"It may have been capable of climbing tress, something unusual for snakes." *Me looking just slightly to the left and looking at my ball python currently climbing with ease*
@thescrambler635419 күн бұрын
Don't lie bro they fell after or did something dumb. Or is mine broke
@rawmaw19 күн бұрын
@@thescrambler6354 I'm not lying. Of course like any other animal they can make mistakes. But snakes very much generally have never had an issue with simply trees or other alike natural structures. My ball python very much enjoys his layered biome of cleansed sticks and branches to climb, and can both get up and down with ease. Been so for the past nearly 9 years. If your snake is having issue climbing, its furniture may be too slippery, not enough space in the terrarium, or spots are too spread apart.
@corvidKinq14 күн бұрын
There are even arboreal species of snakes
@thaw3dproductions25814 күн бұрын
@@thescrambler6354I reckon your snake is broken, you probably need to take him to a chiropractor
@Drunkenbasilisk12 күн бұрын
Tell ya ball python I hope he had a good day
@cheezemonkeyeater22 күн бұрын
"The koala coatless." Oh, then how is he gonna handle the cold weather?
@cogs_and_gears18 күн бұрын
Well I heard Australia was pretty hot from experience
@nemo-is-real8 күн бұрын
@cogs_and_gears then he's gonna get sunburnt without all his fur :(
@phantomfirst38773 сағат бұрын
As an Australian living in Victoria, it's either 37 degrees, like today, or 15 degrees but usually winter. Melbourne weather is memed all across Victoria. Queensland weather is hot, humid rainy and miserable at all times, and the outback is colder than queensland
@JonathanNormandy23 күн бұрын
Fish. Listen to me. Fish bites and the dinosaur stuff is so incredibly entertaining. I just like hearing you talk. Please continue.
@syco900822 күн бұрын
That’s not creepy at all. I agree
@justaghostinthesea11 күн бұрын
Nearly had a stroke reading this, then I looked at the channel name
@dakotaraptorr8 күн бұрын
@@justaghostinthesea Same, like i knew the name of the channel too but it took me a minute to realize
@MarianzYT6 күн бұрын
"Fish. Listen to me" 🗣️🔥🔥✍🏻
@pegasus_21374 күн бұрын
@@MarianzYTFish. Hear me out...
@ruthgeorgeholt568011 күн бұрын
"Sexual display" is the paleontology version of "used for ritual purposes" (both meaning "We have no idea what this was for")
@RokuroCarisu9 күн бұрын
Well, that is one idea.
@Mjgaming543218 күн бұрын
To be fair, under the archaeological definition of “ritual purposes”, a toothbrush is used for ritual purposes. So it isn’t entirely out of the question
@Wojti2000Zapasowe22 күн бұрын
The greatest thing I learned from this video is that firstly, the T-Rex is one of the largest, meat-eating L̶̳̱͙̓́̔̆̿̍̄̀̉ę̴͕̗̝̺̱̞̘̪̞̺̤̘̔̄͗̈́͌͐͂̒̃͂̀͛̔̚̚ͅǫ̵̢͖̬̫͙̭̪̭̝̤̹̤͇͙̝̭̿̋͋̇͐̾̋̉͂͌͂̕͝L̸̨̮̭̺̎̀e̸̛͙͓̻̾̽̄̓̓̇̾́̕̚o̷̠̖̣̍̅̔̈́̿͌͊͝L̵̢̡̡͇̳̤̠̗̠̘̹͔̺̥̲͖̞̅̓͘ȩ̴̡̙͉͇̝͍̘̹͇̪̳̺̗̠́̒̽̐͠õ̷͚̜͝L̷̨̼͉̘͎̜̙̬̟͔̙͓͈̬̂͛̑ē̴̢̺̣͕͙̠̳̎̈́̅̉́̃̑̄͝ǫ̴̧̼͎̻̞̹̰̋̀͗̎͌̈́̃́̐̉͋̂̾͘͘̕͜͝ͅ.
@Pizza_Crusader22 күн бұрын
Yeah finally someone speaking out against the psuedo science bs
@maciejprzychodzen845221 күн бұрын
Nie spodziewałem się tutaj ciebie.
@floor_tile13 күн бұрын
@@Pizza_CrusaderI'm confused
@Toff121012 күн бұрын
@@maciejprzychodzen8452 ja nie spodziewałem się tu żadnego Polaka
@M50A111 күн бұрын
@@Pizza_Crusader what are you on about
@cheezemonkeyeater22 күн бұрын
"Firstly, the T-Rex is nyoiyoiyoiyoing." well, I guess at least the voice isn't AI generated.
@SD_VREAL21 күн бұрын
That’s totally something a non Ai voice would say
@cheezemonkeyeater21 күн бұрын
@@SD_VREAL It is, if he's made a mistake with the delivery.
@llewelynshingler217320 күн бұрын
@@cheezemonkeyeater And if it's an intentional error?
@cheezemonkeyeater20 күн бұрын
@@llewelynshingler2173 *intentional. Then I guess we're all proper fucked.
@gunmunz16 күн бұрын
@@cheezemonkeyeater Then why didn't he edit the flub out and do a retake. 1: The content farmer did it to make it seem the AI was human 2: AI messed up and the farmer didn't care
@petersmythe646210 күн бұрын
Zoologists: "sexual display feature!" Anthropologists: "it's ceremonial!" Cosmologists: "This must be caused by dark energy!"
@fearofthechippan14 күн бұрын
2:31 this is so hurtful. My wife is a megalodon and she cares about me.
@Bone_Incidents10 күн бұрын
Exactly bro. These meg haters are getting out of fin.
@chuckled12523 күн бұрын
The human flesh bit might be like those google AI results that were based off of reddit posts
@josephjackson967916 күн бұрын
I damn near choked when he said humans emerged about 12,000 years ago and Megalodon died off around then, for so many reasons. 1) this is so far wrong. Homo sapiens has beem kicking around for 300,000 years. The implication that it takes until the start of civilization-ish stuff to begin for us to count as human is just kinda shitty to our ancestors. If you plucked a human from 100,000 years ago and brought them to the modern day (maybe a child to help with learning language and give them shots for various illnesses) they would be just as capable as we are. All they had was less info 2) there is an implied correlation by saying we emerged around when it died. Does he think humans hunted megs to extinction? 3) the even better interpretation is that we evolved from Megalodons. I choose this truth.
@ythegamerita15 күн бұрын
The ai probably got the 12000 years from some creationist source
@fedos11 күн бұрын
It all depends on your margins of error.
@PointingFinger9 күн бұрын
I would love a mythology that says humans are the descendants if megalodon.
@dakotaraptorr8 күн бұрын
he said humans too not homo sapiens, so doesnt that make it like 5 million years ago lmao with homo habilis and shit
@josephjackson96798 күн бұрын
@dakotaraptorr I guess? Im assuming by human he means sapiens rather than hominids in general?
@christiancinnabars140222 күн бұрын
The "Saber Tooth Cat sabers were fragile" debate is basically calling the teeth weak because they aren't literally adamantium. If you bite into especially a large prey animal's bone at the forces Smilodon and co were, you are bound to injure your longer, more exposed teeth eventually. Carnivores losing their teeth is a pretty common ordeal. That doesn't mean the teeth touching bone _at all_ was game over, but it's still bone slamming into bone.
@kyryloslav16 күн бұрын
Erm akschually, teeth aren't bones🤓☝️
@recurvestickerdragon10 күн бұрын
anyone who genuinely thinks smilodon "couldn't realistically" survive with their fangs/tusks has never seen a walrus in person
@miquelescribanoivars50494 күн бұрын
We have a possible pathology of a Smilodon populator that got bit through its skull by another, as well as a few nimravids with bite marks from other nimravids, both intraspecific and interspecific
@nottony866523 күн бұрын
Love how the ai narrator made a freaky noise for no reason in particular
@donalddonahue67423 күн бұрын
And left it in too
@GIGACAT57320 күн бұрын
When ?
@LegianaPlush19 күн бұрын
@@GIGACAT573the t rex segment
@kaepora6614 күн бұрын
I believe it’s engagement bait to get people commenting
@GIGACAT57312 күн бұрын
26:47
@NOTAISAWESOMESAUCE14 күн бұрын
who ISNT glad that crash bandicoot is extinct man was a threat to society
@Mr.Dinosalt18 күн бұрын
"Maybe could climb trees, something unusual for snakes" BROTHER, THERE ARE SNAKES THAT GLIDE! IN THE AIR! Imagine what tall place a snake could GLIDE from in a FOREST.
@fraskf676511 күн бұрын
What? Like a flying squirrel? Or some birds? How does a snake glide through the air?
@Mr.Dinosalt10 күн бұрын
@fraskf6765 Well yes, like a squirrel. But not quite. kzbin.info/www/bejne/Z2fEeIaubsx5hZYsi=HCyerVgf8XhxBiEi
@lovingfool206023 күн бұрын
fish going into the untapped potential of the dinosaur reaction channel
@donaldbaird784923 күн бұрын
As for the part with the titanoboa being claimed to be large due to it being hot, many animals do get big in cold environments due to the square cube law, where the volume increases faster than the surface area, allowing the animal to more easily retain heat.
@Suo_kongque19 күн бұрын
I was going to comment this. Bergmann's rule.
@ythegamerita15 күн бұрын
No the ai is just a furry
@mori986822 күн бұрын
You walk cautiously trough american woods, when suddenly! You step on a branch and make a loud crack! It's too late. The megatherium notices you, stands up on it's back legs and just sprints after you to tear you apart with it's giant claws and consume your flesh! Thank you for this video very educational.
@ryanhodges220117 күн бұрын
Honestly, as a Dino nerd kid who was bullied out of it, please keep making dinosaur videos. It feeling incredibly validating seeing one of my favorite youtubers be just as into Dinosaurs as I am.
@Justaguy-rp4wv16 күн бұрын
Dude, don’t let ANYONE bully you out of enjoying these majestic extinct creatures, fuck whoever bullied you, and continue enjoying dinosaurs (Also carnivores pfp nice)
@Dawg34712 күн бұрын
Who tf bullies people out of liking dinosaurs of all things
@HurricaneBady12 күн бұрын
Why in the world did people judge you for liking dinosaurs???
@Nockgun11 күн бұрын
@@HurricaneBadypeople hate trivial things they use bs social norms to arbitrarily judge someone. not knowing that hating others for a harmless hobby is "weird" but again its a subjective term like normal.
@ryanhodges220111 күн бұрын
@@HurricaneBady I didn't like sports, and so they decided to bully my interest. Also the autism.
@mercaius11 күн бұрын
We're glad the Platybelodon is extinct because otherwise the pogface would haunted us for all of history instead of just the last decade.
@tonyf343115 күн бұрын
12:20 animals do actually tend to be a bit larger in certain climates… but _colder_ ones, and this is best observed as variation within a species.
@rockclanhawkstar145415 күн бұрын
A good example of this is with Bears, specifically comparison between Grizzly Bears and Polar Bears. Warmer climates actually tend to have animals be significantly smaller like Fennec Foxes or Elf Owls.
@tigers78349 күн бұрын
True but the larger snakes are in warmer climates
@petrfedor18514 күн бұрын
That works for animald with high metabolism And stable body temperature. None of which Is true for snakes
@Mopsspoof13 күн бұрын
How much are y’all willing to bet the voice is AI generated too? It sounds like it’s constantly on the verge of crying 😭 that voice is QUIVERING.
@dakotaraptorr8 күн бұрын
Firstly, the T. rex is one of the largest meat-eating 👅 BLEHLEHLEHLEHLEHLEH hahaha 👅 Firstly, the T. re-
@Xeno_2011X22 күн бұрын
If you think about it megalodon believers contradict flat earthers, as if we were on a floating disk. Then there would be no deep oceans, but if the earth was flat. Then theres no megalodon
@SuraiginOfficial19 күн бұрын
Actually even if somehow the earth was flat there could still be deep oceans. Don't forget that the earth's crust is very thin compared to the rest of the earth, and the oceans are even thinner than the crust, so even if a flat earth looked as thin as a pizza slicer compared to its diameter it would still be able to have deep oceans (at the very least deep enough for whales and megalodon to exist). The flat earth is already a very stupid idea anyway, but the existence of megalodon and the ability to have deep oceans is not one of the reasons for its stupidity.
@Staringtrex19 күн бұрын
Mind blown
@recurvestickerdragon10 күн бұрын
unfortunately, I usually see it spouted alongside hollow Earth "theory"
@RokuroCarisu9 күн бұрын
@recurvestickerdragon So, apparently, the earth is both flat and hollow, and also full of giant sharks in addition to sand weasels.
@dakotaraptorr8 күн бұрын
there can still be deep oceans on a flat earth tho
@moomooman632122 күн бұрын
26:50 Bro getting freaky thinking about Tyrannoraurud ahhh
@ungulatemanalpha12 күн бұрын
The saber teeth thing seems to me like they had a cool narrative idea to distinguish the 'protagonist' of the episode and accidentally turned a very reasonable idea (sometimes predators hurt themselves or damage parts of their body as part of life) into a nonsense generalisation (saber teeth in general were fragile).
@SergioCánovasCM22 күн бұрын
As a fellow autist, I appreciate the dedication and knowledge fish has on dinosaurs
@ValeBridges18 күн бұрын
4:13 You're too generous. I don't know much about dinosaurs, but I do know about humans. 12,000 years ago was around the time of agriculture. Anatomically modern humans are dated back to 300,000 years ago.
@theredsaurian21 күн бұрын
0:40 that's the fictional "Silurian Scorpion" from Primeval lmao
@dirteater75799 күн бұрын
holy shit that image of Nigel Marven holding the sea scorpion unlodged a deep deep core memory. I must have watched Sea Monsters on vhs a thousand times as a kid.
@eros542023 күн бұрын
Some scientists have theorized that sea scorpions would be awful drivers. Love these vids. I've subbed and liked. Hope to see more!
@ythegamerita15 күн бұрын
I mean.... Are they wrong?
@copperlemon111 күн бұрын
@@ythegamerita We can't be certain. Provided a car with ergonomic features tailored to the body plan and appendages, a eurypterid could well make a fine driver.
@ythegamerita10 күн бұрын
@@copperlemon1 yes that is a fine point but I do not believe is had the reflexes or intelligence to even understand what it was doing
@phone_gal23 күн бұрын
"that looks like more sludge" me to the underpaid lunch lady in elementary school when they where serving us lunch provided by the government
@petersmythe646210 күн бұрын
Investors sounded pretty interested in my proposal to find deep ocean fossils from the Permian until I showed them the part about subducted slabs.
@azuresiren584622 күн бұрын
Saber Tooth Tiger is just a common name. Clouded leopards aren't actually leopards, nor are snow leopards, mountain lions aren't lions, not to mention American cheetahs weren't cheetahs and yet I don't see anyone online complaining about those guys, yet call a smilodon a saber tooth tiger and everyone loses it. It's just a descriptive name that gives you an idea of what the animal is, and since common names are by nature messy, thats what scientific names are for
@christiancinnabars140222 күн бұрын
The difference is that the more accurate and equally as common common name for them is Saber Tooth _Cat._ You can't call the others Clouded Cats, Snow Cats, Mountain Cats (though Puma or Cougar is somewhat common - depending on region), or American Cats. For stuff like Bear Dogs, who are neither, or Golden Moles for an extant example, yeah we're stuck with misnomers unless a better name catches on. But Saber Tooth _Cats_ have their more accurate name right there. It's like the whole Pterodactyl vs Pterosaur debate. Yeah, everyone knows what you mean when you say Pterodactyl, but if you are someone _making science-focused videos that go into detail on various paleofauna which garner over 3 million views each,_ then maybe try to use the more accurate name that is more accepted by current paleontology.
@Saiyanking7222 күн бұрын
Call a smildon a saber tooth tiger and society…. Society calls you stupid!😤
@IcefloeProductions-qv2qg21 күн бұрын
@@christiancinnabars1402 "You can't call the others Clouded Cats, Snow Cats, Mountain Cats (though Puma or Cougar is somewhat common - depending on region), or American Cats." why not? it's basically the same thing
@EinTheEin21 күн бұрын
Paleontologist geeks are generally really annoying over people not knowing the exact species name of an obscure extinct animal they know inside and out but do not have the degree to make it actually worthwhile to know said information.
@syrupmancer15 күн бұрын
I get annoyed by pedantics in conversation, but imo if a video tries to present itself as informative or educational I'd say it's fair game for this kind of correction (ai slop doubly so)
@KirbyMario12345_93923 күн бұрын
"Agility of a bird" just makes me think of a winged T.rex, which is kinda funny. The closest living relative of terror birds is the red-legged seriema, which averages between 30 to 35 inches long. It's not flightless, but perches fairly low. Also, on the topic of flightless birds, the moa were supposedly, in fact wingless, not even having vestigial wings like other ratites.
@oxotniknaoleney20 күн бұрын
Agility of a bird? What’s next, Aerodynamics of a cow?
@ythegamerita15 күн бұрын
Now i imagine a t Rex with chicken like wings
@sneakysnake769513 күн бұрын
They never said what bird, could have the agility of a kakapo or kiwi lmao
@sneakysnake769513 күн бұрын
@@ythegameritachickens are surprisingly agile, just because theyre near flightless (depending on the breed, I've seen some catching impressive amounts of flight time) doesn't mean they can't move.
@ValeBridgesКүн бұрын
@@ythegamerita Imagine having KFT (Kentucky Fried Tyrannosaur)
@MrSpeedysam6010 күн бұрын
42:57 "An interesting fact that many people don't know about terror birds is that... terror birds with long and slender beaks probably ate insects and small animals, while those with short and powerful beaks likely hunted larger prey." This is literally just Darwin's finches.
@DiscoverWithDeLo13 күн бұрын
Humans actually make terrible prey for sharks. We’re super bony and muscle, with not much meat on our bodies. Most shark attacks are just a single investigative bite followed by the shark leaving because it realizes we aren’t worth the effort
@thelanktheist26269 күн бұрын
We’re a very lean meat, and while some sharks eat fish, the one to blame for most shark attacks (the dopey, well-meaning great white) snacks on blubbery fatty seals, meaning they realize we definitely aren’t worth it
@smashers697122 күн бұрын
Honestly if we continue this series of Fish reacting to weird Paleo slop I want Fish to react to one of those “Taking an animal and placing it in a different time period” videos that have been popping up recently.
@blackheart27289 күн бұрын
"20 Dangerous Animals You're Glad Are Extinct" : big, big, big, big, big, big gee I'm sensing a pattern here
@bobjoe34924 күн бұрын
Don't forget about the large terror bird that could grow up to 2.5 inches
@rigel92283 күн бұрын
Well you see, big = scary and dangerous, it's not like half of these would have probably been hunted to extinction by humans like the Mammoth had they come into contact with us...
@manafi100212 күн бұрын
I guess the AI got the part about titanoboa and the heat mixed up, but it is true that the reason titanoboa could have reached those sizes is because it was extremely hot back then (since its a cold blooded animal, if the temperatures were lower, it would have lost too much heat at that size).
@Stinky-f9m23 күн бұрын
New Dinosaur video just dropped, billions must watch
@jimboskran489223 күн бұрын
0:30 that's the Sand Scorpion from Primeval, an England dino / creature tv show from 2007, people might also know it because RickRaptor105 uses the raptor from that show for his pfp. The Sand Scorpions themselves are.. aight nothings crazy, it's Tremors but with Scorpions
@iguanaboi392120 күн бұрын
Damn, I had no idea you were a dino guy. Respect Edit: I don't know id someone brought it up, but that initial Carbonemys picture was from Ark
@mlgodzilla420622 күн бұрын
I always find it funny how thumbnails use Platybelodon to show a “monster” when it was a slow lumbering swamp dweller
@Timberwolf13911 күн бұрын
Quetzalcoatlus' diet does seem to depend on it's species, and the smaller of the two, Q. Lawsoni, has been found in an alluvial floodplain deposit that had is believed to have been alkaline lakes. While the larger species, Nothropi was found in non-alluvial plain deposits, so workers think that it had the scavenging diet. Do also note that no Azhdarchid seems to have been found in a fully terrestrial environment, there's always some river, coastline or lake nearby.
@Cyromantik7 күн бұрын
The weird pronunciation kinda points to the narrator themselves as an LLM ("AI") generated voice. "Epoch" as "Ee-pōsh" for example.
@mustardbeef604511 күн бұрын
THE SLOP MUST FLOW HE WHO CONTROLS THE SLOP CONTROLS THE ALGORITHM
@ma1-t1f23 күн бұрын
17:28 I don’t know why they do it maybe because it’s a common name for it and plus we still call strawberries berries even though they’re not and jellyfish fish even though they’re not fish
@Breat_Teleporter23 күн бұрын
20 bucks on that there will be no animals on the list that came before the Carboniferous
@randomgrunt1222 күн бұрын
When are they gonna have a "15 AWESOME creatures that went extinct" that includes Tully monster on the list
@petersmythe646210 күн бұрын
The main things for human pursuit predation are the ability to sweat efficiently to get rid of heat and highly efficient movement. Thus ultra-long-distance pursuit is possible on full aerobic power at jogging speeds.
@The_Pikaboi10 күн бұрын
Im glad this video exists so i know a Helicoprion is real and not an AI generated Shark with a Sawblade
@Orgs_Rock20 күн бұрын
11:55 So, I have heard tempreture be equated to size, at least in biology, but its not always true, and mostly applies to cold climates. This is known as Bergmans law (whos irony is not lost on anyone) and its mostly true, but kinda tenuous. But hey, the larest land animal ever lived at incredibly warm times (eg, Argentinosaurus living at the Cretaceous Thermal Maximum) so idk.
@ValeBridges18 күн бұрын
My layperson's understanding is that for large animals in hot climates releasing body heat can become a problem, so they need to have more surface area relative to their volume, whereas in cold climates it's better to be able to contain your heat, hence you get things like polar bears and walruses that are fatty and rotund, and generally larger than their equivalents in warmer areas. Maybe things are different for non-endotherms?
@CameronCarter-h7c10 күн бұрын
"Terror birds didn't have wings" I guess the bot got terror birds confused with moas & elephant birds
@shaifennec14 күн бұрын
Theses large birds range from 2 inches to 2 inches big
@Thomaas5516 күн бұрын
2 inches to 6 centimeters
@petrfedor18514 күн бұрын
What ani impressive range!!
@Drknsl06 күн бұрын
I need a Helicoprion-based Pokemon, it's a shark with a buzzsaw in its face
@petersmythe646210 күн бұрын
Seriemas are modern terror birds though and if you're a small snake they are absolutely deserving of that title.
@Mag3.141522 күн бұрын
My best guess on tyrannosaurus feathering is that they had feathers when they were young but as they grow they loose most/all of them
@Kupsode5 күн бұрын
26:48 the AI had to have tripped over itself to even be capable of making that noise
@JimParente18 күн бұрын
Good video! In this age of awful AI voices, I am so glad there are content creators like yourself who do their own narration.
@01eksii22 күн бұрын
We are at the point, when people want to look at a reaction content to AI slop, peak entertainment
@studefishernikal18 күн бұрын
just wanted to say the vinegaroon sea scorpion from 0:50 was a "silurian scorpion" from the british tv series "Primeval"
@notaclass-d182217 күн бұрын
i feel like its not an ai voice over, but definitely someon reading off an ai script
@petersmythe64629 күн бұрын
I mean there isn't really a tree clade so as far as I'm concerned anything that is partially living and forms the canopy of a forest is a tree.
@andrewszanto934710 күн бұрын
13:13 bro just looked at a snake and was like "has no arms, probs can't climb a tree." and just left it at that
@Boneworm85211 күн бұрын
I'm much more glad the Heliseethrion and Helimaldrion also died out. And I DO remember sharkopaths!
@petersmythe64629 күн бұрын
Gigantopithicus was a Pongid but I think it's not really analogous to either Gorillas or Orangutans.
@Ceratophoneus15 күн бұрын
Please i beg of you. PLEASE. your reactions are peak and you seriously remind me of AVNJ. ON my three amazing and adorable cats, on my entire future paleontology career, PLEASE make another one of these😭
@mrgodzillaraptors863222 күн бұрын
Fish talking about prehistoric animals is always fun
@J0hnzie20 күн бұрын
You should make a video thats just a really bad AI trying to debunk these dinosaur sludge videos
@Asmokedetector21 күн бұрын
33:44 I'd love to see a definite Triceratops recreation where it does have quills along its body, it only makes sense, why leave the back completely undefended?
@dakotaraptorr8 күн бұрын
Pretty sure we found preserved evidence of quills not too long ago! Really makes sense considering Psittaco had them.
@despoinasuri65211 күн бұрын
There is actually a spices of fish that can open and close its mouth fractions of a second if I remember the spices is called the frog fish (sorry for any spelling mistakes English is not my first language)
@ninjafrog69663 күн бұрын
“sexual display” is basically just “we have no clue what this does”
@Lesbiwolf9210 күн бұрын
the meg doesn't exist cos whalers never saw it? well I put it to you that the whalers were in fact the meg all along!
@eergegerg233 күн бұрын
Classic AI paleo slop. "These fantastic creatures were from 3 feet to 90 cm long, some of them could reach 1 yard and the biggest were about 0,9 metres!".
@Deadpool3E3 күн бұрын
38:21 Terror Birds have been found in Antarctica. I heard that the first remains from that continent were found in thr 1970's, but they were a few scraps. Last year, another specimen was found with a size estimated to be similar to that of Phorusrhacos itself. Apparently, even after the Mesozoic, Antarctica was still connected to South America and Australia until sea levels rose and the continent was encased in ice. 39:30 The Terror Birds were a lineage that date back 60 million years. They likely came from smaller ancestors with roots from Asia or Europe before taking over South America where, outside of Sparassodonts and some land crocs, was devoid of an apex predator niche in the open fields. 59:40 Surprisingly, this is true. There was a paper back in 2007 that tested the skull mechanics for Dunkleosteus' bite. Turns out that it had a four bar linkage system that incorporated it's mobile skull plates and muscles. The result was that from open to close, the fish would've bit in 80 milliseconds with a strength of nearly 7500 N, among the highest bite forces of any animal.
@MLittleBrony10 сағат бұрын
rip sea scorpions you would have loved human flesh
@Sakaki_Hime23 күн бұрын
I love listening to bonzi buddy tell me about about 20 dangerous extinct animals 😊
@petersmythe646210 күн бұрын
"agility comparable to that of a modern bird" Bruh. Ever seen a modern bird that weighs 9 tonnes?! Don't get me wrong they were probably surprisingly agile. I don't think it's impossible T. Rex could have jumped and used its feet to help control or bring down prey. But can it *FLY?*
@petersmythe646210 күн бұрын
Size of cold-blooded animals is often limited with temperature. Size of warm-blooded animals is strongly inverse with temperature.
@petersmythe646210 күн бұрын
Sabertooth cats could probably puncture into bone. It's dealing with prey flailing around unrestrained that's gonna put a rather unhealthy amount of leverage on those teeth.
@notTLWO17 күн бұрын
you know, I theorize that the Sea Scorpion might have gotten 1,000 kills with the shortstop.
@anautilus200410 күн бұрын
1:04:29 This is not an animal that I'm glad is extinct either, cephalopods fucking rule
@DrLongWang13 күн бұрын
To the person who asked how many dinosaurs haven’t been discovered: the fossil record we have for dinosaurs is the equivalent of finding a squirrel, bat, spider, and pig skeleton. Then add some discarded bones from a bear and a falcon. Now try to interpret the entire biosphere that exists in the modern world.
@petersmythe646210 күн бұрын
High humidity technically means less oxygen because it's being displaced by water. The thing that will give it better oxygen availability is heat because it speeds up all of the reactions taking place in its blood and muscles.
@bigdaddydons62419 күн бұрын
MAYBE the weird size thing with the terror birds was talking about babies? Even the eating bugs thing could of been some speculations about younger terrorbirds and that confused the AI
@petersmythe646210 күн бұрын
The snake appears to be made of snake sir.
@vietnamgamer94909 күн бұрын
Herbivorous pronounced “herb a vorus” deserved a shoutout
@petersmythe64629 күн бұрын
Meganeura would've weighed like 5 ounces. Like, your cat is definitely bringing them home for you occasionally. Total non-threat even to a baby.
@irExron4 күн бұрын
I feel like the Human flesh line came from a videogame guide for ark or something lol
@BNWOCHUD10 күн бұрын
I could've sworn you were a tf2 KZbinr am I mental
@apersonontheinternet835410 күн бұрын
His gaming channel has tf2 content but this is his non gaming channel
@TenositSergeich17 күн бұрын
Sea scorpions loving human flesh is like Dwarf Fortress preferences; they're born with love for human flesh, even if they never get to taste it
@Szpuppet3 күн бұрын
I feel like if megladons did exist it would have a significant impact on us all. A big animal would need a lot of food to sustain itself, our oceans probably wont be able to handle such a big predator. Many animals might be driven to extinction.
@petersmythe64629 күн бұрын
I think 440 lbs is pretty low-ball for a giant azhdarchid especially given their wingspan estimate of 36 feet. At that size I could see 600.
@Sateliteman6 күн бұрын
09:05 got that song in my head now… such a good anime 🌀👍
@mightyaussie718716 күн бұрын
Didn't realise that there was a non-gaming channel, now I know he likes dinosaurs! Awesome!
@TheIndefinitive7 күн бұрын
When I heard that first ai voice at 1:00 do a pitch perfect impression of the dweeby guy who gets fired in Scrooged I fucking reeled man
@peskywombat491513 күн бұрын
I think that the heat=size ting for the Titanaboa was the AI mixing up the whole “needed more oxygen” thing with the Carboniferous period(which I know Titanaboa didn’t live during), and then kit said heat
@bobjoe34924 күн бұрын
This ai proved bigfoot is alive
@rhs026317 күн бұрын
Please, make more of these. Very Entertaining!
@SaffronicSaffron11 күн бұрын
GUYS!. OMG, I just saw a snake in a tree! Yeah, that's right, A SNAKE. IN A TREE!! Oh my gosh 🙀 This must be a new type of species quick let's study it. What would we even name it!??
@junior4022211 күн бұрын
Tree climber snake
@N1gh7L0rd15 күн бұрын
my reason for why there's no major evidence of livyatan and Megalodon fighting is because it's all in da ocean