Lyme Regis Fossil Festival
Lyme Regis Fossil Festival
  • Видео 73
  • Просмотров 90 285

Видео

Lyme Regis Fossil Festival 2023 - Meet Mary Anning & Charles Darwin
Просмотров 106Год назад
Lyme Regis Fossil Festival 2023 - Meet Mary Anning & Charles Darwin
Lyme Regis Fossil Festival 2023 - Meet Mary Anning
Просмотров 407Год назад
Lyme Regis Fossil Festival 2023 - Meet Mary Anning
Lyme Regis Fossil Festival 2023 - Author Booking Signing
Просмотров 68Год назад
Lyme Regis Fossil Festival 2023 - Author Booking Signing
Lyme Regis Fossil Festival 2023 - Meet Partners & Exhibitors
Просмотров 189Год назад
Lyme Regis Fossil Festival 2023 - Meet Partners & Exhibitors
Lyme Regis Fossil Festival 2023 - A Wonderful Adventure - The Sands of Time
Просмотров 61Год назад
Lyme Regis Fossil Festival 2023 - A Wonderful Adventure - The Sands of Time
Make Space/Fossil Festival Stop Motion Animation 2022
Просмотров 1352 года назад
For the very first time the Lyme Regis Fossil Festival hosted an animation workshop as part of the activities for 2022 These films were made by young people aged 8-11 years and produced over one weekend in the run up to the 2022 Annual Fossil Festival. Students produced their own storyboards from which two are selected to make into films. They then work in teams to create the art work, film and...
How do squishy animals turn into fossils? Using decay experiments to understand fossilisation
Просмотров 1732 года назад
With Thomas Clements - Fossils capture our imagination - ancient creatures like the tentacled ammonites that grew to the size of a car, two-story tall giant sloths that roamed South America or the giant meat eating dinosaurs that fuel nightmares and Hollywood blockbusters. We know so much about these wondrous animals and the environments they inhabited from the smallest scraps of information: t...
What might a World Class fossil exhibit look like for West Dorset - Part 2
Просмотров 1533 года назад
Part 2 - West Dorset is one of the most famous fossil localities in the world and yet after 20 years and some £37 million spent on capital projects associated in some shape or form with the designation, it is now last on the list. So this talk is a simple demonstration of how to select fossils from the West Dorset fossil code of conduct recording scheme, by thinking about what stories we want t...
What might a World Class fossil exhibit look like for West Dorset - PART 1
Просмотров 1413 года назад
PART 1 - West Dorset is one of the most famous fossil localities in the world and yet after 20 years and some £37 million spent on capital projects associated in some shape or form with the designation, it is now last on the list. So this talk is a simple demonstration of how to select fossils from the West Dorset fossil code of conduct recording scheme, by thinking about what stories we want t...
Would You Like a Career in Palaeontology or the Earth Sciences?
Просмотров 1713 года назад
Recorded live at the 2021 Lyme Regis Fossil and Earth Science Festival. Are you thinking about the place that palaeontology and earth science might have in your future? But are you also wondering 'how on earth do I become a palaeontologist or Earth Scientist?!' Join Elspeth Wallace from the Palaeontological Association and Irish Centre for Research in Applied Geosciences to learn more about pat...
More Than Dinosaur Food: What plant fossils can tell us...Dr Susie Lydon (University of Nottingham)
Просмотров 3,4 тыс.3 года назад
Palaeobotany - the study of plants through the fossil record - can tell us how the plants around us today have evolved, but can also help us to answer bigger questions about our planet’s history through deep time. We will look at how palaeobotanists study fossil plants, and also how plants are under-represented when palaeontology gets communicated to wider audiences.
Spirals in Time: What Can Ammonites Teach Us About Life in Ancient Oceans?’ with James Witts
Просмотров 29 тыс.3 года назад
Recorded Live at the 2021 Lyme Regis Fossil and Earth Science Festival. Ammonoid cephalopod molluscs (more commonly known as ‘ammonites’) are one of the most recognisable groups of fossils. Their distinctive spiral-shaped shells can be found in huge numbers in sedimentary rocks all over the world, including in the cliffs of the Jurassic Coast around Lyme Regis. But what do we really know about ...
How to Draw Dinosaurs - a workshop with palaeoartist James Mckay
Просмотров 1993 года назад
Recorded Live at the 2021 Lyme Regis Fossil and Earth Science Festival. James Mckay is an artist who works with scientists to reconstruct prehistoric animals and their environments. In this live workshop James will show you how to create a brilliant drawing of a dinosaur. You can sit back and watch, or you can join in and draw your own dinosaur at the same time. This workshop will be fun for an...
Dinosaurs: New Visions of a Lost World - A Live talk with Q&As - Michael J. Benton
Просмотров 4,5 тыс.3 года назад
Dinosaurs: New Visions of a Lost World - A Live talk with Q&As - Michael J. Benton
The Future of the Jurassic Coast Collection - with Chris Reedman
Просмотров 983 года назад
The Future of the Jurassic Coast Collection - with Chris Reedman
The Geological Structural Evolution of the Jurassic Coast World Heritage Site - Vincent Sheppard
Просмотров 10 тыс.3 года назад
The Geological Structural Evolution of the Jurassic Coast World Heritage Site - Vincent Sheppard
Chasing Earthquakes: From the Jurassic Coast to all around the World
Просмотров 813 года назад
Chasing Earthquakes: From the Jurassic Coast to all around the World
Departures - Time to Fly against Extinction
Просмотров 873 года назад
Departures - Time to Fly against Extinction
A Comparative look at East and West Dorset with Steve Etches and Richard Edmonds
Просмотров 9833 года назад
A Comparative look at East and West Dorset with Steve Etches and Richard Edmonds
Virtual Geological Field Trip to Burton Bradstock with Vincent Sheppard
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.3 года назад
Virtual Geological Field Trip to Burton Bradstock with Vincent Sheppard
Inferior Oolite with captions
Просмотров 363 года назад
Inferior Oolite with captions
York Fossil Walks - from the Yorkshire Fossil Festival
Просмотров 763 года назад
York Fossil Walks - from the Yorkshire Fossil Festival
Lyme Bay The Road to Recovery - with Intro by Adam Rees
Просмотров 213 года назад
Lyme Bay The Road to Recovery - with Intro by Adam Rees
Scelidosaurus - Charmouth's Famous Dinosaur - with Paul Barrett - Natural History Museum
Просмотров 4223 года назад
Scelidosaurus - Charmouth's Famous Dinosaur - with Paul Barrett - Natural History Museum
A Palaeontologist's Journey Through Time
Просмотров 843 года назад
A Palaeontologist's Journey Through Time
Sparkling Hydrogen Sulphide! - Jed Atkinson
Просмотров 1863 года назад
Sparkling Hydrogen Sulphide! - Jed Atkinson
Sedimentary layers!
Просмотров 223 года назад
Sedimentary layers!
Scelidosaurus Song with captions
Просмотров 303 года назад
Scelidosaurus Song with captions

Комментарии

  • @orlandoarmaswalker1190
    @orlandoarmaswalker1190 8 дней назад

    I think the Somalian plate will stop moving once the Indian Ocean and Indian plate complete the collision with the Eurasian plate.

  • @nincumpoop9747
    @nincumpoop9747 16 дней назад

    The shutdown/lockdown: Never before in modern history have so many intelligent ppl made such a terrible decision collectively. Never again.

  • @DAVIDPETERS12C
    @DAVIDPETERS12C 28 дней назад

    @41:07 Benton would love for someone to find nonvolant pterosaur ancestors. His 1999 paper indicated Scleromochlus was that ancestor. Problem is... Scleromochlus has tiny hands, no fifth toe and nests with basal bipedal crocodylomorphs. A year later, a 2000 paper used three analyses to show that Cosesaurus, Longisquama, Sharovipteryx and Langobardisaurus were nonvolant pterosaur ancestors. Several years later, Benton teamed with his student, David Hone, to test whether or not these four taxa were indeed pterosaur ancestors in a two-part paper (no one else has ever done this before or since and they did not look at any specimens). In part two these four taxa and citations to that 2000 paper were omitted from the study. As you can see from this video, Benton went back to square one, saying we don't have those ancestors. Google: "timeline of pterosaur origin studies" for details.

  • @artursarmento315
    @artursarmento315 Месяц назад

    Very nice!!

  • @gustavoscalabrin5028
    @gustavoscalabrin5028 Месяц назад

    Did they have nautilus tentacles, or did they were more squid-like?

  • @corrineterry6676
    @corrineterry6676 2 месяца назад

    Well done! I enjoyed your presentation very much!

  • @johnnash7769
    @johnnash7769 3 месяца назад

    This is a compelling and fascinating presentation. Here, on the Isle of Wight, last December, we had a massive reactivation of movement at The Landslip, Bonchurch. Much-loved features that were formed in 1810-18 have been wiped-out or re-arranged . All Upper Cretaceous and no doubt a more straightforward sliding mechanism than at Great Bindon. Thanks for your brilliant video.

  • @whitby910
    @whitby910 3 месяца назад

    Superb, thank you.

  • @peterganunis9665
    @peterganunis9665 3 месяца назад

    Awesome insights!

  • @DreadEnder
    @DreadEnder 4 месяца назад

    Amazing! I have chosen to study palaeontology at university and I’m lucky to be near Bristol university. I hope to study under you in the not too distant future.

  • @Leptospirosi
    @Leptospirosi 4 месяца назад

    Interestingly, the Nautiloids only live where Seals do not. Another curious factor is that Nautili are by far, the longest living of all all the molluscs, up to several decades while squids and Cuttlefishes don't live more then a couple of years.

  • @MargretChipasha
    @MargretChipasha 5 месяцев назад

    I have never seen a starfish in my life I wish I could go to the aquarium 😊😊😊

  • @MargretChipasha
    @MargretChipasha 5 месяцев назад

    Fascinating creatures 🦐🐠🐡

  • @amyhurn1892
    @amyhurn1892 5 месяцев назад

    Excellent speaker, really informative.

  • @stevemelton966
    @stevemelton966 5 месяцев назад

    presented very well. I enjoyed it.

  • @gabriellarossi
    @gabriellarossi 6 месяцев назад

    Great presentation!

  • @gabriellarossi
    @gabriellarossi 6 месяцев назад

    Great Presentation!

  • @rheiagreenland4714
    @rheiagreenland4714 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this. Given how critical continental rifting is to understanding plate tectonics, I think it's a shame how poorly explained a topic it is for the general public.

  • @ChristySpencer-eq4cn
    @ChristySpencer-eq4cn 8 месяцев назад

    Wow I have a fossil of it I had no clue that a animal lived inside it 😮😮😮😮😮

  • @TheBonsaiGarden
    @TheBonsaiGarden 9 месяцев назад

    Just reading this great book now 👍

  • @yfrontsguy
    @yfrontsguy 9 месяцев назад

    Plant blindess is a real societal problem that hinders greatly our survival in the face of climate change. It is symptom of the disease that is causing anthropic global warming.

  • @HenryPease-dz6qu
    @HenryPease-dz6qu 10 месяцев назад

    @laurenmount8817 Dont nick my pencil case online pls

  • @moel59
    @moel59 10 месяцев назад

    God bless

  • @edbarskite2730
    @edbarskite2730 11 месяцев назад

    DUDE,, ALL THE DINOSAURS GOT BURIED IN NOAH'S FLOOD, 7500 YRS AGO

    • @garethdavies4487
      @garethdavies4487 6 месяцев назад

      “Dude,” before making comments on science, learn some science, and your religious opinion is not science….

    • @edbarskite2730
      @edbarskite2730 6 месяцев назад

      @@garethdavies4487 BUT ITS THE TRUTH,,

    • @malcolmberwick9190
      @malcolmberwick9190 4 месяца назад

      What an obvious troll , you could at least have said god did'nt create dinosuars as there not in the bible .

    • @edbarskite2730
      @edbarskite2730 4 месяца назад

      @@malcolmberwick9190 THERE NOT IN THE BIBLE BECAUSE THE FALLEN ANGLES CREATED THE NASTY MEAT EATERS,, THERE WAS EVIL NASTY THINGS GOING ON ALL OVER, WHY GOD FLOODED THE EARTH TO RID OF IT,,

    • @malcolmberwick9190
      @malcolmberwick9190 4 месяца назад

      Hey Troll , You have facts to prove this or is this just ill informed supposition@@edbarskite2730

  • @Karl-md6cx
    @Karl-md6cx 11 месяцев назад

    Best comprehensive introduction to ammonites on RUclips. Wonderfully well-prepared. Thank you!

  • @brandonsheffield9873
    @brandonsheffield9873 11 месяцев назад

    How do Jelly fish turn into fossils? There have been fish found whole and fossilized. Same with bugs.

  • @johnharris7353
    @johnharris7353 11 месяцев назад

    Fascinating... This is why I luv RUclips

  • @Joe-lb8qn
    @Joe-lb8qn 11 месяцев назад

    Fantastic. Makes me want to go back to uni again. ETA just ordered the book.

  • @gthomashart3926
    @gthomashart3926 Год назад

    Thank you very much for the new organizational methods included too - I was particularly struck by the term eophytes which is helping us better comprehend the original evolution of plants!! 😃

  • @paulthew2
    @paulthew2 Год назад

    Great video

  • @AlexBetiina-jn2bm
    @AlexBetiina-jn2bm Год назад

    Waiting to see the new ocean

  • @paulthew2
    @paulthew2 Год назад

    What a fantastic presentation - I learnt some very interesting different ways to look at plants in this one video. Many thanks.

  • @flycraft2273
    @flycraft2273 Год назад

    Hello, what is the name of the compressor on time 1:30? Thank you.

  • @Mike-xi4zt
    @Mike-xi4zt Год назад

    The theory about ammonites went extinct because they lived close to the surface is interesting but I know for a fact there are tons of other forms of sea life that lived on the floor of the ocean that are fossilized in Missouri limestone that went extinct. So I don't think your, live near the surface Extinction theory, is totally correct and is not valid. Plus the theory of one asteroid digging up enough sulfur from One impact to acidize the whole ocean of the whole Earth seems a little far-fetched. It is mathematically unlikely. If the sulfur was there in the ocean in the first place it would have already sulfurized and acidized the ocean before the meteorite ever hit anything.

    • @garydunken7934
      @garydunken7934 11 месяцев назад

      That theory is probably right. And the Nautiloids that normally roam the sea floor survived with energy source provided by Earth's thermal vents that fed some life, even when photosynthesis shut down with years of dust clouds. It's fascinating field of science.

    • @Mike-xi4zt
      @Mike-xi4zt 11 месяцев назад

      @@garydunken7934 let me repeat there are tons of sea life that are fossilized that you can look at, with your own eyes, that died and went extinct. And they did not go extinct because they lived near the surface. In fact they lived on the bottom of the ocean and they still went extinct. So you make up a totally new theory that ammonite and Nautilus swam down to the limited number of volcanic vents underwater and change their whole lifestyle of living to a lifestyle of living by a volcanic vent. .... Ridiculous. Why do you think photosynthesis shut down? You're making up another fairy tail.

  • @sergemeijerink258
    @sergemeijerink258 Год назад

    Just found two of them in one stone here in Kenya, Kwale County. Just crazy to imagine all that time having gone past, and then I get the chance to break a rock and boom, there they are... gonna find a nice spot for them at home...

  • @johanwilmout4631
    @johanwilmout4631 Год назад

    Very good talk. Don't know why I haven't come across this before.

  • @rebellion795
    @rebellion795 Год назад

    Since when is it keff??? Do we dmsay kef-alization or sef-alization? Then i guess if you go back in the etymology to the greek Islands we recover the hard k. Bit you go against the grain of good sound sir

  • @laurenmount8817
    @laurenmount8817 Год назад

    That's my science tacher

  • @nayelibalderas3660
    @nayelibalderas3660 Год назад

    This video is incredibly helpful, seriously.

  • @pchabanowich
    @pchabanowich Год назад

    Thank you for this clear, informative production. It is such a massive geological process to actually witness that I stare in awe. Best of fortunes your way to the PHD.💐

  • @outdoorsy01
    @outdoorsy01 Год назад

    Brilliantly presented. Very well done and I look forward to more

  • @ramasesuk
    @ramasesuk Год назад

    Why does jon's name keep coming up?

  • @iseriver3982
    @iseriver3982 Год назад

    Marshwood Vale, not a marsh or wood in sight.

  • @Soapartisan875
    @Soapartisan875 Год назад

    Just incredible information blows my mind these fossils are millions of years old ..

  • @educationvideoadventure9282
    @educationvideoadventure9282 Год назад

    Why not use the same scanning technology recently used in central America to analyze Mayan and other pre-Columbian civilization through jungle growth?

  • @thomasjones1496
    @thomasjones1496 Год назад

    How is it possible that an animal 5 times the size of anything on this planet now walked then unless Gravity has changed. Thunderboltsproject

    • @satanspawn66
      @satanspawn66 Год назад

      The thunderbolts project is pseudoscience bullcrap.

    • @feathered3167
      @feathered3167 Год назад

      It's easier for something with hollow bones to get bigger than for a mammal to do so, like with the Eiffel tower, you just need a rigid hollow structure that can be designed well enough to not buckle. Dinosaurs have exactly that; hollow bones as in birds today, which allows an animal with the same mass to be many times stronger, since they can have more muscle with less massive but still perfectly strong bones. Birds of prey like bald eagles can carry off fish as big as them because their skeleton weighs next to nothing compared to what it would need to carry the increased weight of non hollow bones. Elephant birds and other massive flightless birds don't seem to have bones as wide and sturdy as mammals of similar mass. Mammals tend to have much heavier looking skeletons at the scale of emus and up, and because the current big herbivores are descended from burrowing creatures while the dinosaurs had been adapting for efficiency and agility for the solid last 200 million years most often as predators, even the sauropods and ceratopsians are descended from small predators in the Permian and early Jurassic.

  • @releasingendorphins232
    @releasingendorphins232 Год назад

    Texas is in a major drought right now and people are gathering amonites like crazy. I enjoyed your information. Thank you.

  • @mateuszg3049
    @mateuszg3049 Год назад

    Did the Concavenator have feathers ?

  • @jeremyl862
    @jeremyl862 Год назад

    Fantastic presentation.

  • @shreyakumari5160
    @shreyakumari5160 2 года назад

    Sir is there mental plume beneath the African rift which is bracking and rifting continental crust. Is it formation of new divergent boundary in lithosphere backed by mental plume. And what is source of magma on divergent boundary. Is it direct from d layer and do we get plume head there also or just a vent. Core to asthenosphere. Like we have source of magma for mental plume from d layer results in hotspot .