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Tate Geological Museum
Добавлен 26 авг 2020
Russell Hawley presents "Paint Like a Caveman" for the 2024 Casper College Humanities Festival
Russell Hawley, Tate Geological Museum Education Specialist and renowned paleo artist, presented “Paint Like a Caveman: The Techniques and Science Behind Ice Age Artwork” on Tuesday, February 20th, 2024 as part of the Casper College Humanities Festival. Woolly mammoths and cave bears have been extinct for millennia, but there are several lines of evidence that allow artists to depict these creatures with a surprising degree of accuracy. Discoveries of fossil skeletons, some of them nearly complete, permit reconstruction of the animal using the principles of comparative anatomy, while evidence from frozen carcasses and cave paintings allow paleo artists to construct a vivid and detailed pi...
Просмотров: 76
Видео
Clelandina exhibit featured in Tate Mini presentation
Просмотров 15411 месяцев назад
The Tate Geological Museum's Clelandina exhibit is highlighted in this Tate Mini presentation. Featuring Education Specialist Russell Hawley, this video was created and narrated by museum work-study student Shaedon K.
Pterosaur exhibit featured in Tate Mini presentation
Просмотров 14611 месяцев назад
The Tate Geological Museum's Pterosaur exhibit is highlighted in this Tate Mini presentation. Featuring Education Specialist Russell Hawley, this video was created and narrated by museum work-study student Shaedon K.
Mammoth exhibit featured in Tate Mini presentation
Просмотров 6911 месяцев назад
The Tate Geological Museum's Mammoth exhibit is highlighted in this Tate Mini presentation. Featuring Education Specialist Russell Hawley, this video was created and narrated by museum work-study student Shaedon K.
Pachycephalosaurus exhibit featured in Tate Mini presentation
Просмотров 7111 месяцев назад
The Tate Geological Museum's Pachycephalosaurus exhibit is highlighted in this Tate Mini presentation. Featuring Education Specialist Russell Hawley, this video was created and narrated by museum work-study student Shaedon K.
Torosaurus exhibit featured in Tate Mini presentation
Просмотров 11811 месяцев назад
The Tate Geological Museum's Torosaurus exhibit is highlighted in this Tate Mini presentation. Featuring Education Specialist Russell Hawley, this video was created and narrated by museum work-study student Shaedon K.
Basilosaurus exhibit featured in Tate Mini presentation
Просмотров 8511 месяцев назад
The Tate Geological Museum's Basilosaurus exhibit is highlighted in this Tate Mini presentation. Featuring Education Specialist Russell Hawley, this video was created and narrated by museum work-study student Shaedon K.
Russell Hawley presents Give Me Some Skin, Reconstructing Dinosaur Color and Texture
Просмотров 265Год назад
Tate Geological Museum's Education Specialist, Russell Hawley, presents Give Me Some Skin, Reconstructing Dinosaur Color and Texture
Tate Geological Museum guest lecturer Dr. Kent Sundell
Просмотров 304Год назад
The Tate Geological Museum hosted Dr. Kent Sundell, Caper College Geology professor, on April 25, 2023, to discuss the recently discovered Wyoming impact crater field. Sundell was part of a team of U.S. and German geoscientists who discovered the craters in exposed sedimentary layers from the Permian period, which dates back to around 280 million years ago.
Joseph Peterson lecture 2 27 2023
Просмотров 233Год назад
The Tate Geological Museum hosted Dr. Joseph Peterson as he presented a lecture titled “Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry: A Re-Evaluation of a Dinosaur Death Pit.” The talk will take place on Tuesday, February 27, at 7 p.m. both in person at the museum and also live on our Facebook page. “The Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry is home to one of the densest concentrations of Jurassic carnivorous din...
Dr Anton Wroblewski Anemone Buttprints 3:7:23
Просмотров 198Год назад
Dr. Anton Wroblewski joins the Tate Geological Museum to present "Anemone Buttprints, Worm Burrows, and Dinosaur Tracks: How Trace Fossils Reveal Lost Worlds and Record Changes to Wyoming's Ancient Coastlines." Dr. Wroblewski earned his PhD in Geology at the University of Wyoming in 2002. He then got married and moved to Chicago, where he taught undergraduate geology at Northeastern Illinois Un...
Tate Lecture Series David Peterman 28 Apr 2022
Просмотров 5162 года назад
David Peterman of University of Utah talks about his experiments using ammonite robots and 3d printed models to study how living ammonite might have moved in the oceans.
The Great Wyoming Jackalope
Просмотров 9592 года назад
Did you know that Jackalopes are not only native to Wyoming, but have an extensive fossil record?
Tate Talk- How Strong were Sauropod Tails?
Просмотров 3923 года назад
Tate Talk- How Strong were Sauropod Tails?
Anthony Maltese Annual Tate Conference
Просмотров 1893 года назад
Anthony Maltese Annual Tate Conference
Elliott Armour Smith Annual Tate Conference
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.3 года назад
Elliott Armour Smith Annual Tate Conference
Stephan Spiekman Annual Tate Conference
Просмотров 7783 года назад
Stephan Spiekman Annual Tate Conference
Valentin Fischer- Annual Tate Conference
Просмотров 3633 года назад
Valentin Fischer- Annual Tate Conference
Hii… how much does those both piece worth?
Thank you!! Just what I was looking for
i really enjoyed the insights you presented in this video, it’s always great to learn more about these fascinating creatures. that said, i've always wondered if the tails of sauropods were truly as versatile as some scientists suggest. i mean, could they really use them for defense, or is that just speculation? seems like there's still a lot we don't know about their behavior. what do you think?
Awww yes, part 3 for girls night. Thanks Russell!
Me and my bestie (32 & 42) are spending girl's night being obsessed with this while looking at my shells 😅 thanks for teaching us Russell!
This is the definition of 'How shells are made' video
Ima have to make a point to visit this museum
How do they get these different ratios?
wonderful
Have a bro from a land locked state talking about this.
"One of these things is NOT a dinosaur." Thats a line our biology teachers really start to use once they are past the age of 40 and talk about genetics, while talking about Jurassic Park as a reference... Its a nice video that sadly doesnt get much attention...
Great explanation
Thank you for the precious information. If you have time to look, I put 3 pictures of a tooth fossil in a video, on my channel, and some observations in the description. What do you think? It is realy a fossile tooth, of some kind of ancient animal?
Great Video. 🖖🏼
randomly thought about how seashells are formed today. very happy that I found these videos :3
I was sold a part of a jaw which I was told was a dinosaur teeth but today I brought it up to my paleontologist professor, and she informed me that it was intact a Oreodonts. Kinda disappointing it was not a dinosaur but still cool to know and this video was very informative.
These extinct mammals are cool in their own right. They are more like us than any reptiles could be. I doubt any reptile can love, that's a mammal thing.
great video
Is it the dna that determines the variables?
I wondered how it was made, I did browse around but so far, the explanations here are the easiest to understand 👍
Phenomenal finds! Phantastic science!🥼😆
Fantastic - and with a joke at the end. I love it!
Serious question…What about the giants in various culture’s legend all over the earth?
"Herbie doesn't like to make toys!" Good garsh. Well, aside from that kid's problems, better moderation was needed - grab more questions from the chat rather than letting any one audience member dominate the Q & A.
This is so fascinating
I really appreciate this video. I'm working on a fantasy story that involves an intelligent group of small theropods and been trying to find out what I can about their physiology. One was the tail. What they would do with them when sitting, in a crowd, etc. Knowing how to check for flexibility is such a huge lifesaver!
i love how you evaluate every detail
cool video thank you, id love an accurate model like these!!
wow amazingly explained video, super informative and interesting thank you cant wait to watch the next part :)))
I love temnospondyl
Very cool!
Couldn't find a video of how conch's shells get formed, got something much better. thank you
The man, the myth, the legend is back.
Great informative video. Found of these on my jobsites in colorado
Interesting. I didn't know that ammonites had a siphuncle. I learned something today - thanks!
I knew they were real, I just didn't realize there was such a rich fossil record describing their evolution.
Yes we need more of these Russel. Anatomy and morphological aspects is great to learn.
Super. Bardzo ciekawy wykład.
👏🤓😂 "Way too much fun" here! Thanks!
Russell is the geological science's equivalent to film-making's Quentin Tarantino, albeit unconfirmed at this point. #rockstarcache
I’m thinking about doing a drawing of a herd of dinosaurs walking along the coast of the Sundance Sea. Any you can suggest that would have been around at the time?
We aren't too sure what was around at this time because so far no dinosaur bones have at the right time and place. What we do know is that due to the size and general trend of the time period it's probably something that would resemble Torvosaurus, which started to show up near the end of the Sundance's relvance.
@@STCK78 What about sauropods? Also, do you have an approximation of the age when the Sundance Sea disappeared? I know the formation lasted until 157 mya, but since the sea lasted into the late Jurassic, is it possible it lasted a little longer?
Thanks 👍
1 kodi = _____
a-kat ba-nir = about root bani (Ar) = pu-ak pen-sil = mirsam. (Ar) pen = qalam. (Ar)
Page 193 PETRIFACTION---A process in which the original substance of a fossil is replaced by mineral matter.
"I found my frill on Blueberry Hill" - Hilarious.
Those teeth look sharp. Were they carnivores?
Your Baptanodon eye animation is inaccurate. You put the whole eye into the space that would just be the aperture of the iris. Thanks for a fun tour of the Sundance Sea.
That is just the iris. I intentionally left out any whites of the sclera to emphasize the visible part. It just moves around to give some character
Wait, wait. Go back to abalone and explain more. You went too fast!
Good 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍
Thanks for the video, Russel. I was looking into BigFin Squids and got notice of the existance of Belemnides. Didn't find much info on them until I saw your channel. Very interesting that they didn't had suction cups(?) on their tentacles, but rather two hooks.
So how much has the N American plate rotated counter clockwise since these finds perished?