@@ckkjgc I’m not talking trolls and fairies. Weird strawman argument. Lil weirdo
@pinchevulpes
@pinchevulpes 2 ай бұрын
@@ckkjgc where did I say it was real? I just said certain figures bear striking similarities in cultures. Even those creatures you speak of were shared across Europe, trolls and such. I’m saying these people had zero contact with each other, and basically describe the same thing. Not every thing has to be Eurocentric buddy
@missesmew
@missesmew 2 ай бұрын
Sabe(sawbay) is the name us Ojibwa gave the Sasquatch. Way before colonial contact.
@NLEcoppa1
@NLEcoppa1 2 ай бұрын
Been waiting so long for this ❤
@calebchristensen900
@calebchristensen900 2 ай бұрын
A jaguar is bite is actually very strong. It can get through a Caymans hide as well as punch through tortoise shell. For pound it’s actually the strongest bite of any big cat alive currently
@missesmew
@missesmew 2 ай бұрын
Seen a couple dead humans in Brazil on bestgore bitten straight through the skull. Like a hydraulic machine had done it. Amazingly strong
@S0m35uy
@S0m35uy Ай бұрын
It’s amazing that no giant mammals ever lived north of the modern border with Canada except the few that magically existed within the confines of Alaska and only therein.
@fossilsfromray
@fossilsfromray Ай бұрын
I dive in a lot of rivers and beavers are a true fear of mine. They are very territorial and if the giant one still existed, I don’t think I would go into any slow moving body of freshwater
@dannyhernandez265
@dannyhernandez265 2 ай бұрын
How I wish I can see these creatures for just one day.
@lewispaine4589
@lewispaine4589 3 күн бұрын
It's been suggested that woolly mammoths may not have been hunted to extinction, but were victims of an extinction level event near the end of the last ice age.
@a_diamond
@a_diamond Ай бұрын
Okay.. we still have stories about individuals taking down a Bison with a bow. It *was* a big deal. Big enough that we still know about it xD
@dispatcher22z20
@dispatcher22z20 2 ай бұрын
11:21 that is a map of the countrys the bear inhabiited not its range this is labeled incorrectly how did you expect us to believe that it lived in Alaska and Hawaii but not Canada
@IngeniousOutdoors
@IngeniousOutdoors 2 ай бұрын
The fuck is your problem.
@davidgoldstein745
@davidgoldstein745 2 ай бұрын
Sorry, but no Native American ever rode horses before the europeans arrived.
@Ispeakthetruthify
@Ispeakthetruthify 2 ай бұрын
You're correct. Now the earliest Native Americans that entered the Americas, definitely would have seen the original horses/donkeys of the Americas, but they did not ride or domesticate them. That would happen thousands of years later on the other side of the globe.
@ShogunateDaimyo
@ShogunateDaimyo 2 ай бұрын
Nope they rode mastodons and sabertooth tigers. Way cooler
@pinboi163
@pinboi163 Ай бұрын
@@ShogunateDaimyothey also got killed by them on a drastic scale😱
@YsabetJustYsabet
@YsabetJustYsabet Ай бұрын
Excellent video! I particularly love the size comparisons, those always help (and yeah, I saw 'Justin Bieber' on the beaver chart!) I've been to one of the mammoth-kill sites, the Murray Springs Clovis archaeological site in Sierra Vista AZ-- it's between my home and Tombstone, so I and a couple of friends went on one of the Friends of the San Pedro guided walks and got to listen to a local archaeologist explain the whole thing, show us the black mat and soforth. Pretty impressive, and all that area is open range with the rare small house-- you can look out there from my friends' home in Sierra Vista AZ and just imagine mammoths meandering across the landscape. We were allowed to examine some actual Clovis points, too, and one replica of a bone shaft-straightener from the period of the kill site; I do a little knapping myself, and those points were *amazingly* made-- way past my skill level.
@adambermingham737
@adambermingham737 2 ай бұрын
Man this has to be one of my favourite channels on YT. I could literally watch paleo-art on repeat all day.
@paraceratherium255
@paraceratherium255 2 ай бұрын
I will edit this comment when I finish watching the video.
@AwanAdas
@AwanAdas 2 ай бұрын
22/06/2024 20.05 Bro've already edit the comment ØuØ.
@snr.froggymooopew7781
@snr.froggymooopew7781 2 ай бұрын
@@AwanAdas”Bro’ve”????? I’m stealing this is my new favorite contraction lol
@josephvanucchi5249
@josephvanucchi5249 2 ай бұрын
​@@snr.froggymooopew7781I was thinking the same thing
@gigachadgoose
@gigachadgoose 2 ай бұрын
Bruv, you already edited it before finishing the video
@Googledeservestodie
@Googledeservestodie 2 ай бұрын
Poopoopeepee
@MrPink-qf1xi
@MrPink-qf1xi 2 ай бұрын
I know horses evolved first in America then went extinct there(I can't remember when) Till Europeans brought them back.
@sedatedape315
@sedatedape315 2 ай бұрын
It could be they came across the Siberian Land Bridge with the rest of the "imported" mega fauna; Woolly Mammoth, giant Bison, and several deer species. But the "American Horse" did died out along with most of the large animals that were common in the North American countries 11,000 to 14,000 years ago.
@missourimongoose8858
@missourimongoose8858 2 ай бұрын
So did camels which is kinda weird lol
@richie_0740
@richie_0740 2 ай бұрын
same with camelids, north america is their ancestral home, now the only living species were the eurasian dromedaries and bactrian camel, ass well as llamas, guanacos and alpacas in south america.
@missourimongoose8858
@missourimongoose8858 2 ай бұрын
@@richie_0740 there's a 4th one in south america today but I can't remember the name
@new-dystopia
@new-dystopia 2 ай бұрын
@@sedatedape315 They did cross into Beringia and evolved into the Yukon horse and possible a Beringia species/subspecies as well (we need more fossils and they may be lost to the sea). But those absolutely died off, there is zero evidence of horses after the Yukon horse until the European horses. DNA testing on supposed native horses have shown they are Eurasian horses through and through. I'd love to see us find some fossil evidence, frozen horses,, or even hair for some DNA as that would be an amazing find but right now it's more wishful thinking than anything.
@gang-ridertv5433
@gang-ridertv5433 Ай бұрын
13:10 "Glad you are around to tell us these things. Chewie take the professor out back and plug him into the ships computer"--Captain Han Solo
@lordtachanka903
@lordtachanka903 Ай бұрын
Title correction: animals that the native Americans hunted to extinction
@CowboyPrestige101
@CowboyPrestige101 2 ай бұрын
I have something in common with these ancient natives. I was born in the late 1900s (1992) and I have seen the homo sapiens with common sense go extinct. All jokes aside the thought of a Kodiak bear sized big cat with swords for teeth leaping 12 feet in the air. Gives me anxiety.
@tableslam
@tableslam 2 ай бұрын
my dumb dyslexic ass saw Tremarctinae on the screen and i was like "holy shit Mark Tremonti from Creed has a bear clade named after him"
@john-ic5pz
@john-ic5pz 2 ай бұрын
kudos to whoever named Smilodon, considering the big toothy grin it must've had 😁
@isla3263
@isla3263 2 ай бұрын
ice age theme intensifies
@user-rs8ky8hv6s
@user-rs8ky8hv6s 26 күн бұрын
Or Walking with Prehistoric Beasts! 😄
@EyeSeeThruYou
@EyeSeeThruYou 2 ай бұрын
Just a clarification here: *The first documented European arrival in the Americas were the **_Norse_** around the mid 900s.* They would not have required any assistance to farm or hunt, both of which they successfully did wherever they went. Norse explorers attempted to establish trade with cultures they encountered during voyages, and in north America, they likely did so with First Nations peoples as well. Just sayin' since a Spanish conquistador was shown at the beginning of clip in reference to first European arrivals. The Spanish and Portuguese arrived 500 years _after_ the Norse.
@Snailz5
@Snailz5 2 ай бұрын
Sure, but saying they wouldn’t require assistance is a bit of stretch considering how quickly those colonies died out. Either they were not thriving, contracted diseases from the natives, or were wiped out in hostilities.
@EyeSeeThruYou
@EyeSeeThruYou 2 ай бұрын
@@Snailz5 Not at all a stretch since in examining the latitude of known landing and settlement sites, and a comparison to flora and fauna on *both* continents, climate and huge similarities in genera emerge. It would have been very easy for the Norse not just to survive, but do very well. The Norse _chose_ not to remain in Greenland and North America because they did not establish consistent and reliable trading partnerships. They weren't interested in staying for long-term settlement purposes. Claiming otherwise is simplistic stereotyping in contradiction with established historical findings - some of it written down by the Norse themselves with those written histories surviving in Iceland.
@luisa.acevedo3326
@luisa.acevedo3326 2 ай бұрын
Who cares? They didn't achieve anything.
@EyeSeeThruYou
@EyeSeeThruYou 2 ай бұрын
@luisa.acevedo3326 Oh, but they did. Your unwillingness to comprehend that achievement means _less than nothing._ Spain wasn't the first European arrivals. _Get over it._
@stefthorman8548
@stefthorman8548 2 ай бұрын
@@EyeSeeThruYou except spain was the first to share the discovery, you know, which is far more important than just arriving first, then not telling anyone else about it
@mwj5368
@mwj5368 2 ай бұрын
Wow great writing the script and also the spot on film editing so well synchronized with your narrative. You should get some kind of award for this! Thank you for such a fine documentary! I never had such a lucid view of what the native North Americans faced in their era. I also never knew 500 people die a year from large cats!
@Workerbee-zy5nx
@Workerbee-zy5nx 11 күн бұрын
Being that they crossed the ice bridge from Siberia to Alaska, these Eurasians saw many things.🤓👍👍👍
@aKalishnacough
@aKalishnacough 2 ай бұрын
Dont make taking a buffalo solo, myth. My father brought down a buffalo in 1939 with two arrows. He was on horse. He hit the buffalo in the heart and ran him off his horse. He got back on, caught up to the same buffalo and shot it in the eye. With his 2nd arrow. While the buffalo dragged it head on the ground trying to dislodge the arrow. He came up behind it in dispatched it with his knife. One man dispatching a Buffalo is common in indian society.
@johngalt97
@johngalt97 2 ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure Gary Larson documented the hunting process. There were enough animals that there were always a few stragglers that were easy kills.
@melanimatejak6821
@melanimatejak6821 Ай бұрын
One can always just wound the animal and then follow it, waiting to get weakened with bleeding.
@A_Rainworld_Fan.
@A_Rainworld_Fan. 26 күн бұрын
Just a quick note, 'Indian' isn't really the correct term for indigenous/native American people. The reason early settlers called indigenous people Indians is because they originally thought they were from India.
@melanimatejak6821
@melanimatejak6821 25 күн бұрын
@@A_Rainworld_Fan. Just a quick note, 'Caucasians' isn't really the correct term for whites. It is based solely on old legend from 17. century (long proved to be wrong) that white people originated in Caucasian Mountains. I would use this opportunity to appeal against the use of this name 😏
@melanimatejak6821
@melanimatejak6821 25 күн бұрын
@@A_Rainworld_Fan. But now seriously. The thing is that many tribes are still referring to themselves as 'American Indians'. Second, I personally don't think that 'Native Americans' is a good term either, because 'native' basically means born in the country. Therefore, every person born in US is a 'native American'. I don't like term Asian for this reason too, because every person born in Asia is a native Asian, regardless of race (actually, I would use Asian for any person who lives long/was brought up in Asia). By the way, in your opinion, how long some ethnic group has to live in certain area to be considered 'native' to that place?
@john-ic5pz
@john-ic5pz 2 ай бұрын
the ridges on the beaver's teeth would technically make a higher pressure on the wood, making the cutting more efficient... penetrating the top layer(s) of wood easier at least, the edge then peels the wood along the grain and incises the far end of the piece it's biting off? ahh logic....coming to (possibly) the wrong conclusion, but with confidence!! 🤭
@Buster_Piles
@Buster_Piles Ай бұрын
Imagine being savaged to death by a ferocious giant beaver. Gives me the shudders.
@Jay-jb2vr
@Jay-jb2vr 2 ай бұрын
*This channel is SO COOL!!*
@HassanMohamed-rm1cb
@HassanMohamed-rm1cb 2 ай бұрын
Why don’t you get to think and make a suggestion creating another KZbin Videos Shows that’s all about the Extinct Prehistoric Amphicyons (Bear Dogs) on the next Extinct Zoo coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
@aaaydenwetsell
@aaaydenwetsell Ай бұрын
2:40 when i first saw them in the ice age movies i thought it was a turtle.
@boardmike82
@boardmike82 2 ай бұрын
Who needs dinosaurs with these beasts around!
@HAB-BITUAL
@HAB-BITUAL 2 ай бұрын
i am a glyptotherium.. yes, we're still here 🙄
@hia5235
@hia5235 2 ай бұрын
"Extinct Animals the Native Americans wiped out"
@jimc4839
@jimc4839 2 ай бұрын
I believe climate did much of that. There were lions, camels and other elephant species that existed 15 million years ago that went extinct long before humans were around due to climate. However in the last few hundred years, the euoropeans really F'd this world up.
@juicer1155
@juicer1155 28 күн бұрын
NOOO CAPYBARA WHYYYYYYYY💔 0:58
@loutownsend3244
@loutownsend3244 21 күн бұрын
I love my ancestors so much they’re literally so cool
@speedingatheist
@speedingatheist 2 ай бұрын
Wait, did you just claim that Europeans had no clue about hunting or agriculture? That's funny.
@davidjones-vx9ju
@davidjones-vx9ju 2 ай бұрын
or living off local resources
@intricacy9490
@intricacy9490 2 ай бұрын
For some reason I was distracted when the giraffe lifted the kid
@ThecultofCon
@ThecultofCon Ай бұрын
The native America propaganda is real. They didnt teach Europeans a single thing. We already had guns, horses, and Maize farming. We already braved the Swiss alps, the jungles of india, and the deserts of North Africa.
@FrancisBillions
@FrancisBillions Ай бұрын
U were slaves in north Africa
@DonkeyYote
@DonkeyYote 2 ай бұрын
Pygmy Mammoth is one of my favorite oxymorons. I also wish that you covered ground sloths because they are so different from their current relatives.
@comradecat3678
@comradecat3678 2 ай бұрын
"Exctict animals native Americans drove to extinction" fixed the title
@GlebNerzhin
@GlebNerzhin 2 ай бұрын
🎯 People are afraid to say this out loud.
@ukestudio3002
@ukestudio3002 2 ай бұрын
Probably not true ..much due to climate change and disease..
@angelacrabtree2847
@angelacrabtree2847 2 ай бұрын
There is a tendency among some groups to blame humans for every species that has gone extinct since we showed up. Even ones we existed with for 10s of thousands of years. However, Most of the megafauna disappeared as the glaciers receded as opposed to when humans arrived. Climate change causes all sorts of changes. As temperatures increase indotherms tend to get smaller, limbs sometimes elongate and ears can become bigger. Adaptations that increase hear loss in indotherms. Exotherms tend to get bigger. This has to do with surface to mass ratio. Because exotherms absorb their heat cold limits their size. Indotherms have to conserve heat so bigger animals with slower metabolisms And, no, humans did not trigger the end of the last glacial maximum.
@sapphonymph8204
@sapphonymph8204 2 ай бұрын
​@@GlebNerzhinmust push the peaceful native agenda.
@YE-dr3zk
@YE-dr3zk 2 ай бұрын
​@@sapphonymph8204 What agenda? You're either bigoted or dumb because all humans around the world drove prehistoric species to extinction 😂
@EastBayFlipper
@EastBayFlipper 2 ай бұрын
Bring back the giant beaver 🦫 😂
@sapphonymph8204
@sapphonymph8204 2 ай бұрын
Just visit downtown Chicago late at night. Vu
@louishaddon4351
@louishaddon4351 Ай бұрын
​@@sapphonymph8204just stay strapped,and wrapped
@sapphonymph8204
@sapphonymph8204 Ай бұрын
@@louishaddon4351 always
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