The biggest takeaway I’ve gotten from this series thus far is the fact that most, if not all, mammals were friend-shaped at some point in their evolution
if you want to be terrified, i highly suggest seeing a fossil of a paraceratherium in person. pictures just don’t do it justice, those things were HUUUGE
There used to be a full-sized, full-body reconstruction of one in Elephant Hall in the University of Nebraska-Lincoln natural history museum. It towered over the mounts of a group of African elephants.
@@peabrain6872 “i talked to aaaalll the other megafauna… and they said i was yuuuuge, way yuger than any other megafauna… sleepy joes megafauna wish they could be like me”
Elephants already look like they are gonna break under their massive size, so the fact that there was a mammal this big and capable for walk is beyond me.
And modern elephants are also dwarfed by some of their extinct cousins. It's astounding that Palaeoloxodon, the giant extinct elephant mentioned, probably weighed the same as 3 full-grown African elephants. Taller & far heavier than a T-Rex.
@@jimsmith3715 Sauropods had hollow, air-filled bones, they were in a different league. They could have even grown about 20% larger than Argentinosaurus but there wasn't enough food to sustain such body mass. But, as I said, it's really impressive for an animal with non-hollow bones to reach the size of a small sauropod.
I love how the few extinct rhinos that had 2 horns side by side on their nose still had smaller horns than arsinoitherium, one of my favorites mammels from the eocene
You will probably never read this but i have watched every single one of your videos and I love all of them. Your style of presentation, the structure, the amount of details and, above all, your soothing voice made you my favourite channel on all of RUclips. I hope you keep going forever and please don’t change your style. It is perfection!
First time being relatively early with a new video. Been subbed for over a year and haven’t seen a single bad video from you. Hope you keep at it and thanks so much for all the work you’ve put out. 👍
I'm sure many of you myself included where introduced to Paraceratherium in Walking with Beast. I really hope we get another documentory Oligocene Asia because one creatures that was not in the third episode of that series is Astorgosuchus.
Great video. Original topic as well. Can you consider doing the "story" of the first fish? There aren't many videos around about this topic and the occurrence of chordates is a really interesting case. Thanks.
Absolutely love this series. It would be great though if you could do a rapid recap at the end of each video to summarize the key events/lineages. The effort you put In is amazing
Just yesterday I was telling a family member about Paraceratherium and how huge they were, so this is especially timely. I can't help but feel we humans missed contact with all the coolest animals just barely. If we'd evolved just a few thousand years earlier... oh well, no use pondering what might have been.
We might have missed paraceratherium, but humans were around to see a bunch of giant (post-dinosaur) animals. It's just that we also killed a lot of them off. We're kind of an invasive species.
@Its me or whatever It's now speculated that populations of humans would have been too small to hunt any pleistocene megafauna to extinction. Humans would have only been a nail in the coffin after a more natural mass extinction due to climate change. So let's not rush to blame everything on humans. We've only recently become so destructive for the environment.
This comment............but on everything. It's like having a riddle with no absolute solution. A movie/book/story where the ending is completely debatable........all of which annoy the shit out of me. I wish I could see them. I wish I could see them as they were. I can't, never will be able to. Hell, even if they were "resurrected" from extinction I would doubt the truth of their social structure as being "true". I shouldn't comment while drunk.
I always love your videos. You have such a calm voice and such a beautiful way of explaining things. I feel like I'm in a biology class¹! ¹I love school and I love biology, so this is in all the good ways
I often wonder why those two Ice Age rhinos never made one last push into North America during the Pleistocene (were there various factors that may have restricted them)?
Elasmotherium lived mostly in the Ukraine and Middle East and the surrounding area. The Wooly Rhino probably did, given how it's range stretched over most of Eurasia, but we've yet to find one in North America so they likely weren't too successful.
I love your content and your narration. Touched on a lot here. Honestly though, it seemed you were just scratching the surface and this could’ve easily been a 20 min video. I certainly wouldn’t mind some videos at a length similar to your Madagascar video
The fact that Paraceratheriidae were once the size of horses makes me imagine an alternate history where we domesticated and rode around on them instead
Many people have what I call protagonist’s disease… they think the story of the universe began when they were born and that their life contains the climax; everything before their life was prologue and everything after is just a bunch of sequels. Watching your videos reminds me what a minuscule and amazing slice of existence we (and I) occupy
Reminds me of a quote from "Red Vs. Blue". Grif: The world is not ending. Everyone thinks the world's gonna end in their lifetime, but the truth is, none of us are that cool or interesting so just get over it.
DRINKING GAME!!! Take a sip of your drink when there is: - a time lineage - a genetic tree - a new illustration - a size comparison Take a shot when: - the narrator says "however"
The freshwater fishes of North America today is an interesting case, as the assemblage is almost completely constituted by lineages that moved in from East Asia. The sunfish family, for instance, are most closely related to oriental perches.
@vincentx2850, actually, freshwater sunfish are more closely related to the serranids and icefish and are grouped with them under the order Serraniformes, whereas both oriental perches and true perches belong to the order Perciformes.
How cool would've it have been to see Paraceratherium alive? I also find it amazing how rhinos can distribute their weight even better than an elephant. My favorite living rhino species are the black rhinos. I don't know why but I find their prehensile lips more aesthetically pleasing than the flat, square lips on the southern white rhinos. People did a great job bringing the southern white rhinos numbers up; now the critically endangered black rhinos need help more than ever (same for the Javan and Sumatran, and the Sumatran rhino is the closest living relative to the woolly rhino).
Why don’t you think about making a suggestion and creating a RUclips Videos that’s all about the Evolution Of The Pliosaurs on the next Moth Light Media coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
@Moth Light Media, just a pronunciation point: Paraceratherium, you keep missing the middle "ra." You keep pronouncing it as if it is spelt, Paracetherium. It should be, "Peh-rah-Seh-rah-THII-RII-uhm," not, "Peh-rah-seh-THII-RII-uhm." Para means around, and Ceratherium, the ending just means an individual group of Ceratheres, whatever that is in Latin. Perhaps grass eaters? But it is definitely "Seh-Rah-thiirz," not, "Seh-thiirz."
I absolutely HATE that rhinos are so endangered! Yes, they are dangerous. Leave them alone. I grew up around moose. The things I did as a kid I would be dead were I to do them now. Don't mess with moose either. (how my brother and I made it to adulthood is a mystery) Edit: There exists a huge difference! Moose can see very well what they go aggressive against. The two shouldn't even be compared. I did it so I am the one at fault. Maybe someone else can see the mentality though...........
You can thank Traditional Chinese Medicine (which isn't actually all that traditional, being invented in the 20th century) for the continued extermination of the rhino.
I imagine that every time an extinct species gets described there's someone at the world natual history research center whose only job is to contact Julio Lacerda and ask him to draw it 😂
Saw tooth whale slull and tism brain took over but Basilosaurus is my state fossil. Farmers used to plow up rib fossils and skulls that mineralized in the clay. We still find shark teeth in the creek, hundreds of miles from the sea
Interesting video although I would have went through the 5 living species today because not everybody knows about them especially for people who don't live anywhere close to where rhinos live I live in Canada so of course I've never seen1 in real life
The four major placental mammal groups Xenarthra, Afrotheria, Laurasiatheria, and Euarchontoglires originated from four different and respective parts of the world, Xenarthra originated from South America, Afrotheria originated from Africa, Laurasiatheria originated from North America, and Euarchontoglires originated from Eurasia.
Neat! Humans, if anyone else was curious, are Euarchontoglires - which is primates, rodents, lagomorphs, treeshrews, and colugos. The group is based primarily on genetic semblance, as there's little to link us anatomically.
Yep, and did you know that because the Euarchontoglires superorder originated exclusively from Eurasia, the ancestors of new world monkeys actually came from Southeast Asia through the Pacific Ocean?
hats off to Dmitry Bogdanov for drawing every single species of animal to have ever existed !
And also Nobu Tamura
The biggest takeaway I’ve gotten from this series thus far is the fact that most, if not all, mammals were friend-shaped at some point in their evolution
What is "friend-shaped"?
@@post-leftluddite in the simplest terms possible, its appearance makes you want to go up and pet it and try to make it your friend
round a cute.
@Its me or whatever not in way too long but yes I love drawfee
What does that mean “friend-shaped”?
if you want to be terrified, i highly suggest seeing a fossil of a paraceratherium in person. pictures just don’t do it justice, those things were HUUUGE
Its was gonna be HUUGE - paraceratrumpium
There used to be a full-sized, full-body reconstruction of one in Elephant Hall in the University of Nebraska-Lincoln natural history museum. It towered over the mounts of a group of African elephants.
@@peabrain6872 “i talked to aaaalll the other megafauna… and they said i was yuuuuge, way yuger than any other megafauna… sleepy joes megafauna wish they could be like me”
Where did you see one? Please say somewhere in europe
i wish i saw one in real life, they should use its dna to bring it back to life
This channel cures depression. Makes me feel very human and connected with the world.
Elephants already look like they are gonna break under their massive size, so the fact that there was a mammal this big and capable for walk is beyond me.
And modern elephants are also dwarfed by some of their extinct cousins. It's astounding that Palaeoloxodon, the giant extinct elephant mentioned, probably weighed the same as 3 full-grown African elephants. Taller & far heavier than a T-Rex.
@@fredbloggs8072 Makes me wonder if they had long lifespans to match
@@LimeyLassen Almost definitely, large animals almost always have long lifespans.
dinosaurs go brrr
@@jimsmith3715 Sauropods had hollow, air-filled bones, they were in a different league. They could have even grown about 20% larger than Argentinosaurus but there wasn't enough food to sustain such body mass. But, as I said, it's really impressive for an animal with non-hollow bones to reach the size of a small sauropod.
Babe hurry, new rhino video dropped!
i really love these "evolution of" videos, hope you keep it going for a long time Moth Light
Nice pfp, I like G11
I love how the few extinct rhinos that had 2 horns side by side on their nose still had smaller horns than arsinoitherium, one of my favorites mammels from the eocene
The miniaturized version
what an absolute godam unit
@@LimeyLassen it sure was😊
Arsinotherium was actually closer to elephants.
A new Moth Light video is a great thing
You will probably never read this but
i have watched every single one of your videos and I love all of them.
Your style of presentation, the structure, the amount of details and, above all, your soothing voice made you my favourite channel on all of RUclips.
I hope you keep going forever and please don’t change your style. It is perfection!
Paraceratherium always reminds me of that old joke:
"What do you get when you cross an elephant and a rhino?"
"'Ell if I know!"
I'll see myself out...
First time being relatively early with a new video. Been subbed for over a year and haven’t seen a single bad video from you. Hope you keep at it and thanks so much for all the work you’ve put out. 👍
I'm sure many of you myself included where introduced to Paraceratherium in Walking with Beast. I really hope we get another documentory Oligocene Asia because one creatures that was not in the third episode of that series is Astorgosuchus.
This is the best animal and paleontology related channel on this site, thank you very much again for your upload.
Great video. Original topic as well.
Can you consider doing the "story" of the first fish? There aren't many videos around about this topic and the occurrence of chordates is a really interesting case.
Thanks.
Absolutely love this series. It would be great though if you could do a rapid recap at the end of each video to summarize the key events/lineages.
The effort you put In is amazing
Just yesterday I was telling a family member about Paraceratherium and how huge they were, so this is especially timely. I can't help but feel we humans missed contact with all the coolest animals just barely. If we'd evolved just a few thousand years earlier... oh well, no use pondering what might have been.
Paraceratherium went extinct 23 million years ago
We might have missed paraceratherium, but humans were around to see a bunch of giant (post-dinosaur) animals. It's just that we also killed a lot of them off. We're kind of an invasive species.
Let us just stive to save those that we have atleast..... so that our grandkids dont like a comment like this
You chase your family members down to talk to them about random extinct dead mammals?
@Its me or whatever It's now speculated that populations of humans would have been too small to hunt any pleistocene megafauna to extinction. Humans would have only been a nail in the coffin after a more natural mass extinction due to climate change. So let's not rush to blame everything on humans. We've only recently become so destructive for the environment.
Let’s all take the time to praise the 1st single cell organism that fought to survive so we can all hit the like button today
Should've stay that way.
Isn't that basically an advanced form of ancestor worship?
Hey bro! Glad to see you uploading again!
Moth Light Media, thank you! Great video as always😍
Can you do a video on the evolution of arthropod exoskeletons?
It's such a lovely channel, this, both meditative and informative. In other words: perfect!
nice to have you back man
Been waiting with bated breath for this. Worth it. Thanks, MLM.
I know the DNA is way too old. But i wish i could see a Paraceratherium in real life. The creature in the thumnail ❤
This comment............but on everything. It's like having a riddle with no absolute solution. A movie/book/story where the ending is completely debatable........all of which annoy the shit out of me. I wish I could see them. I wish I could see them as they were. I can't, never will be able to. Hell, even if they were "resurrected" from extinction I would doubt the truth of their social structure as being "true".
I shouldn't comment while drunk.
I always love your videos. You have such a calm voice and such a beautiful way of explaining things. I feel like I'm in a biology class¹!
¹I love school and I love biology, so this is in all the good ways
IVE BEEN WAITING FOR THIS INSTALLMENT . thanks hottie!!!
Hey, love your channel - aside from the content, I gotta say that I love the music, it’s very calming.
I often wonder why those two Ice Age rhinos never made one last push into North America during the Pleistocene (were there various factors that may have restricted them)?
Elasmotherium lived mostly in the Ukraine and Middle East and the surrounding area.
The Wooly Rhino probably did, given how it's range stretched over most of Eurasia, but we've yet to find one in North America so they likely weren't too successful.
They didn't think there would be dandelions
@@JrIcify hahahahaha I got this reference!!!! U are amazing
@@JrIcify maybe the sloths ate them all. 😂😂😂
So happy to get a new video! Loving it!
Please could you do a video on the evolution of the parrots? Messelastur need to be recognized
Its always a good day when Moth light Media uploads a new video!
One of my favorite extinct mammals, Paracerathrerium.
extinct
for now
your mom is my favourite animal
I was literally thinking yesterday, "There hasn't been a Month Light Media video in a while" and now I wake up to this notification 😁
Amazing video! Super high quality, and fascinating!
Could you do a video on the evolution of ducks please.
Especially their dicks!
Evolution says that you come from a fish
@@ulemulion5969 we did lol
Wake up babe, Moth Light Media just dropped a new Vid
I love your content and your narration. Touched on a lot here. Honestly though, it seemed you were just scratching the surface and this could’ve easily been a 20 min video. I certainly wouldn’t mind some videos at a length similar to your Madagascar video
I NEED a two hour drive episode. I NEED this in my life!
That zebra rocking out in the background at the end.
YEEES when paleocontent creators upload it’s a great day
I wish you would post more often. I always look forward to your videos.
The fact that Paraceratheriidae were once the size of horses makes me imagine an alternate history where we domesticated and rode around on them instead
Unicorns!
I love your channel and your videos, I’ve learned so much!!! Please keep doing what you’re doing :)
0:45 that's what a unicorn really was.
Another excellent and succinctly presented video on this amazing group of animals
Holy shit new Mothlight Media video :o
love your vids man. pls don't stop uploading
Many people have what I call protagonist’s disease… they think the story of the universe began when they were born and that their life contains the climax; everything before their life was prologue and everything after is just a bunch of sequels. Watching your videos reminds me what a minuscule and amazing slice of existence we (and I) occupy
Reminds me of a quote from "Red Vs. Blue".
Grif: The world is not ending. Everyone thinks the world's gonna end in their lifetime, but the truth is, none of us are that cool or interesting so just get over it.
Wonderful video!
Although it is a little odd hearing you miss a syllable in the name of Paraceratherium every time you said it.
Great video! The sources are the for the past video I believe. I hope you can update them soon as I'm eager to read more!
Another great video, thanks.
cheers from sunny Vienna, Scott
Yay, finally a new MLM video ❤
He dissapeared
I love your videos so much can you do a video on the evolution of humans?
What’s the background music you use on your video sir
Very soothing voice and great infos.
babe wake up moth light media posted a new video
DRINKING GAME!!!
Take a sip of your drink when there is:
- a time lineage
- a genetic tree
- a new illustration
- a size comparison
Take a shot when:
- the narrator says "however"
Could you please do a program on the evolution of the passerine birds including the little song-birds (robins, bluetits etc.)
Thanks always interested in new information about extinct species
Paraceratherium inspired George Lucas when creating the AT-AT Imperial Walkers for Star Wars. The similarity really is striking.
The no background sound or music makes your videos more easily consumable
This was lovely as always. Paraceratherium beggars belief in how large it is. Were there even bigger terrestrial mammals? Time may yet tell.
Can you make video on other afrotheres besides elephants and sea cows
Hey mothlight, would you consider making a video about the evolution of fresh water predatory fish? Such as northern pike or large mouth bass?
You just want to hear him pronounce muskellunge!
The freshwater fishes of North America today is an interesting case, as the assemblage is almost completely constituted by lineages that moved in from East Asia. The sunfish family, for instance, are most closely related to oriental perches.
@@vincentx2850 How do those two relate to North American perches?
Not very closely related. Yellow perch is in the same family as walleye and darters, while white perch has a marine ancestry.
@vincentx2850, actually, freshwater sunfish are more closely related to the serranids and icefish and are grouped with them under the order Serraniformes, whereas both oriental perches and true perches belong to the order Perciformes.
how have you not run out of video ideas yet, nice
How cool would've it have been to see Paraceratherium alive? I also find it amazing how rhinos can distribute their weight even better than an elephant.
My favorite living rhino species are the black rhinos. I don't know why but I find their prehensile lips more aesthetically pleasing than the flat, square lips on the southern white rhinos. People did a great job bringing the southern white rhinos numbers up; now the critically endangered black rhinos need help more than ever (same for the Javan and Sumatran, and the Sumatran rhino is the closest living relative to the woolly rhino).
Thank you very much for the video.
Why don’t you think about making a suggestion and creating a RUclips Videos that’s all about the Evolution Of The Pliosaurs on the next Moth Light Media coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
Fantastic content!
Would love to see a video detailing the evolution on Pachycephalosaurids.
The video was very very nise and ypur channel is very good and I suggest you make a video on palaeoloxodon.
@Moth Light Media, just a pronunciation point: Paraceratherium, you keep missing the middle "ra." You keep pronouncing it as if it is spelt, Paracetherium. It should be, "Peh-rah-Seh-rah-THII-RII-uhm," not, "Peh-rah-seh-THII-RII-uhm." Para means around, and Ceratherium, the ending just means an individual group of Ceratheres, whatever that is in Latin. Perhaps grass eaters? But it is definitely "Seh-Rah-thiirz," not, "Seh-thiirz."
I knew today was gonna be a good day.
Fascinating video.
I absolutely HATE that rhinos are so endangered! Yes, they are dangerous. Leave them alone. I grew up around moose. The things I did as a kid I would be dead were I to do them now. Don't mess with moose either. (how my brother and I made it to adulthood is a mystery)
Edit: There exists a huge difference! Moose can see very well what they go aggressive against. The two shouldn't even be compared. I did it so I am the one at fault. Maybe someone else can see the mentality though...........
They aren't endangered because they're dangerous. It's because rich people in China think the horn will make their peepee bigger or cure cancer.
You can thank Traditional Chinese Medicine (which isn't actually all that traditional, being invented in the 20th century) for the continued extermination of the rhino.
Wonderful, thanx big G
Which songs do you use in your videos? They are quite pleasant.
If they're closely related to horses, then does that mean unicorns really existed
no
What's the animal at 2:07?
I *think* it's meant to be an Embolotherium andrewsi.
Thank you! I realise I got my timestamp wrong and meant 2:00 😅
@@thejibberjabberwookiee8604 Not 100% sure but looks like a female moose to me.
@@DJFracus thanks! That makes sense
A Very intresting and fun topique 🗿
If these things lived into modern or at least ancient times, you can bet the Romans would have put archers on them and rode them into battle.
This is my favorite prehistoric animal.
Hello there
Hey, your video is great, but can you please add subtile it? Its really helpfull for non-English speaker
I imagine that every time an extinct species gets described there's someone at the world natual history research center whose only job is to contact Julio Lacerda and ask him to draw it 😂
I'm confused on a couple things. You say Paracetherium and Paraceratidae, yet the text in the video says Paraceratherium and Paraceratheriidae?
Saw tooth whale slull and tism brain took over but Basilosaurus is my state fossil. Farmers used to plow up rib fossils and skulls that mineralized in the clay. We still find shark teeth in the creek, hundreds of miles from the sea
love your vids
Please do one on the evolution of annelid worms.
That rule also applies to languages.
Overestimated. "Over exaggerated" is redundant, and thus self defeating.
that is so cool
Rhinochads…are we gonna make it?
Finally!
Interesting video although I would have went through the 5 living species today because not everybody knows about them especially for people who don't live anywhere close to where rhinos live I live in Canada so of course I've never seen1 in real life
Nice.
The four major placental mammal groups Xenarthra, Afrotheria, Laurasiatheria, and Euarchontoglires originated from four different and respective parts of the world, Xenarthra originated from South America, Afrotheria originated from Africa, Laurasiatheria originated from North America, and Euarchontoglires originated from Eurasia.
Neat! Humans, if anyone else was curious, are Euarchontoglires - which is primates, rodents, lagomorphs, treeshrews, and colugos. The group is based primarily on genetic semblance, as there's little to link us anatomically.
Yep, and did you know that because the Euarchontoglires superorder originated exclusively from Eurasia, the ancestors of new world monkeys actually came from Southeast Asia through the Pacific Ocean?
Please make playlists
This is so weird, i am subscribed to you but none of your msot recents videos showed in my feed :(
A 5 m Rhino what a truly terrifying creature to be charging at you