What Was The First Dinosaur Discovered In The United States?
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- Опубликовано: 6 авг 2024
- The Cretaceous period is the longest period of geologic time in which life has existed on earth. It lasted nearly 80 million years from the end of the relatively short Jurassic period, until the planet was rocked by a few literal earth-shattering events including volcanic activity, chaotic biological warfare, and of course the giant space rock. With this length of time, you can imagine a lot of stuff happened. That stuff really only started to be understood when western scientists colonized the paleontological resources of the burgeoning American colonies throughout the 1700s, which began to see some real results in the mid to late 1800s - hence the Bone Wars.
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• A Dinosaur's Day in Tr...
• Dinosaur's Day in Tren...
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Intro - 00:00-03:38
Discovery - 03:38-15:12
Ornithotarsus immanis - 15:12-16:12
Hadrosaurus tripos - 16:12-17:01
Hadrosaurus minor - 17:01-18:29
Hadrosaurus cavatus - 18:29-19:34
Hadrosaurus agilis - 19:34-20:09
BMNH R1007 - 20:09-20:33
Hadrosaurus breviceps - 20:33-21:20
Hadrosaurus paucidens - 21:20-22:32
Phylogeny - 22:32-25:53
Biology - 25:53-28:44
Size - 28:44-29:17
Ecology - 29:17-33:46
Legacy - 33:46-35:21
Outro - 35:21-36:40
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✅ RESEARCH ✅
Prieto-Márquez, A.; Weishampel, D. B.; Horner, J. R. (2006). "The dinosaur Hadrosaurus foulkii, from the Campanian of the East Coast of North America, with a reevaluation of the genus" (PDF). Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 51 (1): 77-98.
Prieto-Márquez, A. (2011). "Revised diagnoses of Hadrosaurus foulkii Leidy, 1858 (the type genus and species of Hadrosauridae Cope, 1869) and Claosaurus agilis Marsh, 1872 (Dinosauria: Ornithopoda) from the Late Cretaceous of North America" (PDF). Zootaxa. 2765: 61-68. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.2765.1.6. S2CID 83268290. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-02-16.
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✅ Hashtags ✅ #dinosaur #history #science
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Hadrosaurs deserve more spotlight
I live in New Jersey as a matter of fact, there’s a park that I go to close by that they found the first dryptosaurus. And I never been to Haddonfield New Jersey. I heard it’s pretty awesome.
i know what you mean but birds never get enough credit for being the first known dinosaurs literally everywhere to everyone in all of human history
I hope you'll do a video about Paranthodon, the first dinosaur that was ever discovered in Africa, discovered in 1845
We all know hadrosaurids, but not hadrosaurus, the namesake for the family
Abelisaurus:
Same for abeliaurus, pliosaurus(not dinosaur but still)and maybe plesiosaurus (also not dinosaur)
Also ceratopids
Also titanosaurus
Would love to get videos on all the famous group names named after less famous members=
Appalachiosaurus and Eotrachodon mentioned!!! Love your videos EDGE, been a fan for a long time. Cheers from an Alabama Paleontologist!
I love your videos and I'm going to shout you out everything you do for a living and I love your real keep up the good work and hope your works improve each time you make dinosaur videos you probably could be in the Jurassic movie I hope
I think skeleton robot with artificial muscle and skin making it Paleo accurate Dinosaur with basic AI in it would be the most incredible to behold. Sauropods should be the start.
Make it solar and chargeable with batteries in it
As a Horizon: Zero Dawn player, I don't like this idea. Not at all.
that's just a bridge that walks
@@gigak3447 first thing I thought when I read the OP comment was "so you want a Tallneck irl?"
@@gigak3447i am also one of those players, and i love that idea,
A tallneck in real life’d be awesome
Very happy that my states dinosaur got talked about.
Am curious for you to cover other eastern dinosaurs and the like in the future.. if you haven’t already.
Great job, EDGE! You are one of the very few places where I can learn new things about dinosaurs.
2:24 That´s me asking someone for directions
So many mentions of Haddenfield and no Halloween joke? I mean okay they are not in the same state, but still!! XD
super excited to finally see someone talk about NJ dinosaurs, hopefully we find more than Hadro and Dryptosaurus
I am so thankful that Appalachian dinosaurs are getting more attention recently.
I've visited the site in Haddonfield, New Jersey, where the fossil bones of the Hadrosaur were found. I also had a friend take a photo of myself posing in front of the bronze of the Hadrosaur 35:18 whilst "shaking" its "paw." Many thanks, EDGE Science!
These are more interesting character aspects of the hadrosaur family.
I guess that using Hadrosaurus' relatives, Eotrachodon, and Nanyangosaurus, reminds me of reconstructing the appearance and biology of Megalosaurus bucklandii, using inferences based on its relatives; Duriavenator, Wiehenvenator, and Torvosaurus.
I lived in Haddonfield / grew up there
Graduated from HMHS and
Its without hyperbole - that I say -
it's one of , the safest,most beautiful , towns in THE ENTIRE COUNTRY . So so fortunate getting to spend my childhood and young adulthood in that town......🎉❤
As an Applalachian, THANK YOU for saying Appalachia right
I would be very interested in knowing your sources on early knowledge of dinosaur bones by first nation tribes, and especially how they made the connection with birds.
It was more of a generalized passing comment then anything I know of as a direct primary source. My sources are books by Adrienne Mayor. The first nation tribes compared the bones to birds - the big tridactyl prints were thought to be big birds, and many possibly false assumptions infer that some dino bones were incorporated into various myths - ala the Thunderbird.
Amazing, I find it quite intresting how Hadrosaurus Foulkii has been considered valid many times but then is classified as a invalid. When it comes to specimens, its a matter of debate since many are quite fragmantary. So its a matter of debate. Additionally Hadrosaurus Foulkii can't completely be used as a base to compare Dinosaurs since its quite primitive.
What was the shitpost at the beginning😭😭
Is it true edmontosaurus has comb on top of his head or we don,t know.
The only dinosaur found in my home state of Iowa.
This is from New Jersey.
@@EDGEscience There have been some Hadrosaurus fossils found in Iowa.
Correction/ Did a double check it only said possible hadrosaur.
An even partially complete eastern American Dinosaur? The foulk you say.
Ever hear of Appalachiosaurus?
I mean Anchisaurus is known from like 8 if not even more individuals. It probably holds that title for right now, unless you count Titanus fossils from Florida.
There is also Parrosaurus from Missouri, which is known from an entire nesting site.
Yo dinosaurs come in Earth is go wild
Wtf is that cringe intro