Thank you so much for having me on, Lindsay! It was super fun, and as always, it turned out brilliantly! Fantastic work by you and Gian, im stoked for your next part. I hope we can work together again soon!
@eacalvert4 ай бұрын
I'm glad you guys did the colab 😊
@BJdbbdb4 ай бұрын
monke
@danielforgedragon34464 ай бұрын
Dude I love your videos
@touremuhammad59834 ай бұрын
You mispronounced Macuahuitl when you mentioned the Jurassic Ankylosaurs.
@irizzard40494 ай бұрын
@@touremuhammad5983🤓
@trli71174 ай бұрын
Ironically enough, in the books naming it "Jurassic" park was actually intended as an indication of the park having proritized markitability over safty or scientific accuracy.
@TheLithp4 ай бұрын
I think in the movie they also have the general "all of this stuff is from the Cretaceous"/"Jurassic sounded better in marketing" exchange.
@suchnothing4 ай бұрын
@@TheLithp that wasn't in the first movie at least, unless it was a deleted scene.
@mattkrupka70124 ай бұрын
@@suchnothingI’d give my left arm for Jurassic park: directors cut with an arnold death scene
@suchnothing4 ай бұрын
@@mattkrupka7012 We'd all have to hold onto our butts to get through that one
@mattkrupka70124 ай бұрын
@@suchnothing 😂
@guy_badly4 ай бұрын
Man I've been starved for a "that we know of" for a minute
@ConLustig4 ай бұрын
I have all the patients in the world for people creating content seriously in their chosen field. But..i still want more videos 😭
@WhiskyWombat5564 ай бұрын
Same here. I rewatched this entire series twice
@jonathanbruynooghe34494 ай бұрын
yo, same
@ReptilianTeaDrinker4 ай бұрын
@@ConLustig You're a doctor? You have patients? lol
@artor91754 ай бұрын
@@ReptilianTeaDrinker All the patients in the world? They aren't a doctor, they are The Doctor!
@ryan41054 ай бұрын
I grew up with a ginkgo tree in my backyard, fun fact they drop all of their leaves for the winter in one day so for a few hours in the fall it's essentially raining leaves from the ginkgo tree. It was always cool to watch
@acrazydurian4 ай бұрын
as kids we used to collect and store them in books. im sure there was a reason why we put them in between the pages of books, might have something to do with paper sucking up moistures of the leaves. Then randomly, we started competing who has the strongest stem of the leaf, one thing lead to another, us boys were storing them under our shoe insoles. every boy's hands smells like feet for like a year. good memories.
@WiskyDuck4 ай бұрын
When the leaves fall, ginkgo biloba becomes rocky biloba. “Let me tell you something you already know. The world ain't all sunshine and rainbows. It's a very mean and nasty place and I don't care how tough you are it will beat you to your knees and keep you there permanently if you let it…”
@MsMrBigglesworthАй бұрын
So essentially your Ginkgo Biloba was yelling, “Primula Auricula!” over and over in the Fall?
@personaldinouse4 ай бұрын
You don't just introduce a man to a giant ammonite and expect him to casually brush it off. That form of knowledge can change a man forever.
@Marie456104 ай бұрын
Rats, rats, we're the rats. We prey at night, we stalk at night, we're the rats. I'm the giant rat that makes all of the rules 🐀🐀🐀🐀
@Eloraurora4 ай бұрын
Let's see what kind of trouble we can get ourselves into... 🐀➡️🐒➡️🧍
@halicritters94783 ай бұрын
Wasn't expecting a Jerma meme here. Lol.
@Kirsten42603 ай бұрын
@@ElorauroraI immediately thought of the rat song from coraline lol
@ratticusthewinion3 ай бұрын
🐀🐀🐀🐀
@paigewilson5585Ай бұрын
@@Kirsten4260 I thought of Rats from Hey Arnold. The Cats spoof
@InfiniteSquareZero4 ай бұрын
One of the earliest science lessons I remember in school was my teacher coming into class with a cool leaf she found on school grounds. She explained to us how it was a living fossil from dinosaur times, and we got to go on a "fossil hunt" mini field trip around the grounds to find the tree it was from while she taught us cool paleontology facts. It's a super fond memory for me so I got all nostalgic hearing you talk about how rad ginkgo trees are! ^_^
@LizardandBuns4 ай бұрын
I was also feeling nostalgic! My grade school was surround by ginkos. I never knew they were fossil trees until more recently.
@brigidtheirish4 ай бұрын
I am so jealous of you being able to go on a mini-paleontology field trip. School would've been so much more fun and I wouldn't learned things so much more easily if it'd all been framed around dinosaurs and paleontology.
@2degucitas4 ай бұрын
That's an awesome teacher
@Danosauruscrecks3 ай бұрын
I'm jealous all my teachers sucked and didn't like it even you knew more than them.
@olinelvgreen20624 ай бұрын
fun fact about gingko: theyre some of the few trees that didnt die from the radiation at Hiroshima and Nagasaki! Theres one around 2 km from the center of the explosion site, thats over 150 years old and survived, thats pretty impressive for a tree!
@darcieclements48804 ай бұрын
Pretty awesome for a species with an extreme genetic bottleneck in the last couple hundred years. It's hard to imagine that we were down to six of those things left in the world at one point.
@JMObyx4 ай бұрын
@@darcieclements4880 There were ONLY six left? What's the backstory behind that???
@hedgehog31804 ай бұрын
I doubt that's really a radiation thing, the nuclear bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki didn't produce much fallout and at 2 km away from the center of the explosion there'd be no noticeable radiation from the blast itself. It's probably more that the tree survived the following firestorm that was ignited by the bomb and which caused most of the destruction since most buildings in Japan at the time were still built out of wood, which is still impressive and speaks to how hardy these trees are.
@Sapphie02Ай бұрын
Extinction didn't get me, you puny radiation won't either. Let's go ginkcos!
@sciencenerd76394 ай бұрын
Never go in against a caecilian when death is on the line
@destro69714 ай бұрын
Here’s the comment I was looking for, nice work 🤘🏼
@Uggnog4 ай бұрын
INCONCEIVABLE!
@mildlyderanged4 ай бұрын
That this isn't the top comment is a crime against humanity
@Ave_Echidna4 ай бұрын
@@UggnogYou keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
@neurospicyrainbow4 ай бұрын
You beat me to it!
@Finvaara2 ай бұрын
Wiggling your ears is a trait I discovered I had when I noticed that sometimes my glasses got closer to my face for no reason I could explain. This allowed me to figure out what sensations I was feeling when it happened, and isolate the muscle groups so I could do it on purpose. Now I can wiggle my ears when I want to. Thank you for coming to my Ted Talk.
@raindropstarship111322 күн бұрын
I have similar story! Noticed my ears moved on their own while I was in large crowds, so over a lunch break at school I stared at the table and payed super close attention to how they moved towards people talking around me. Discovered how to move them myself over the course of the hour. Now I can wriggle them whenever I want! I can even move them independently, though it's easier to do that with the left ear than the right for some reason. The Ear Training was fun, and I recommend everyone give it a try.
@AstaMoth12177 күн бұрын
I found out when I get embarrassed I move my ears backward and each time when I try to replicate that feeling I get closer until it just clicks and I can wiggle my ears now
@sapphirII4 ай бұрын
Animal: Lay eggs Eutherians: "I am the egg"
@karladenton50344 ай бұрын
There's a "young" (approx 100 year old) ginko tree on my block. Walking through the absolute rain of golden leaves in the fall is one of my favorite things.
@Techno_Idioto4 ай бұрын
So a...golden shower. I'll see myself out.
@karladenton50344 ай бұрын
@@Techno_Idioto UGH, that was a "Pun-ishment" LOL. No, this is lovely if you like fall colors at all. Ginko trees turn such a bright yellow, no other trees in my area come close.
@brigidtheirish4 ай бұрын
I've gotta find out if ginkos will grow in the Upper Midwest. A lot of trees have a rough time up here.
@ReptilianTeaDrinker4 ай бұрын
Ginko trees have the prettiest leaves. I love the colour and I love autumn. All the pretty coloured leaves just make me happy for some reason. lol I live in the UK, so most our trees just go orange-brown or like almost yellow. Still pretty though! But yeah, Ginko trees are really special.
@2degucitas4 ай бұрын
@@brigidtheirish They will. I've seen them grow here in west Michigan.
@HeavyTopspin4 ай бұрын
I cannot think of a cooler scientific fact than that the stegosaur's Thagomizer got its name from a Far Side cartoon. Makes me smile every time I hear the word.
@rachelhansen24174 ай бұрын
I took a class called “dinosaurs” in college, and we had to write a paper on one. I picked stegosaurus just so I could include the cartoon.
@dougmaurer75704 ай бұрын
Every. Single. Time.
@mathdesm93064 ай бұрын
R.I.P Thag Simmons
@kyze82844 ай бұрын
"Hey, look what Thag do!" - cavemen watching Thag use a stick to cook the meat instead of burning his hand
@MissCaraMint4 ай бұрын
I do love that fun fact. Love Gary Larson.
@theseven-armedgod73814 ай бұрын
I'm so happy you brought up Ceratosaurus, it's definitely an underrated dinosaur. It's four fingers, and the really unique tooth structure they had always fascinated me. Allosaurus is my other favorite dinosaur though, so I don't mind it getting attention as well. Honestly both are extremely awesome animals.
@ejd534 ай бұрын
Love the fact you showed a picture of a tree shrew for Eutherians. I used to work with tree shrews way back when they were still considered prototypical primates; they were the subjects for my PhD dissertation.
@miquelescribanoivars504926 күн бұрын
To be fair they are pretty similar to how the most basal Plesiadapiformes looked, even if phylogenetically Scadentia is quite a bit ways off
@charatome4 ай бұрын
me and my boyfriend love your channel lindsay!!!! he's a zoology major and i'm a simple earth fan so we always watch your videos together. much love
@LindsayNikole4 ай бұрын
so happy to have you both here :) much love!!
@Will_Hallett_Art4 ай бұрын
What's simple earth?
@blooper_014 ай бұрын
@@Will_Hallett_Art She was just saying she is a simple fan of Earth.
@Mr.JimPickens4 ай бұрын
@@blooper_01 Regular earth fan vs earth enjoyer T.T
@Hugh.G.Rectionx3 ай бұрын
Thats the planet I'm from. 😃
@Morrison-saber-tooth4 ай бұрын
This is avengers of paleontogy youtubers
@ohgeeshcaro4 ай бұрын
Avengers. WE MUST ASSEMBLE. That we know of.
@jellybingey28504 ай бұрын
Trey the explainer is Star Wars of paleotubers
@thijsfb4 ай бұрын
The avengers that we know of
@kwest97474 ай бұрын
The palaeontologists THAT we know of.
@swagz2624 ай бұрын
get Paleo Analysis in, Tim-Tim can be the sidekick.
@QuatrinaVR4 ай бұрын
I like to think of ‘Jurassic Park’ being Crichton’s literary device to show the corporatism of the whole situation. It sounds catchier and easier to say so it would be ‘consumer friendly’ as a theme park name regardless of the accuracy. We even have characters pointing out that certain species went extinct in different periods than the Jurassic in the story. It helps give Alan, Ellie, and Malcolm a step up to be able to lecture the greedy characters that only wanted to DO and make money. Without stopping to think if they should be doing all of the cloning and turning it into a circus.
@bluelotus.society4 ай бұрын
That's precisely what the books say.
@thylascene3 ай бұрын
fr, was pretty clever lmao, too bad the JP movies pretty much screwed up modern views of prehistoric animals (cough, bald dromeosaurs and elephant-skin t-rex) nowadays
@Me-yq1flАй бұрын
@@thylascene You do realize that the appearance of those dinosaurs at the time was considered relatively accurate, right? Dromeosaurs being bald was the general consensus, and the idea that most dinosaurs were feathered only recently became the consensus, long after Jurassic Park was made. Jurassic Park did, however, made the public aware that dinosaurs were not slow, stupid beasts that dragged their tails.
@Moeron863 ай бұрын
Lindsey your personality and the way you make content is weirdly magnetic. Thanks for teaching me better than any of my teachers ever did.
@111olbap4 ай бұрын
Hi Lindsay, I know you get tons of comments and won't see this but I want to thank you for making this channel, and especially for making the history of life series. I have been glued to my seat watching these for awhile now. So much good information that I'd never heard before, AND you present things in an energetic and exciting way which isn't very common with nerdy stuff on youtube and keeps people engaged. I foresee a future where you are a famous and highly payed public speaker about stuff like this. I love your videos. THANK YOU!
@lukasspielmann1084 ай бұрын
My name is Lukas Spielmann, and _this_ is a comment about all the hype that's flowing through my veins... THAT we know of.
@k1wishade4 ай бұрын
THAT we know of!
@inkognito59454 ай бұрын
*THAT* we know of.
@shenicles4 ай бұрын
THAT we know of!
@jamesleatherwood51254 ай бұрын
I read that "this" with the same tone GMM does their fancy vs frozen eps. "THIS.... is xyz"
@EstebanAlejandroNieves4 ай бұрын
My name is Esteban and THIS is a reply of a comment by Lukas Spielmann about all the hype through his veins... THAT we both know of.
@wronin82444 ай бұрын
Someone: we evolved from monkeys Lindsey: RATS
@bucketslash114 ай бұрын
Someone: what is your favourite Ghost song Lindsay: RATS
@darcieclements48804 ай бұрын
Yes scientists never said anyone evolved from monkeys that was never even on the table. It was creationist to wanted to make The theory of evolution by means of natural selection sound very offensive that made this claim. The actual claim was that we shared a common ancestor which is a completely different statement😂 we know for a fact that we share a common ancestor with a banana tree. The fact that we share a common ancestor with monkeys shouldn't shock anyone. Heck the term monkeys isn't even the scientific term It refers to multiple distantly related animals with convergent evolution😂 That said we also didn't evolve from rats, we share common ancestor with rats and rats resemble that common ancestor superficially.
@D4wn0fAppl354 ай бұрын
@@darcieclements4880 modern bananas aren't true banana's either, so there's also that. Also the "Rat" thing is a joke, because all mammals ancestors looked like Rats at one point in time very early on. Hence the whole "we evolved from Rats"
@wronin82444 ай бұрын
@@darcieclements4880 But we did evolve from "rats" bc they are the common ancestor (Im referring to the first mammals that look like rats)
@voilet-the-non-violet-vulpix4 ай бұрын
@@darcieclements4880 I was told that we descended from monkeys (obviously I agree it wasn’t modern monkeys, but an ancient species of monkey), as ape is a sub-group of Old World monkeys So like, all apes are monkeys, all humans are apes, so not only are humans descended from monkeys, humans _still are_ monkeys. Is there info I haven’t heard about that means apes are more distantly related than we thought? Or maybe I’m another victim of the “Basic” in “Basic taxonomy” glossing over some stuff for the sake of brevity
@alexbaldwin4044 ай бұрын
I recently was in DC with my fiancée roaming around the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History... and my fiancé's first sentence was "Lindsay Nicole... would be... stoked"
@timothy098-b4f3 ай бұрын
LN is one of the most talented KZbinrs around. The density and choice of information and the clarity and style of its presentation is about as good as this format gets. She’s a mental thagomizer.
@thedragonofcanada66593 ай бұрын
35:20 Interesting fact about the Thagomizer (There is no british spelling, only Z :( ) it was named by a cartoonist and not a paleontologist! A comic was made about cavemen who were naming dinosaurs, when Thag was killed by an unnamed weapon on a Stegosaurus
@aazhie3 ай бұрын
The Far Side by Bill Watterson RIP the legend :]
@joekrampus11543 ай бұрын
Gary Larson. Watterson did Calvin and Hobbes
@phoenixfritzinger9185Ай бұрын
@@joekrampus1154and both of them are still alive
@blacksage23754 ай бұрын
Jurassic Park not being accurate is entirely in keeping with Crichton's book where Hammond was a greedy bastard who cut every expense.
@RyoApeiron4 ай бұрын
I love how the book itself essentially starts with Wu telling Hammond how NOT dinosaur their dinosaurs probably were.
@auratus-corvus4 ай бұрын
My favorite part was when the rpg met the velociraptor
@Gloriousturtlechan4 ай бұрын
Yeah the inaccuracy if the jp movie dinos annoys me a little less when I just think about how the dinos are just designed by humans to be the most impressive display animal. Because if I dont then the bs they call the giganotosaurus in the last movie is gonna make my brain bleed. Though I will never forgive them for messing up the Dilophosaurus as much as they did. Dilo could have literally been what their raptors were... It was one of the biggest predators of its time and quite large compared to humans.
@redspiderlilys64 ай бұрын
I just wish the movies played into the whole “not real dinosaurs” thing more, because the amount of people who think velociraptors actually looked like that is so saddening. It’s on par with Jaws with the amount of misinformation it spread.
@RyoApeiron4 ай бұрын
@redspiderlilys6 I mean, Henry Wu gives a similar spiel in Jurassic World, but mostly in response to criticism of his hybridization projects. It definitely doesn't hold the same meaning, mainly because of how defensive it feels.
@matthewb30264 ай бұрын
Thagomizer. Named after the late Thag Simmons.
@jellybingey28504 ай бұрын
Nice of the stegosaurids to adopt that name in remembrance of him
@iliketurtles5114 ай бұрын
I was looking for this comment! 😂
@kolgrimthunderhammer4 ай бұрын
This is why we should let comedians come up with more scientific terms
@kyze82844 ай бұрын
"Look what Thag do" 😂
@modernghost04 ай бұрын
We got a greeting, ear wiggling, explanation of ear wiggling, and the video starting in 30 seconds. Gave me whiplash
@virgilscrivener53354 ай бұрын
Although she raised a more pressing question: WHY TF were our ancestors wiggling their ears all the time? 💀
@Dusty_Den4 ай бұрын
@virgilscrivener5335 some kind of defence, or pick up chicks. THAT WE KNOW OF
@fourpointthreefive4 ай бұрын
@@virgilscrivener5335.. you never seen a cat or dog move their ears? Yeah we used to be able to do that
@ReptilianTeaDrinker4 ай бұрын
@@fourpointthreefive I wish we could still do that, tbh. lol
@LittleLemon133 ай бұрын
I just about screamed when I saw your skeletal of spinosophorosus is from my hometown museum! I've always been obsessed with dinosaurs and still go to that museum often so I instantly recognized the picture
@geigersnap3603 ай бұрын
first off, great video, I get so excited when I see you have a new upload. second, I’m a therian myself (as in the animal people kind. obviously not the prehistoric kind but that would be pretty cool) and the namedrop jumpscared me lmaooo
@cloudsys_shenanigans22 күн бұрын
Alterhuman here, I was hoping to find someone else in the comments
@andrewcullen76714 ай бұрын
A two-headed snake is a basically like a pair of scissors. There's two of them, but they're always together, so they get treated as one object. But a "pair of scissors" is still singular.
@darcieclements48804 ай бұрын
Two heads, 2 minds, two individuals no exceptions. You need a pair of conjoined twins and you will never make The mistake of thinking a shared body means a single individual ever again.
@Psycorde4 ай бұрын
Look at them lesbians They're scissoring
@_Fizel_3 ай бұрын
@@darcieclements4880 Was about to say, it depends on the 'type' of two headed snake. But the one on her leg is two fully separate heads and necks a bit as well. So three snakes.
@crissagram4 ай бұрын
"Juramaia was in fact, NOT a bullfrog. And he really wasn't a friend either... more of a work acquaintance."
@alisaurus42244 ай бұрын
Jeremiah did, however, let you drink his wine-and he always had some mighty fine wine
@amuu89364 ай бұрын
This is geniuenly the series i am most invested in OUT OF ALL. Nothing, not even the coolest show or movie has me so invested as this. I SCREAMED when i saw new episode. Keep up the great work, cant wait for the next period!!
@AlectoAlrite4 ай бұрын
Literally me too 🎉😂
@sabbathjackal2 ай бұрын
This channel has got such "i had a class project that got out of hand" vibes and im here for it
@thylacoleonkennedy73 ай бұрын
6:14 I have a feeling one of the things you could go into detail on is how termites are just really specialised eusocial cockroaches
@benjaminplotke47164 ай бұрын
Oh, that's why that place in eastern Washington is called ginko petrified forest. As a small child, my parents explained that sometimes wood could, left for thousands of years, turn to stone, and that was call petrified wood. And we are going to visit the ginkgo petrified forest. I was kinda disappointed when we got there and instead of stone trees, it was desert where you could find some petrified rocks.
@lellow194 ай бұрын
Eating my dino nuggies while watching this is the perfect evening
@ReptilianTeaDrinker4 ай бұрын
Heck yeah, dino nuggies!!!
@cyrenacorrell64014 ай бұрын
The Shoebill is officially my favorite Bird. Dinosaur for real!
@andersjjensen4 ай бұрын
I feel that the Shoebill may have lost a few IQ points that would have been essential to, say, a T-Rex :P
@user-mr1dv7rt4v4 ай бұрын
Shoebill Stork one of the best birds fr. Birds are funny :)
@queendragon754 ай бұрын
Amen to that! Looks like a Jurassic park understudy but it's friendly to people who bow to it!!❤
@GlitchGlitchtrap4 ай бұрын
Isnt that what that one youtuber, casual geographic said lmao @queendragon75
@abithefallenhuman9212 ай бұрын
@@queendragon75hell, they even guide photographers to their nests to look at their kids
@synthezorth9199Ай бұрын
Each "not jurassic" was like knife in my heart
@Funguy6663 ай бұрын
OMFG Lindsay, I'm curently binging your videos. And as a biologist i just have to say DAAAAAMN you have really good info. TYSM for your divulging service :))))
@jamiew.27184 ай бұрын
Ginkos are my favourite tree, i have a tattoo of some leaves and I always go on about how cool they are and where they come from at every chance i get! Glad you covered them with such enthusiasm!
@Renastarsong4 ай бұрын
I got way too excited every time Borealopelta showed up onscreen for a moment. It's just SUCH a cool fossil and even more mindblowing in person. There's even a cast of the head you can touch. My second favourite fossil after the Berlin archeaopteryx.
@liammitchell2540Ай бұрын
I came here from your “flirting in the club” short about sharks and I think you and Milo Rossi might be my two fav channels right now.
@noahcavalli12024 ай бұрын
Everytime I hear the Spore music in the background I kick my feet a little, it fits so perfectly. Your videos are amazing btw. I'm always looking forward to your next project!
@CthulhuianBunny4 ай бұрын
Dollocaris looks like the grumpy robot sidekick to an incompetent villain in a cartoon. The type who's jaded and too smart to be playing second fiddle to some buffoon.
@nightmarehound4 ай бұрын
They look like cousins of Kastelan robots from WH40k :D
@robynsriot4 ай бұрын
Thanks for another great video! You never miss FR
@LindsayNikole4 ай бұрын
thank you for watching and for your support!!! :’)
@NoodleswithADHD4 ай бұрын
Botanist here! Thank you for mentioning Ginko!!!
@Fawnfreckle4 ай бұрын
Gingkos are my favourite trees!! There's three of them in my town and they are gorgeous in the fall I can't wait!
@Dusty_Den4 ай бұрын
We love ginkos around here!
@lorenzobuero711516 күн бұрын
As an argentinian, i love that the editor is argentinian too.
@ezekielbreedlove76983 ай бұрын
Nyctosaurus is a thunderbird native to the Arizona New Mexico region that has a sail on its head; This sail was used to catch the wind (just like a sailboat today) which gave it the ability to stay in flight indefinitely!
@TheNextTurn4 ай бұрын
Hey Lindsay... Ever though about combining your love for metal and Zoology? You could go alternative metal with an invertebrate song: "I shit out my face" Or power metal for a titanoboa song: "I'll swallow you whole" Or death metal for a Permian extinction song: "Oh fuck ... everything's Dead!"
@jullianlopez33624 ай бұрын
I think a cool band name would be lidseichthis, Instranocevia, or the euripyerids. Don't u think? 🤔
@jamesleatherwood51254 ай бұрын
Dude! Power metal titanboa just reminds me of "Powersnake" by Brothers of Metal.
@TheNextTurn4 ай бұрын
@@jullianlopez3362 Love the name
@egillskallagrimson58794 ай бұрын
The Reign of the Tyrant Lizard King is top notch inspirational material for Power Metal or In the forest of the Terror Lizards for something more Black Metal.
@jullianlopez33624 ай бұрын
@@TheNextTurn thx bro 😉
@milleniumonion72234 ай бұрын
24:04 Its a Liopleurodon, Charlie! A magical Liopleurodooooon- hes gonna show us the waaaay~ (no clue if its actually the same creature and she just used a different pronunciation or not- but I had to)
@Lilpumpkin5054 ай бұрын
I'll be an adventure charlieee we're going on an adventureeee
@fluffyraichu97064 ай бұрын
god damnit you beat me to it
@damienvalentine50434 ай бұрын
It *is* the same creature! Lindsay's using the correct pronunciation here. Pink and Blue are not trustworthy purveyors of accurate paleontological knowledge! Shocking, I know.
@Metal_Maoist4 ай бұрын
Someone needs to make an edit of all the times she talks about caecilians but without any of the context so it sounds like it's about weird shit Sicillians do
@Molybdinum4 ай бұрын
I second this! I would send it to my Sicilian friend
@evilpandakillabzonattkoccu48793 ай бұрын
2:55 I love that there is a petrified forest in the middle of Washington State that had Ginkgo in it! Tells us a ton about the past!
@bigchungus68534 ай бұрын
very minor correction: I'm pretty sure spinophorosaurus having tail spikes is an inaccuracy, the spikes were found to have come from a nearby stegosaur instead. shunosaurus did have it though
@taiahlee85004 ай бұрын
1. As a girly who JUST got a floral sleeve with Ginkgo leaves incorporated I 10^100 share your enthusiasm for the species. 2. Please Please Please speak about ammolite whenever you revisit the ammonite topic. I've started a collection of gems and fossils because I am a nerd.
@virgilscrivener53354 ай бұрын
I just learned something new, those stones are freaking awesome!!!
@mildlyderanged4 ай бұрын
So in the Jurassic Park novel it is pointed out that most of the dinosaurs are from the Cretaceous era, John Hammond replies that the marketing guys felt Jurassic Park was more catchy.. The novels also describe Dilophosaurus as being it's actual size, not the dinky little.guy from the movies
@blwnodaiy4 ай бұрын
LINDSAY!! I had a rough day dealing with my Nana and Nonno, I’m more than happy to see this. Thanks for doing what your doing, it’s awesome.
@horrormaiden46425 күн бұрын
Guurrrllll, are you a palaeontologist or is this just a mass of knowledge you hold?? Either way, I freaking love it!
@billymcnomates776419 күн бұрын
Excellent. You fit in so much, gives you so much info that you can not help but form questions and then investigate.
@MogamiKyoko134 ай бұрын
Just wanted to share a little insect interaction I had today. I was sitting on a park bench near the river in my town when a bumblebee smacked into the ground in front of me. Like, it sounded like someone had thrown a pebble at the sidewalk. It seemed mostly okay, but was having a hard time turning itself over. So, I took off my flip flop to help it flip over, and instead, it latched onto my shoe and wouldn't let go. I ended up sitting on the bench with the bumblebee resting on my shoe beside me for a good half an hour before I had to leave. Poor little guy did not want me to move it onto a leaf nearby and kept clinging to whatever I tried to push it off with. I didn't have any way to give it water if it was thirsty, so I hope it was just tired and needed a rest. Bumblebees are such chill little dudes; I really hope that bee was okay.
@farkasmactavish4 ай бұрын
Precious little creature. And so was the bee. :)
@voilet-the-non-violet-vulpix4 ай бұрын
I recently found a whole, completely intact dead bumble bee. It’s getting colder in my area so I think the little thing just naturally reached the end of their journey. But I’d almost never seen such a thing before.
@Julian-mr6fv4 ай бұрын
This channel is such a breath of fresh air. The information is always interesting, and well presented, but what makes it stand apart is how you put personality into it. A channel that either teaches me insanely interesting stuff or makes me laugh 100% of the way through is just perfect! Keep it up
@Menkii4 ай бұрын
That Zoo Tycoon music in the background brought back the best memories ever!!!
@EasilyDistractedPlanner4 ай бұрын
I thought I recognised it. Now I wish I could play that game again...
@FuzzyImages4 ай бұрын
There is like always a moment in these videos where I go “How do we know that?” And then I look up something like “how do we know pollination started in the Jurassic” and wind up going down a crazy rabbit hole of just cool shit, and then I get mad knowing there are people out there who don’t believe in evolution with all this research and evidence out there!
@sebastienmailbox4 ай бұрын
Awesome video, as always. I am enthralled by the ginkgo tree and hope you bring up magnolias in your cretaceous video in the future, too. They're such a fun plant. Loving my t-shirt and hat, too. Happy to direct people to your channel when they ask about it. Excited to see what else you make in the future: both content and apparel.
@meg28314 ай бұрын
I think the two headed snake would be considered two snakes. Two heads=two brains=two individuals. 🐍🐍
@danieldejesusfigueredoorop14284 ай бұрын
Agreed (also fish section was neat AF)
@aegresen4 ай бұрын
I disagree because the name itself is singular; two-headed snake indicates a single organism, therefore it cannot be counted as two snakes.
@meg28314 ай бұрын
@aegresen conjoined twins are a thing and they are two individuals. Just because they are called two headed doesn't mean it is only the head that is duplicated. But even if it was just the heads that were duplicated spent mean it is one individual, they still have two brains which is two separate thought processes.
@darcieclements48804 ай бұрын
I strongly agree. We would never consider conjoined humans to be one person if they had two mines we would consider them to be individuals that are unfortunately stuck together. Now if the twinning is in the body part and there's only one head then that's one individual.
@darcieclements48804 ай бұрын
@@aegresenI think what you're really saying is that two-headed snake is a derogatory term and that it should be a one bodied pair of snakes. Or perhaps we should just call them conjoined twin snakes. After all, calling conjoined twin humans a two-headed human is incredibly rude.
@TheMunchkinita25094 ай бұрын
I can wiggle my ears too. When my kids were younger, they would make me do it to show their friends that their mom was a "freak of nature." (Their words, specifically my oldest. Not mine😂) I remember how proud they each were when they figured out they could do it, too.
@thegamestorian334 ай бұрын
The whole “Jurassic Park make people think T-Rex isn’t from the Cretaceous!!!” Has always been so odd to me, In at least the first movie MOST creatures not from the Jurassic are labeled as such. Like it never tries to mislead people all it does is trust people to know.
@emmarichardson9654 ай бұрын
CinemaWins also pointed out that there is dialogue showing the writers (and most of the characters) know the animals are from all different periods. Jurassic Park was the name Hammond chose (which does kind of tie in with his "all sparkle and little substance")
@christiancinnabars14024 ай бұрын
The issue is most people didn't even watch the original movie, and just associate the "Jurassic" in the title with the skeleton T. rex in the logo. And maybe around 95% of people who _did_ watch the movie hyper skippa skippa'd the opening up until the T. rex break-out scene.
@curiousKuro164 ай бұрын
Unfortunately people are silly.
@ReptilianTeaDrinker4 ай бұрын
There are a lot of stupid people in the world... You'd be surprised how easily mislead some people can become, even when something is seemingly obvious and isn't meant to be taken as a reality. It's actually quite scary how easily people believe things that aren't factual or don't have the common sense to just look things up and educate themselves.
@nobodyexceptme77943 ай бұрын
I dont know why im just finding this channel but i love her energy bruh. This is what education needs to be 😂
@AlanDampog4 ай бұрын
your story telling is getting better and better... great video! thanks!
@a.N.....4 ай бұрын
"insects get feed and plants get mates" take me back to college why dont you
@ShaneMitchell-kz3fw4 ай бұрын
That Peterson jumpscare at 8:37 really got me😂
@jbone8774 ай бұрын
It's bilbo
@klinfordjklingy4 ай бұрын
I can wiggle each ear independently from the other, and I can blow air out of my left eye socket. That second one has always concerned me a little.
@mr.presidnt4 ай бұрын
i can do the eye thing with my right eye but not the ear thing
@Yoshoggutha4 ай бұрын
I just tried to blow air out of my eye. 🤦♂️😂
@sylvirgiomanach14914 ай бұрын
I can't quite blow air out of my eyes, but they do whistle when I lie down. 😅
@ShannonShanks-il8ip4 ай бұрын
I can do the eye thing. So annoying when sick. Not the ears
@ShannonShanks-il8ip4 ай бұрын
@@sylvirgiomanach1491that sounds very annoying 😂
@TaylorDekar4 ай бұрын
I absolutely adore your speaking style and sense of humor. Thank you for your hard work!
@imikokodama30544 ай бұрын
Your hard work has definitely paid off. Your video is fantastic as always.
@NotesFromTheVoid4 ай бұрын
Fun fact: there's evidence that gymnosperms also used insect pollination as far back as the triassic before angiosperms made that lifestyle their personality. Temnospondyls were still around though, they wouldn't go extinct till 120 mya with koolasuchus. Shame though, I wish we stil, had them. That artwork of the stegosaurid with the blue mini dinos living between its playes is so good. Chilesaurus shoutout, I love a good old fashioned what-the-fuck, reminds us to stay humble. YI QI MENTION MY FAVOURITE DINOSAUR I LOVE IT THANK YOU FOR MENTIONING IT. The cretaceous lasted for ages the next video is going to be an hour long.
@gatzwolffadventures4 ай бұрын
Literally waiting on this playlist for my Homebrew D&D campaign.
@TaterPotater4 ай бұрын
So curious what your campaign is going to be about
@gatzwolffadventures4 ай бұрын
@TaterPotater if your genuinely asking I'll tell ya friend. It takes place on an island that is in the shape of a ships wheel (Helm). The Island is aptly named Dragon's Helm Island. Anyway there's a corrupt Mayor and secretly he's very powerful and very bad so when the party members attempt to beat him they are whisked away to the Cambrian period and have to make their way back to the Holocene by defeating monsters, solving riddles, completing puzzles, and surviving traps and dungeons. I'm tentatively calling it The Epoch of Dragon's Helm Island. I'm hoping it'll take players from Level 1 to about Level 16 or 17. But that's all I'm saying cause then if someone copies me it's not a plagiarism
@egillskallagrimson58794 ай бұрын
I did design a campaign in the style of Dinotopia's book and Skull island an instead of monster had mesozoic and paleozoic creatures. They are way more interesting than many monsters that are just nonsensical and incoherent to create a living ecosystem.
@gatzwolffadventures4 ай бұрын
@@egillskallagrimson5879 I don't know any of that stuff
@sovietdoge.73694 ай бұрын
@@gatzwolffadventures Heh heh time to do a plagiarism
@leolockhart27934 ай бұрын
Another awesome video!! Startling my friend with the knowledge that all non-monotreme animals are technically therians, and the mental image of an armless snake flopping around on back legs, and the starkly brilliant idea that is getting zooted and watching birds dance, are just a few reasons I will watch every damn video you post.
@watrvapr4 ай бұрын
You’re the reason I ended up getting a baphomet moth tattoo!! I had no idea they existed until I watched your videos. Cool ass bug!!!!!!!!!
@alexperry24064 ай бұрын
It’s our favorite substitute 7th grade Biology teacher, back with another great video 🎉🎉
@henriklarsen81934 ай бұрын
Today I learned that the term "thagomizer", which I only knew as a Far Side joke, has been adopted by the dino community as an actual term for that body part! I am sure the late Thag Simmons is proud of this 😀
@joshjames5824 ай бұрын
He died as he lived. Screaming in agony and covered in blood.
@ashyeet7024 ай бұрын
Wait the body part was named after the far side comic???
@ashyeet7024 ай бұрын
@@joshjames582GARY LARSON DIED????
@henriklarsen81934 ай бұрын
@@ashyeet702 I don't think so? www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-d&q=GARY+LARSON
@wadespencer36234 ай бұрын
@@ashyeet702 No, he's still alive! Thag Simmons, however, very dead.
@indigorivermountain4 ай бұрын
"Just like Tino does! 😁 Tino just ate yesterday. 😊" It's so sweet how much you love your snake 😭
@th3grav3mak3rgaming84 ай бұрын
I love the energy and passion of all your videos. You can really tell how much you love this subject. If student had teacher that loved the subject they teach this much, I think a lot more people would enjoy learning
@arthurarcherman3 ай бұрын
Been watching some of your vids for a minute but the Zoo Tycoon music got me, now I'm subscribed in the name of nostalgia and quality science content. Keep it up!
@MinnowTheFurryOWOАй бұрын
17:36 BRO MY HEAD JUST SHOT UP, I WAS LOOKING DOWN AT SOMETHING AND I HEARD “the Therians” AND WAS LIKE “WAIT WHAT-“ (I’m a Therian btw)
@orthospetjellyfish4 ай бұрын
Was watching this while waiting for my bus and I had to take a moment to admire the trees and plants around me. Evolution is a beautiful thing and it fascinates me to know how all the modern plants surrounding me came to be.
@orthospetjellyfish4 ай бұрын
OH MY GOD MY JAW DROPPED WHEN I HEARD THE ESTIMATED LENGTH OF THE LEEDSICHTHYS
@TheBigLubelsky4 ай бұрын
Lindsay I have been a fan of you forever now...after your collabs with Shark Bytes and Mamadou...DinoFax was literally icing on the cake...THANK YOU for you...never stop
@iclashwitheverything88444 ай бұрын
I will never be over the fact that the end of stegotails actually became commonly called a Thagomizer
@maryeckel96824 ай бұрын
Gary Larson smiles upon us.
@lily-qx9pm3 ай бұрын
i’m thirty seconds into this video and i love it so much. this is exactly the kind of informative entertaining content i have been craving for so long❤❤❤
@Cicada110114 ай бұрын
I need someone like this around me, idk how to describe it but people like this are my favorite!
@azamutu14134 ай бұрын
So a flower garden is the real Jurassic Park.
@alexmuse18714 ай бұрын
You make me feel like a kid again 💜 i used to love learning until i started stifling my AuDHD tendencies and masked for more than two decades 😢
@maryeckel96824 ай бұрын
60s kid here, I feel you. Solidarity!
@joshuawiese84464 ай бұрын
Damn is it cool to hear the term “thagomizer” used completely straight as a (semi) scientific term. Gary Larson what a legend
@JohnTitor-K224 ай бұрын
Your editor is the best there is! (that we know of) Love your content Lindsay :) keep it up!
@arc73754 ай бұрын
I am _so stoked_ for this!
@Wispi-Gh0st4 ай бұрын
I CANT WAITTTTTTTTTTTTTT!!!!! IVE BEEN WAITING FOR THIS!!!
@Tardisntimbits4 ай бұрын
Our Ash tree in the front of our house was a victim to Emerald Ash Borers (big sad, they're doing a number on ash trees across Canada), and the city went on a mission to get them cut down, but they also offered us new trees, from a small selection. I think we're the only one on the block to pick ginkos, but I'm glad we did. They're pretty as fuck!
@maryeckel96824 ай бұрын
They're fantastic street trees! When I worked at a nursery, I always talked them up. 😊
@OleanderStarshine2 ай бұрын
As a therian, I like the fact you don't really hate on us or anything. Yeah, you showed a therian being silly and quadrobics art but I don't feel offended or anything. I was worried for a bit I was going to have to write a different kind of comment but here we are. I enjoyed the video! Keep going!
@welcome2myhappyworld3 ай бұрын
13:34 I need to know if the OOL came back to bite Leedsichthys! Is it likely much shorter than previously thought?!
@MrTommygunz04824 ай бұрын
Stegg was my favorite when I was 5, and it is still at 45. I just love it❤.
@OlyChickenGuy4 ай бұрын
I really appreciate seeing Dinofax featured on this channel. KZbin has only suggested stuff from him like describing video game dinosaurs, so I wasn't sure that he actually knew what he was talking about, or if he was just parroting what video game lore was available. That's super cool to know that I have another creator to keep on my radar, and to know that his knowledge is more than fictional trivia. I'll definitely be giving his channel another chance after this! :3