Ngl Siberia still be giving that prehistoric Europe energy: kzbin.info/www/bejne/rWHFdHaGh6aGm5I
@HassanMohamed-rm1cb7 күн 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?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
@rdctd73487 күн бұрын
lol 3 title changes.
@BoomBoom-ym5oy7 күн бұрын
What was the true reason we didn't migrate til later? CAVE HYENAS or human eating NEANDERTHALS u decide
@pieterwillembotha67196 күн бұрын
Siberia is in Asia
@lucaricci19876 күн бұрын
Why does the thumbnail keep changing? I’ve seen 4 different ones and keep thinking they’re new uploads
@seaglass30346 күн бұрын
"...herds of bears..." Lord have mercy.
@raylopez996 күн бұрын
Yeah that scene with the caveman looking down from the cliff was awesome artwork and scary.
@mortiferousarcadia7656 күн бұрын
@@raylopez99 That was Skyrim lol and the caveman was a Khajit
@Boy-d4o1l5 күн бұрын
Thats skyrim you limo driver@raylopez99
@pedroeldiablo8115 күн бұрын
@@Boy-d4o1l Do we all have to know skyrim ?
@deinsilverdrac86955 күн бұрын
Don't worry it never happened. They were solitary. Most bones were from individual that never met eachother. All you need is a few bear per centuries dying in the cave and boom, over time you get hundreds of them lying there
@francis-m1z7 күн бұрын
cave lion, cave leopard, cave bear, cave wolf, cave hyena, all of course hunting the cave-man
@beastmaster09347 күн бұрын
That’s what happens when most of the fossil remains are found in, where else, caves.
@marcpaulus62917 күн бұрын
man, the cave real estate market must have been packed.
@masonboone43076 күн бұрын
The cave-cone
@georgebeckham51506 күн бұрын
As long as they stay out of my man cave...
@PeterSchnorfheimin6 күн бұрын
What about the freeman are they hunting him?
@grimtea17156 күн бұрын
"I'm not trapped in here with you. You're trapped in here with me!" -OG Europeans
@splatninja94474 күн бұрын
In loving memory of Ukbuk. He ate bad fruit, started feeling funny, and fought a herd of cave bears.
@splatninja94474 күн бұрын
Oh neat. So a herd of bears is called a sleuth, sloth, pack, or my personal favorite, a maul.
@sapereaude62743 күн бұрын
That's where that comes from...
@thegunslinger13637 күн бұрын
The thought of a larger sub species of Polar Bear is horrifying.
@Deadsea_19936 күн бұрын
And they didn't have anything close to firearms at that time too. Early Sapiens and Neanderthals were built different. They destroyed a bunch of apex predators like it was a game of Football
@mylessmith97586 күн бұрын
Well it wasn’t quite that easy.
@matthieuduchasteniermartin5324 күн бұрын
@@Deadsea_1993Humans almost got extinct for a reason
@sulfuricanaljuice39944 күн бұрын
@@Deadsea_1993 true, but now we tame/enslave apex predators to dance at festivals for our amusement. We shape the earth to our whim, harness power no other creature on this planet can even begin to understand. Can move faster than any animal, become stronger than any animal, imagine and create things stronger than any animal on this planet that has been here and likely will ever be here. Early Sapiens and Neanderthals would be spending their entire time meeting modern humans either trying to fuck us or worship us as godly beings
@pedroroque8293 күн бұрын
It probably was just a very large polar bear. 1300kg is not that far from the largest polar bear shot in the 20th century (1002kg)
@splatter52187 күн бұрын
Neanderthals Vs. Most other Predators: Normal Prey and Predator relationship Neanderthal Vs. Prehistoric hyena: Freaking Warhammer 40k
@herpesisnice14435 күн бұрын
For the Emperor of cave-kind!
@KFrost-fx7dt3 күн бұрын
I'll bet most animals were terrified of neanderthals. Dying by spear point is a rough way to go.
@akumaking12 күн бұрын
Or more like pre-civilization Warhammer Fantasy.
@naufalmEZa2 күн бұрын
@@akumaking1moreso Warhammer being Neandhertals' fictitious Techno-theologic analogue.
@fallsky_19Күн бұрын
no wonder the europeans started warhammer lmao talk about drawing from their roots
@LenexTL7 күн бұрын
It’s a good day when extinctzoo uploads
@psalm-oz1od7 күн бұрын
And a good night here in the Philippines 😴
@jaredelizardo2017 күн бұрын
@@psalm-oz1odtge time?????????????????????#cuz it's 9:28am here in the usa!
@fluffyboi22277 күн бұрын
Agreed ❤
@hibaakaiko38887 күн бұрын
I love this channel! I'm always sending my nephews these videos. They love them too!
@MyBestBuddiesForever6 күн бұрын
Yes yes it's a good lullaby everytime he uploads 😴 💤 .
@paul69257 күн бұрын
Imagine being attacked by a pack of 100 supersized hyenas? The sound they make is terrifying enough.
@Randomguy-h3g6 күн бұрын
What's more terrifying is that hyenas prefer to eat their prey alive
@paul69256 күн бұрын
@Randomguy-h3g ugh yes I saw footage of that I regret seeing
@zweihander73096 күн бұрын
Middle of the night on a freezing cold ice age europe night and you see some eyes lit up from your campfire and then hear some hyena "laughing" noises then see many more eyes in the darkness and then they all decent onto your tribe eating your friends and family alive. Ye terrifying, I would rather get taken out by the cave bears or cave lions at that point☠️
@homelackin22346 күн бұрын
Tbh the hyenas scared me the most out of every other animal here. Some reason, I got goosebumps
@paul69256 күн бұрын
@homelackin2234 It’s really what I imagine the laughter of demons to sounds like 😂
@Randomguy-h3g7 күн бұрын
Cave lion is an underappreciated feline that deserves more recognition
@rubric-eo5yj7 күн бұрын
I mean our ancestors seem to appreciate it the most alongside bison and mammoths
@nucleargrizzly17767 күн бұрын
Years ago at a special museum exhibit the were skeletons of Cave, California, various modern lions, and tigers. The Cave Lion was the thing of nightmares. Just seeing a pic or vid of the difference doesn't do it justice.
@raylopez996 күн бұрын
@@nucleargrizzly1776 Maybe like the cave bear is was a big vegan sweetie? I mean they have vegan cat food these days... lolz
@darkthunder1687 күн бұрын
"sir we've just discovered a bear, wolf, lion, hyena and many other species of animals in Europe. We need some names for them." "Just put the word cave in front of all of them."
@infinitemonkey9176 күн бұрын
You so funny and clever.
@Bonkers6996 күн бұрын
@@infinitemonkey917you are not
@infinitemonkey9176 күн бұрын
@@Bonkers699 Those are just common names, not nomenclature.
@infinitemonkey9176 күн бұрын
@@Bonkers699 And what's with the quotes?
@lastword87835 күн бұрын
@@infinitemonkey917why would you ask that? Quotes are for dialogue.
@jensphiliphohmann18767 күн бұрын
02:40 Of course, the cold climate cannot be the reason why there are no big felines in Europe. The best counterargument is the existence of the largest living cat, the Siberian tiger. In fact, mammals living in colder climates even tend to be larger than their warmer climate counterparts. Polar bears, for example, are huge. A similar thing seems to hold for birds: The emperor penguin lives in Antarctica.
@jensphiliphohmann18767 күн бұрын
04:00 _... so still extremely deadly to say the least._ Still less so than - humans. Cave lions hunted humans but humans also hunted cave lions.
@hubertdenise31006 күн бұрын
Historically there were Caspian tigers living as far west as Ukraine until the end of the 19th century, and Lions lived in Greece, Hungary, Croatia, Serbia, etc until the start of AD times and much later if you count Turkey as part of Europe, so it’s not that Europe cannot have big cats, but that we hunted them out much later on.
@christines.52416 күн бұрын
Snow Leopard please.....
@AStangeSoup6 күн бұрын
don't forget about snow leopards!
@rarelife16 күн бұрын
They must have forgotten the Polar bear exists.
@madmarvshighwaywarrior28705 күн бұрын
The presence of cave lions in Europe may explain why the lion is a popular animal in European heraldry. Aside from cave paintings, the collective memory of cave lions before going extinct inspired both fear and awe to prehistoric humans that lasted til recent times.
@KFrost-fx7dt3 күн бұрын
That and also the Romans imported a lot of lions into Europe for circuses and fights in the colosseum.
@novaexplova94273 күн бұрын
Lions also lived in Europe during the Roman times as well. They were widespread spanning from Greece to Hungary.
@gumbercules39252 күн бұрын
Modern lions used to have a much, much larger range and were present basically everywhere around the Mediterranean. The levant, greece, italy, spain etc.
@Yesunfortunately-r1x6 күн бұрын
3:30 everytime I hear about how much big animals weigh it makes me realize just how insane the fact that the people in my 600 pound life exist is
@KFrost-fx7dt3 күн бұрын
For real. Those people weigh as much as some horses that I've ridden. God help this species.
@NomnomSaix7 күн бұрын
cave this, cave that. Even ExtinctZoo noticed a trend with how the ice age predators were named lol
@francis-m1z7 күн бұрын
even humans were cave-men😂
@De1h_7 күн бұрын
@6:245if you're concerned about the dog look up the story his name is Leonard and he survived! As a fellow dog person was curious also 6:49
@neovenator9993 күн бұрын
Thank god, that shocked me. Good to know he is fine
@justfive555Күн бұрын
Omg thank god I was looking for a comment like this
@sethalja6 күн бұрын
A distinct improvement over modern Europe. Let's go back.
@AGalahcalledSammi4 күн бұрын
😂 Sadly, this is a sentiment rightly held in many modern countries. 😢
@noname-dw9te4 күн бұрын
You're delusional bro you wouldn't survive a day
@DISTurbedwaffle9184 күн бұрын
@@noname-dw9te Nah, I'm built different.
@JustCrash4 күн бұрын
@@noname-dw9tenah, I’d win
@shiva729454 күн бұрын
Ik heb zo'n trek in mammoet, jaren niet gegeten.
@Martial-Mat7 күн бұрын
23:45 That charging rhino video at the end was hilarious. Even Superman would look at that and say "Whoa there Ug, that doesn't look like a smart move!"
@raylopez996 күн бұрын
If you're Chuck Norris and/or a Neanderthal you take it head on and love it.
@KFrost-fx7dt3 күн бұрын
Search up that clip. The neanderthal got owned.
@Martial-Mat3 күн бұрын
@@KFrost-fx7dt 😁
@thefranken-thingКүн бұрын
I think you mean Super*CAVE*man.🙄
@MrKraken312Күн бұрын
not necessarily thanks to the momentum of the rhino, you can scoop the spear deeper reaching the lungs or injure large blood vessels, and at the last moment assist yourself with the spear as in pole vaulting and jump off, this is a very dangerous tactic but doable, and given that they were on rather open and snowy terrain (I dare say that the woolly rhino was more adapted to running in such terrain) so they may not have had much choice
@aottadelsei9807 күн бұрын
Could you do a video about Sundaland? It’s a cool lost land mass no one really talks about dispite it having giant tiger, giant tortoise, giant tapirs and bovids with massive horns. Small elephants and rhinos. As well as homo erectus, gigantopithecus and a massive crocodile known as Crocodylus sp. Specimen CD 14 that might have been up to two tons or more but was once called Crocodylus ossifragus
@chubibi066 күн бұрын
Sundaland ? What a marvelous place ! Never heard of it. A video would indeed be appreciated
@sinnavihecroft20446 күн бұрын
Hearing that name feel akwkward as sundanese
@obiwahndagobah95436 күн бұрын
@@chubibi06 Well, it was Sumatra, Borneo, Palawan, Java and Bali connected to each other and to mainland southeast asia because of the low sea levels at that time. That is the reason we have today many species that are spread throughout these islands that came from the mainland. They walked to these places during the last ice age.
@michaelsuarez88836 күн бұрын
That would be awesome
@posticusmaximus17397 күн бұрын
Crazy how these highly populated places were once wild environments
@ilkoderez6017 күн бұрын
Yeah, it's almost like humans destroyed the magic of nature...
@justinbarion22697 күн бұрын
It's crazy how highly populated places will one day be wild again...
@feba336 күн бұрын
@@ilkoderez601mans gotta eat
@christianriddler50636 күн бұрын
@@ilkoderez601 You are welcome to leave civilisation and move into the woods without electricity, running water, food and modern healthcare. No one is forcing you to stay and BENEFIT from human civilisation.
@erendiranigarcia83266 күн бұрын
one of the first book series i read as a kid was called wolf brother, it did a really good job of illustrating how terrifying it would be to live in mesolithic europe. there was this heavy dread over everything
@alexgreen43224 күн бұрын
Based Chronicles of Ancient Darkness enjoyer ❤ those books were great, I love the little maps in the covers.
@AmericanAurochs5 күн бұрын
You do an amazing job of recreating these eras for us. Great work.
@PHOBOS17087 күн бұрын
Your videos are prime content for everyone interested in science! the finest yt has to offer ... 💪💪😎
@whatbreaksthesilence85086 күн бұрын
I believe every pre-historic European who asked “If not friend, then why friend shaped?” Died
@n7quantum4723 күн бұрын
plenty of videos of idiots approaching dangerous wildlife. So some of them must have survived lol
@tyleriamyourcreator7 күн бұрын
I would have been weeded out by natural selection because I would have 100% tried to tame and ride the giant deer.
@Poatan.chama.7 күн бұрын
It somehow worked with horses so why not try right?
@andreasschwarz49087 күн бұрын
you can do that in mongolia, they have a breed that can carry humans. obviously not 1:1 the same as in the video.
@raylopez996 күн бұрын
@@Poatan.chama. Or try it with the rhino?! lol
@mhdfrb99717 күн бұрын
European megafauna had it rough. They got screwed over so hard. First there were the Pleistocene glaciations, and just looking at it geographically the European continent is a terrible place to want to live during that period as abrupt climate change was the norm. The glaciations obviously affect high and mid-latitudes much more strongly than lower ones but it’s not just that. European megafauna repeatedly contracted and expanded their range just like animals in North America, but the difference is that Europe is beset by tall east-west mountain ranges which are hard to cross if moving north to south or vice versa whereas animals in the eastern half of America can move around freely because the only mountains there are the medium-sized and easily bypassable Appalachians. As a result of animals in Europe having a harder time being able to get where they need to, the extinction rate was probably higher for most of the Pleistocene. We also see them (often)not reaching quite the sizes of their North American counterparts. Many also became isolated in small pockets of temperate refugia which made them especially vulnerable to humans and Neanderthals. I believe this is what happened to cave bears. Then you have the high human density from the Neolithic going into the modern era, which did a number on the megafauna that actually managed to survive. Europe now seems like a land nearly devoid of animals for this reason.
@raylopez996 күн бұрын
For that reason and also overpopulation.... exceeding the carrying capacity of what can be sustained by the wild (hence the need for domestication of plants and animals).
@eldritchyarnbeing32956 күн бұрын
every single time i see ferocious wolves i cant help but look at my little chihuahua and laugh. thousands and thousands of years ago humans were so determined to pet some doggies that we turned a horrifying predator into a silly little dude that needs a sweater in the colder months and relies on me to boil chicken and rice for him when he's mildly ill. truly an apex predator
@DioPorco-v3c2 күн бұрын
We are litterally the Qu
@thefranken-thingКүн бұрын
You will regret mocking him. Chihuahuas are the most aggressive dog breed. No doubt he is formulating a plan for his revenge at this very moment. Maybe he'll bite the cuff of your jeans right as you take a step down the stairs. He'll get away with it too. Who would suspect such a cute, buggly-eyed little cuddle monster could do something so awful? 👹
@eldritchyarnbeing3295Күн бұрын
@@thefranken-thing you were unfortunately right, this morning he licked and snuggled me to death and i am typing this from the grave😔
@dallascrosby7254Күн бұрын
I feel the same way about my cats lmao
@mikes56376 күн бұрын
I consider myself fortunate to live in a world without bungalow lions, house bears or apartment hyenas.
@jaredelizardo2017 күн бұрын
Yolo i ❤ the skyrim part of the video were the Dragon born as a Kahjiit is standing on a cliff looking at a heard of cave bears nice one Extinct Zoo!
@Baamthe25th6 күн бұрын
2:25 Siberian Tigers are a thing, though, and they are the biggest of big cats. And if they don't know that, most people also vaguely know about saber tooth tiger, or saw the Ice Age movies.
@angusmcnay54492 күн бұрын
Siberia is Asian.
@FigureInTheDarkКүн бұрын
@@angusmcnay5449 they meant that being too cold isn’t a problem ,not that the Siberian tiger is from Europe dummy
@Carl_Johnson_1992_GSF7 күн бұрын
Merry christmas to all you ExtinctZoo watchers out there🎄
@DreamerBooksAnIceAgeSaga7 күн бұрын
Well done! Thank you for this video!
@TheOverseerDebates7 күн бұрын
Time to watch another ExtinctZoo video
@BeastNugget44Main7 күн бұрын
Nice to meet you here, We still seeing each other tonight ?
@faunafaxx6 күн бұрын
Gosh I love this page. Cave lions were absolute BEASTS.
@galacticdirt29257 күн бұрын
Prehistoric anything is something that you don't want to experience for yourself...
@raylopez996 күн бұрын
true, even and especially prehistoric medicine, where they sometimes practiced brain surgery.
@Alex-j9k5h6 күн бұрын
Id try prehistoric sex
@yoweedmofo19897Күн бұрын
0:20 "Strong career opportinities" shows clip of Jordan Belfort being onboarded to a job at L.F. Rothschild just before it went bust on Black Monday, 1987 🤣
@dust1339Күн бұрын
Hehe , 9÷11 , hehehe , 2001 😢😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂🎉🎉🎉
@SB-JUN7 күн бұрын
I Am staying in australia💀
@paul69257 күн бұрын
Yea but at this point in prehistory they had giant land crocodiles that could run faster than any human
@christines.52416 күн бұрын
OMG you have so many poisonous dangerous critters spiders and snakes!!!!!💖(staying in Australia)
@rarelife16 күн бұрын
@@paul6925 Yeah but due to its isolation it never had the amount of terrifying Megafauna like in the Americas and Afro-Eurasia.
@glory46455 күн бұрын
I'm staying out of Australia (if I can help it) for similar reasons. Worst thing I heard about animals in my country is that people saw something that looked like bear pawns on soil deep in mountain village my parents are from but at the same time no one saw bears in that parts for 200 years.
@DayBreeze73 күн бұрын
giant monitor lizards say hello
@112VZ6 күн бұрын
6:43 wither skeleton reference
@jessehutchings6 күн бұрын
This is why we have a seeming genetic sense of horror for gigantic predatory animals because once upon a time they actually existed
@UnwantedGhost1-anz256 күн бұрын
Imagine if they never went extinct and lasted all the way to the present day. So that people in this area would record with cameras, camcorders, and smartphones?
@raylopez996 күн бұрын
If you believe in the Jared Diamond "geography as destiny" argument the answer is there would be no such people present...
@sommmeguy4 күн бұрын
I wish. The Darwin awards would have some bite then.
@marsha2.03 күн бұрын
This channel is so amazing; the only thing missing from these videos are subtitles.
@SuprememeCeratosaurus6 күн бұрын
Hyenas have always been so goated 🔥 the fact that wolves, lions, and even bears and early humans were frightened of these guys speaks volume of how op they were
@jensphiliphohmann18767 күн бұрын
01:45 The cold step must have been rich in nutrients to feed those great mammals in these great numbers.
@raylopez996 күн бұрын
Yeah, like the North Sea and codfish these days... anywhere where a warm current meets a cold current, like Gulf of Mexico vs polar region or Chilean ENSO it seems.
@sonkeschluter36546 күн бұрын
A step is a landscape that puts all its nutrients into grasses instead of trees. Trees are famous for locking up carbohydrates into wood which is way less accessible than the carbohydrates in grass. So a step can support more/bigger animals than a forest
@glory2cybertron4 күн бұрын
The animals heavily contributed to feeding themselves by fertilizing the steppe with their dung and spreading plants seeds across their migration routes. Mammoths in particular would have been important for this process (they could dig deep, breaking soil for seeds, and their inefficient digestion meant more seeds would survive passing through the digestive tract), so without them and other very large megafauna, all that is left now is barren tundra.
@dmitriyalaasniy84423 күн бұрын
its the same as savannahs today
@MeelatchiDaibuktiКүн бұрын
It s a miracle we still exist as a species.
@temptemp41742 күн бұрын
Early humans had it so fucking rough it's unbelievable, the amount of pain and struggle our ancestors went through only to survive is absolutely insane. Poor great-great-great...great grandparents
@braydenhardcastle942520 сағат бұрын
When I watch this video I’m thinking, “we must’ve been really really badass warriors to survive amongst these absolute monsters.”
@phineascampbell31036 күн бұрын
I notice a theme that leads me to believe the most successful hominids would've been those who learned to build shelters, or just make a primitive umbrella, but stayed the hell away from sheltering in caves, basically...
@MatthewTheWanderer2 күн бұрын
Caves are scary sometimes, even without animals living in them, due to risks of getting stuck if you try to delve too deep.
@lucamura3227Күн бұрын
I must admit it, i didn't expect to hear Sardinia mentioned in a mega fauna documentary...it's kinda nice. Really good video too!
@bluruckuscrx81247 күн бұрын
Cave lions werent the only lions in europe at the time, the modern african lion also coexisted in europe in souther regions and even lived till ancieng greek times.
@raylopez996 күн бұрын
Once again this channel hits the mark, finding the right balance between entertainment for the KZbin audience and hard science.
@TihonTheDED7 күн бұрын
Awesome intro and video!!!
@mysticaurora37225 күн бұрын
Anyone else find it quite cool watching him change the title and the thumbnail
@Palum1012 күн бұрын
6:50 That just destroyed my day :'D
@Morrison-saber-tooth7 күн бұрын
And you thought, you would been safe in ice age's europe because there were no smilodons(reference on of extinctzoo's older videos)
@Jameswebbtelescope74845 күн бұрын
Out of all of these that surprised me were the giant deers, the cave wolves, and especially the cave hyenas. Like dang, honestly they gotta make a documentary of the ice age in Europe.
@RWDOWNPOUR7 күн бұрын
Before this I didn't know cave leopards were a thing, luv the vid
@xakaryehlynn47495 күн бұрын
the last minute is the craziest part. 0-23 minutes? "The size of all these monsters is insane. the things these monsters do were insane. imagine actually living during this time". then the last part is like "well, we did. and we were the best at it"
@alexanderdragonheart20367 күн бұрын
I'm so glad the European Lepoard got a mention. Also maybe on the first day of spring ExtinctZoo could do a video about the Emian Fauna ?
@baronghede236523 сағат бұрын
Love the channel.
@guineanord5 күн бұрын
As an Alaskan resident, and someone who regularly hikes/camps in the wilderness I often see tourists. Many seem to think if the brown bears come really close to them, and are not acting aggressively, it's ok to touch them. I used to warn people why that's an awful idea. Now I just let natural selection take it's course.
@pedroroque8293 күн бұрын
I want to go to Alaska one day and enjoy the most of the nature. I'm from Portugal, what do you recommend, where to go exactly?
@guineanord3 күн бұрын
@pedroroque829 It depends what you want to see. I have a cabin in the Denali wilderness, there's brown and black bears, moose/caribou, wolves, coyotes, bison, elk, wolverines, porcupines, skunks, weasels, deer, eagles, hawks to name a few. I often go into Anchorage, you can get on whale watching tours there, sometimes you can walk the beach and see seals. Black bears and moose are pretty active there as well. I've never been to Kodiak Island, but I hear you see a lot of wildlife there as well.
@tommyrjensen6 күн бұрын
22:00 "... to see this otter, you have to have traveled to Sardinia." Then shows a map of Indonesia(?)
@giovannia.casula25424 күн бұрын
Yeah i had to double take
@augustulus12772 күн бұрын
A map of Southeast Asia*
@tommyrjensen2 күн бұрын
@@augustulus1277 Maybe as a compromise "a map of a part of South East Asia", since e.g. Myanmar is completely missing.
@augustulus12772 күн бұрын
@@tommyrjensen true
@KonnorHermann3 күн бұрын
The very fact that most people nowadays would probably barely last over three days, let alone an entire lifetime, really does prove how our giant cities and slums, as well as lack of environmental knowledge will be our downfall if something isn't done.
@carlydavis87113 күн бұрын
Hey ExtinctZoo!!! i love your videos!!! i was just curious, how do your videos have different titles and thumbnails?
@gb8286 күн бұрын
9:39 Kid Cudi
@cromchgang3166 күн бұрын
Wha whaa
@vinny1847 күн бұрын
Trogontherium went extinct during the middle pleistocene some 200.000 years ago. It also wasn’t terrestrial and had a diet mainly made up of aquatic vegetation.
@Andre-zp6qq2 күн бұрын
Hi! I’ve been binge watching your videos recently and I absolutely love them. The more I watch you the more I wonder how the fuck did humans survive 😂 Perhaps you can make a video on how our species managed to outsmart and outlive these apex predators haha, that would be interesting. Merry Christmas!
@teyanuputorti79276 күн бұрын
what a trilling video on prehistoric Europe and what a dangerous and interesting time for the humans living through it
@Gallandur6 күн бұрын
Cool video. I hope that someday the extinct megafauna will return to Europe, Siberia and North America.
@raylopez996 күн бұрын
I would be cool...if surrounded by a giant fence.
@glory46455 күн бұрын
No thank you.
@oneshotme2 күн бұрын
I very much enjoyed your video and I gave it a Thumbs Up
@zweihander73096 күн бұрын
Man i love these vids, so much great information packed into one vid
@rikallan57422 күн бұрын
This is a great channel, brilliant...
@rogervandusen83613 күн бұрын
I live on the edge of a forested region and in winter I find the barren trees intimidating though no dangerous mammals beyond coyotes and black bears roam the cold woods at night. At least the bears are asleep this time of year.
@45bois6 күн бұрын
This is my top 3 favorite KZbinrs
@logancrouse60306 күн бұрын
You and dino guy. Favorite people on prehistoric animals
@tortledimlr48417 күн бұрын
Extinctzoo: You should resist the urge to pet this highly dangerous creature even if it was vegetarian Everyone: Can I pet that dawg
@anabolic_red6 күн бұрын
The gollum game dig was gold 😂
@giovannimarcolini69067 күн бұрын
Great content! Always a pleasure to whatch! May i ask at 4:50 which documentary is? Does someone now?
@chosenundead96686 күн бұрын
It looks like "life on our planet" I could be wrong but from how it looks I think that's where it's from.
@chosenundead96686 күн бұрын
Found a clip of that exact scene in the documentary so yeah it's called. Life on our planet 2023 kzbin.info/www/bejne/qmbZgGSwftesZ6sfeature=shared this is the clip is found
@FintaruS7 күн бұрын
I have to ask. Is there really no cave mammoth?
@Barbarian2010-kv3eh7 күн бұрын
prehistoric stuff scares me
@christianriddler50636 күн бұрын
Our ancestors were strong people.
@Barbarian2010-kv3eh6 күн бұрын
@@christianriddler5063 and they made it through and that lead to us what legends they were
@mikes56376 күн бұрын
Stay away from time machines and you're all good 👍
@Akranes0015 күн бұрын
I swear I've seen you in the prior extinction discord server...
@Barbarian2010-kv3eh5 күн бұрын
@Akranes001 i am there hey i found someone else who is there:)
@causewaybob36516 күн бұрын
These videos really make me happy I’m not hunted by lions wolves and bears on my way to and from work everyday
@raylopez996 күн бұрын
Oh my!
@rodw33915 күн бұрын
Awesome. Thanks for all that you do.
@monarchist18385 сағат бұрын
09:58 That is a strange-looking Great Auk, and those two polar bears are fighting over it.
@ulyssedufour2174Күн бұрын
ahh yes , the true american way , counting height in not meters but empire states buildings
@am4793Күн бұрын
I'm not scared of caves. I often imagine caves contain hidden treasure.
@dudeistpreist57215 күн бұрын
Now imagine the siberian unicorn trampling your village and the giant polar bear emerges from it's cave with his herd.
@benoitajayi91877 күн бұрын
What a video 👌
@adambaillie42705 күн бұрын
My grandad knew a guy that caught a lot of that footage. Crazy! Cameramen aren’t paid enough
@heartless090944 күн бұрын
did you change the thumbnail and/or title or i'm bugging? i saw it came out yesterday and wanted to watch but didn't have the time...
@wompppwompwomppp13 сағат бұрын
Lots of channels do that to increase views
@nicholashazlett43696 күн бұрын
Every week. Quality content. How do you do what you do?
@minecrafekid7 күн бұрын
your video made me interested in this type of content
@AAC1714Күн бұрын
Cave lion hunted cave bear?!? Good lord I can’t imagine a human who managed to witnesses that battle
@ilkoderez6017 күн бұрын
This channel is so amazing.
@WilliamNobleBonninActual6 күн бұрын
Awesome. Great video
@megret18085 сағат бұрын
This may explain why the leopard print in clothing has remained popular to this day. It just never goes out of style. Wearing a peopard skin has always a bage of honor
@dinkleberg6842 күн бұрын
I’m always up for Pleistocene themed videos
@BernardGoresКүн бұрын
that one that took out the monkey was jacked af
@DoppelBro7 күн бұрын
where did you find that picture from 22:56!? i last saw it over 20yrs ago as a kid!! core memory unlocked!!!
@ManlyHandshake7 күн бұрын
0:11 bet those stats are real diff in 2024
@fishermanofthesouth41127 күн бұрын
Why?
@colbyjacobs82806 күн бұрын
@@fishermanofthesouth4112woke policies leading to low income and high costs. Theres a reason almost every major government has been elected “right/republican” in the last year
@conormartin74166 күн бұрын
@@colbyjacobs8280Rightwing extremities still have low income high cost. Never gets better, stop trying to make it a left/right issue.
@colbyjacobs82806 күн бұрын
@@conormartin7416 huh? Lmao I don’t get what you’re trying to say
@mylessmith97586 күн бұрын
Define “woke”.
@victormarrec73966 күн бұрын
May you give me the title of th image at 5:58 please?
@danielarepas6661Күн бұрын
Wdym
@Jono_McKКүн бұрын
I think it's someone's art. The name, HODARI at the bottom right suggest that. Maybe if you search for that name you might find the picture.
@pablolongobardi72405 күн бұрын
I love that auto generated subtitles talk about "K bears" 😂