What Was Life Like During The Triassic Period? | Part 2
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- Опубликовано: 11 июн 2024
- The Triassic period was the first period of the Mesozoic era and occurred between 251.9 million and 201.3 million years ago.
It followed the great mass extinction at the end of the Permian period and was a time when life outside of the oceans began to diversify.
00:00 Introduction
03:08 Triassic reptiles
05:44 Earliest mammals
06:38 Herrerosaurus
09:09 Thrinaxodon
11:20 Henodus
12:48 Silesaurus
15:00 Rhynchosaur
16:36 Cymbospondylus
18:29 Nothosaurus
20:22 Placerias
21:56 Morganucodon
23:52 Temnospondyls
25:30 Shonisaurus
27:00 Proterosuchus
28:33 Desmatosuchus
Sources:
1. carnegiemnh.org/mesozoic-mont...
2. ucmp.berkeley.edu/taxa/verts/...
3. nhm.org/stories/earths-first-...
4. www.thoughtco.com/nothosaurus...
5. www.nps.gov/articles/000/tria...
6. www.researchgate.net/figure/H...
7. www.scientificamerican.com/ar...
8. ucmp.berkeley.edu/diapsids/he...
Special Credits: Julian Johnson-mortimer, fine art America, Gabriel Ugueto, Masato Hattori, Emily Stepp, Christopher Chavez, Julio Lacerda, Tiko, Nathane Rogers, Marcio Castro, Gabuded, Life on Earth and others.
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Nice, I have been looking forward to part two!
Love the mammals getting a flowering plant in the Triassic. 6:12
I love art like this thumbnail where a creature is standing in a shallow pool of water and a BIGGER creature is jumping up at it from great depth at less than a meter distance 😂
Can you make a part 2 to the “What was Life Like During The Permian Period”? Awesome video as always!
Just ask! I always said that I need your (my audience’s) ideas. Give me a list of your favorite Permian animals and I will cover that
@@CreatorOnline2.0 Heres my list of the Permian animals i think you should cover: Gordodon, Sphenacodon, Pelycosaur, Helicoprion, Cynodont, Coelurosauravus and Ophiacodon.
@@PolarBearFan24 I will add that to my list. Probably will start at the end of the month. Thank you :)
@@CreatorOnline2.0 Thats great to hear!
@@PolarBearFan24 hey dear sub! Hope you are doing well. Currently, I have a 2-3 video ideas in a row. But, as I promised, I will do the video about the Permian period. As soon as I finish the video, I will comment you here. Have a nice day/night depending on your time zone. 👍🏼
Thank you for listing sizes in meters and feet. Excellent video.
Thanks for watching!
Fun Fact: Did you know in Triassic that 95% of land animals are Lytosaurus, a group of Therapsids and Lytosaurus dies in the Late Triassic when Jurrasic Period is now starting to rise.
Because of this, The Age of Therapsids or Synapsids end during the late Triassic, not the end of Permean Period.
I remember those days, times were tough I'll tell ya'.
Fun Fact: Did you know that the Age of Therapsids or Synapsids end in the Late Triassic when the Jurrasic Period is now starting.
Would be nice of you to add the names of the artists into the video. As a courtesy but also because I would have loved to look up some of the amazing artwork myself.
Very good art work.
Yay more gogo
Great, I appreciate that.
If I know anything about mammals it's there's going to be one that defies all that!
Therapsids and mammals, both from Synapsida, were not reptiles or reptile-like.
Reptiles, from Sauropsida, were not mammal-like.
The synapsids and sauropsids both diverged from the first amniotes, with synapsids being the ancestors of mammals, and sauropsids the ancestors of all reptiles, including lizards, snakes, crocodiles, pterosaurs, ichthyosaurs, dinosaurs and finally, birds.
But mammals were never reptiles.
Synapsids were not reptiles.
Or another branch of reptiles, because the other branch is the Saurus(you knew them).
@@ArmandoEnfectana-bp6jo
The farther you go back in time the more closely the taxa are. We had a common tetrapod ancestor. The lineage split into our line and the reptiles’ line.
@@_robustus_, Wrong, Synapsids and Saurus(Reptiles like Crocs,Dinos, Turtles and Birds) are same group, like If mammals have Marsupials and Placentals, The Reptile class has Synapsids and Saurus, Synapsids are more advanced than Saurus, that is why Synapsids rule start from the end of Carboniferous Period till the End of Triassic, After Triassic and when Jurrasic was now starting to appear, the Saurus was now dominating until the end of Crecatios Period when the space nuke land in Mexico.
Both Group share many traits but Synapsids are the only known group to make a new class of animals, the mammals.
@@_robustus_, Comedic and useless question, Is Godzilla a lizard?
@@ArmandoEnfectana-bp6joyes
Someone's already pointed out the Ceolophysis issue right?
There were no DVD 📀 Players 😢
Can you make a video to introduce the mamal in Paleogene,they are so mysterious
I have a video: what was life like during the paleogene period.
The giant salamanders of Japan and China look very much like relict temnospondyls
Im surprised gliding could be achieved with the wing membranes on the hind limbs and further weighted toward the back by a long tail. Obviously it COULD glide but it seems lopsided to me...And thats why Im not working in the aeronautics industry.
In the section on Silesaurus, you came nowhere near pronouncing the name of the discoverer correctly. Jerzy Dzik, is NOT pronounced like 'Jersey Sick", but 'Yezhy Jeek'. The weird orthography rules of English do not apply to other languages.
There is no reason why an English speaker would ever think ‘Jerzy Dzik’ would be pronounced ‘Yezhy Jeek’ Lol. Sorry. Like wtf??
It never fails to disgust me how little native-English speakers care to pronounce foreign names correctly. You absolutely butchered Jerzy Dzik's name. Jerzy is not pronounced the same as jersey, firstly the J is pronounced Y, and RZ is a tricky pronunciation not present in English, but you can get close to it with the French G that is in courgette and aubergine. DZ is pronounced like the J in jam (or jersey). Yuzhee Jeek is a much closer pronunciation than your dreadful attempt.
Dinosaurs were lucky enough to not see human waste, plastics and fishing nets.
I wanted to joke, but I think it would be inappropriate considering the fact that you are right!
@@CreatorOnline2.0 Go on, I won't mind.
@@Me-ws5zt Meanwhile Spinosaurus going fishing with its gang 99 million years ago :)
I agree from what we now see when seals, turtles etc being tangled in discarded monofilament lines with hooks, and nets etc.
@@Me-ws5zt
...and we are blessed fortunate to never have cause to encounter these creatures. So, win-win.
😁👍🏻
These are great! Keep em coming
Thanks you! The next is going to be 1-hour-long video about the Cretaceous period.