I assume it's just Simon reading. Like he read a couple of the animal names wrong in this video as well and it's rather common to hear him say names completely wrong.
Guy, he freely admits he's dumb as hell. They do a lot of reuploads, too. I'm guessing partly due to error correction. Alternatively, quit hate watching RUclipsrs and go learn a new skill.
you won't be finding any wild ostrich in Australia and very few in captivity, instead you'll find the emu which is a much smaller yet still very large flightless bird, although the cassowary is considered to be much more aggressive and likely to kill you
a very very very very small feral ostrich population (estimated at around 50) the odds of someone seeing one is very low, the odds of a tourist seeing one is functionally 0
I love the Whistler-verse but these science ones often push my pedantry into a crisis. 1) Smilodon was NOT more closely related to lion than a tiger. The reason it’s correct to say ‘cat’ and not ‘tiger’ is because it was part of the Felidae family, but was not part of the Panthera ‘big cat’ family to which both tigers and lions belong (and are just about closely enough related to be able to partially breed) and nor the family to which small cats, Felinae (everything from your domestic moggie up to Cheetahs and their closest relatives pumas / cougars / mountain ‘lions’). These sabre toothed cats specifically sat just outside these two groups within the Machairodontinae. Its mighty teeth were also likely weak point meaning they were probably not used as forcefully as a lion’s canines to asphyxiate prey but perhaps for inflicting fatal blood loss upon a victim already subdued by those mighty paws 2) Although fragmentary at best, there are more remains than a single Andrewsarchus skull exist, and in fact more than one species within the genus. I believe the latest indication is that it would count Hippos amongst its most closely related extant families, it appears to be equally as closely related to all cetaceans (whales and dolphins), and more closely related to the extinct Entelodont ‘hell pigs’ (which were not pigs…). The interesting thing about these is that they were most likely hoofed creatures which has led some to quip they were sheep in wolves clothing. 3) I don’t believe there is a consensus that the Phorusrhacidae had poor sense of smell, I’ve seen the statement repeated on some websites but the opposite reported in papers. The size estimates are realistic because there are many other species that have been more completely recovered. As these truly are the descendants of the terrestrial theropod dinosaurs, what I find amazing about these bird is that they picked up where their non-avian family left off after the Cretaceous extinction. They also survived until amazing recently, and far from being simply wiped out by ‘superior’ mammal predators, they were one of the few creatures to colonise North America when the two Americas joined rather than the majority of travel in the other direction. As for their only living relatives, the phorusrhacids are not the ancestors to the extant seriema but rather relatives. The phorusrhacids diverged from the Cariama and their last common ancestor necessarily predates the earliest terror birds at 53 million years ago.
Curious if you can answer this for me… Simon says andrewsarchus was found by the sea in Mongolia… to the best of my knowledge, there exist exactly 0 seas in Mongolia. Does he mean an ancient sea that has since disappeared? Perhaps one of the larger lakes in Mongolia? Or? Absolutely love your comment by the way, very edifying.
@@italianstalionism I did try to reply to this once but RUclips seems to have crashed so apologies if this is shorter! I don’t know much about the Irdin Manha Formation, a quick google suggest a rich variety of large terrestrial mammals are found here but there’s not too much about the palaeo environment. If you look up ‘ancient earth globe’ you should find a website called dinosaur pictures which has an amazing interactive globe. Looking at Inner Mongolia 50MYA, shortly before A.mongoliensis existed in the Eocene, the coastline appears to intrude further into China than at any other point since the Cretaceous. The location of the remains doesn’t tell us too much about the ecology of Andrewsarchus though as it is most common that the most significant fossils come from remains of creatures that are quickly deposited by water and buried by sediment after death before scavenging, rot (in anoxic conditions) and erosion can take place and allow mineralisation to occurs. This sedimentary rock in which the remains are found can tell us a lot about the location but much less about the animal itself as its final resting place was somewhat incidental. Inference about the behaviour and diet of the creature would be better served by studying morphology and wear of its dentition. I believe isotopic analysis can be quite useful in calculating the source of its diet but I don’t know how far back in time this approach works.. With only a rough guess at where the fossils were found and a very quick google as I’ve not yet had time to really look, it seems like the formation was Inner Mongolia within China rather than Mongolia the modern state, which as you rightly point out has precisely 0 oceanic coastlines and I believe that same was true 40-50MYA
Added to this the fact that ostrich come from Africa ( not Australia) and the terrible scale of the human next to the Andrewsarchus graphic, I must conclude this upload is bordering on AI farm quality.
@@italianstalionismsea levels were much higher at the time Andrewsarchus was around (about 45 million years ago), so it was probably the shoreline of the ocean at that time.
I remember going to a natural history museum in Australia, as a young boy, (so 40-45 years ago), and there was a model of a giant spider, about the size of a large dog. One of the facts I recall about it, was that it was so large, it needed lungs, which arachnids don't have. I'm guessing it was the product of bad science, or subsequently disproved, as I've never really seen it represented anywhere else. It was truly nightmare inducing, as evidenced by the fact I still can clearly recall the display...
@choughed3072 normally I'd say yes, but if my memory serves, it was a museum about prehistoric Australia, which is why it was part of a school excursion. Megarachne wasn't in Australia, is my understanding. Given that much of what I learnt about dinosaurs as a child is now debunked, I figure this is one more example.
It does depend a little bit on how old that fossil is, but keep in mind that the atmosphere has had higher concentrations of oxygen at various points in history, which meant arthropods could get much bigger. And they did. Dragonflies as big as eagles and millipedes the size of canoes.
Yes How tall, stood up, not all fours, to who's shoulder, what's the man looking image for, why use illustration to be confusing of, wtaf and that'll do for now.
lol why is Simon talking about ostriches being from Australia when they are native to Africa? Is he thinking of the Cassowary which is the most deadly bird and from Australia? Feel like this vid kinda misses a few factoids since ostriches are pretty unimpressive and would flee when provoked.
Although they may not be native to Australia they are quite often farmed there and there are small populations of wild ones there (due to escapees) I remember watching a video about it a while back. Also yes ostriches would tend to flee but if they cannot they will kick and farmed ones are particularly vicious 🤣
@@slayingroosters4355 lol yeah I would never just automatically assume Australia when talking about them. They are farmed in America as well and their meat is pretty good, a little too lean for me but still. I thought he was gonna bring up the emu war lmao.
Animals often originated far from where they’re now found. Camels first appeared in North America. Opossums migrated to North America. And this is from before human intervention. Horses evolved in the American west, went extinct on this continent, but had established populations in Asia, and humans brought them back. And an ostrich will stomp you to death. They often kill lions when attacked. Yes, their first choice is run, but when that’s not an option… They have several options for defense, like all animals.
We don't have ostriches in Australia hahahaha Emu and Cassowary yeah I'm pretty high rn but I've never seen a ostrich walking around out in the bush 😅 😂😂
@@astro-blaster4190 What do you mean hahahahah you can get drugs in any country 😂 Medical bud and some meth mate and there I am three days later no sleep and stoned as having Simon cook about ostriches in Australia 😂😂😂😂
@@_NicBP I was well aware there was obviously no native species and that obviously people had bought them here they didn't just pop up out of no where 😂
@madisson1018 I get the impression that you’d be fun at a party lol. As for the person asking about how you get weed in Australia, I’m assuming you grow it or buy it from someone who does, like everywhere else in the world…
Sabertooth CAT wasn't a tiger. It's not even a member of the panthera genus. It's a member of the felidae genus. Meaning the sabertooth is more closely related to your pet cat than a tiger.
Just finished your video, great video by the way.... Question: Are you going to make a part 2 of this? After all you failed to mention something the king from Australia that we were glad that it's now extinct. It's a species monitor lizard, except this one is approximately the same length as a school bus, and can weigh close to as much!!
Sorry to burst your bubble, but Ostriches come from Africa, Australia also has two flightless birds, the Emu (much like an Ostrich but a bit smaller, it can be dangerous), and the Cassowary which is smaller again but much more dangerous, it has been known to disembowel people with its long claws on it's feet.
Best ancient animal video yet. Thank you for pointing out that all we have is fossils and in most cases very few. Also pointing out that all the statements made about the animals are at best educated guesses and least just normal guesses. Oh and btw we have dinosaur DNA as well since they have found living tissue of dinosaurs making them about then 5000-10000years old since science says that that tissue has a half life of 5000 years and that is observable science. I say if we bring back the mammoth and dodo we might as well go full Jurassic Park and bring back the dinosaurs. If your gonna play god don’t hold back go all in on it.
I would rather see the dodo bird brought back from extinction than the mammoth. I would also like to see the Moa bird than the Mammoth. Go team chocobo!
Simon, we are distinctly SHORT of ostriches here in Australia - only to be found in zoos! Methinks you're either thinking of the emu, which does have a mean kick if it could be bothered or, much more likely, the CASSOWARY, which definitely could disembowel you if you approached it the wrong way! For a fact man you can occasionally get things rather embarrassingly wrong!
If you're talking about Emus, they're not particularly killy, but if you actually meant Cassowaries, then yeah, they'll kill you as soon as look at you! An Army friend of mine was chased up a tree by one while on training in the Daintree Forrest. This is in reference to the Ostrich section of the video...
1:44 If that artistic impression it's accurate,the Smilodon likely ate smaller prey and used their teeth as rakes instead of harpoons, as they can't open their mouths wide enough to bite large prey. Some food for thought. 😜
Actually, experts aren't sure whether it's still alive or not but there's much speculation including them living there but nothing has been confirmed. I watched a short documentary about it just recently.
If that's a 6' tall at the shoulder Andrewsarchus, then the human next to him is about 9' tall. The graphic scales could use some work. Love the channel though!
Love all these videos on all the channels. If they re-engineer the wholly mammoth they won’t be mammoths. They’ll be more akin to the Borg than to the OG wholly mammoth after all the genome hacking and slashing. Still cool though.
There are no claws that can rip thru steel not even ones made out of a harder material the problem with cutting steel is the fact the metal is really hard to move out of the way.
"Some experts claim could cut through steel", are these experts on steel? What kind of steel? This statement is too broad and isn't super impressive given that mild steel that's thin isn't hard to cut through.
I do not doubt the strength of the cat but since the claws are made of keratin, I really don’t think they could cut through steel either. It is far more likely that the claws would snap off than slice through. I guess it was lucky for them that their prey were trapped in the Stone Age.
Entire scientific community: "Global temperatures are going to dramatically rise over the next 100 years." Tech bro geneticists: "What if we make a mammoth?"
Simon, you should have included Arctodus simus which was the Giant Short faced bear that only died out toward the end of the last glaciation about 12,800 years ago. Some of these were believed to have been the largest land based carnivores to exist since the Dinosaurs perished in the mishap of navigation 65 million years ago !! There are some who believe they may still be alive in the remotest parts of Alaska and Siberia - although no conclusive evidence has been found - its unlikely, but not impossible. The Yeti has been shown, at least from samples obtained from locals and monastaries, so be various species of known, but rare bears - which have rarely been seen or photographed
It doesn't make sense to me that they even want to, it's been extinct for so long and there already isn't enough space for all the existing animals since we constantly make their habitats smaller. The dodo seems much more logical to me since it's been extinct for a much smaller amount of time but if I remember correctly it's a much more difficult process.
@@DaydreamingSophie I dunno about not having room for them. But they are of a different time and climate and probably wouldn't do well I'm a much warmer climate. On the whole though I am uncertain about the ethics of the whole thing. Seems wrong to me on that level. The biomass of every living creature on earth would easily fit in one province of Canada. There's plenty of space.
@@dacatindahat8275 I don't mean it like that, but that we encroach on habitats more and more to make more space for us. Also, those habitats tend to not be connected to each other. Of course the whole climate and time thing is a big issue too but experts know that and most likely account for that while reprogramming the DNA. I don't believe it's ethical either, maybe with a much more recent extinction I'd have a different opinion since they would probably still find a place for themselves in the ecosystem but the time for the wooly mammoth is definitely over and we shouldn't bring back animals that have no place in this world anymore. And who knows what would go wrong, I think of it a little like an invasive species and as far as I know there has never been a case where it hasn't created more problems even though the species was sometimes placed there to solve one. Now that I think about it, that probably wasn't the ethical dilemma you were thinking of, was it?
The Giant Southern Moa of NZ was about 3-3.6 metres tall and has only been extinct since around the 1400s. There was also the Haast eagle with a wing span of 3-3.6m that hunted them, so went extinct around the same time.
Given how at least some Terrorbirds had forward pointing stubby wings with two claws on each they were basically Sauropod 2.0. A literal Raptor, if you will.
Types of tigers still alive today, get *_much_* bigger than lions. Male Siberian tigers get nearly _double._ Even female Siberians ovelap with smaller (adult) male lions.
8:08 - Woolly Mammoths on the Eurasian and North American mainlands went extinct 9,000/7,000 years ago. A small population on Wrangel Island off of Siberia only went extinct 4,00 years ago, and another population on an island off of Alaska lived until 5,500 years ago
Titanoboa is fascinating 6:58 Modern day Burmese Pythons eat American Alligators in the Everglades... So yeah, it definitely would have been eating crocodilians
One of my favorite extinct animals, is the Platybelodon. An ancient elephant, with a hippo-sized mouth, inside it’s trunk. Google it, and watch your jaw hit the floor.
They have ostriches in Australia? huh... I bet the veterans of the Emu Wars are glad they didn't show up... (maybe we are conflating two completely different continents and or birds?)
On giant flightless birds the largest "Man" has co-existed with were the Moa in New Zealand. The largest known Moa is (i got the figure from Wikipedia) 3.6m / 12ft tall. They were hunted to extinction by the Maroi in the 15th century, but archeologists have found more than bones- som sodt tissue ...skin, feathers, muscle have been recovered and studied - so this is another animal we could potentially revive (,given we are as a species responsible for its extinction it seem reasonable thing to me).
I’m pretty sure as far as Australian birds go the cassowary it the most likely to unalive you
The ostrich isn't even Australian. 😬
@adamduncan5971 maybe he's going to the zoo 🤷♂️
@@adamduncan5971 I think is obvious he meant emu
That was my first thought, has he never heard of the Great Blue Terror?
@@alancox5777Yup also he's not writing the scripts and he's more than likely upset with the discrepancy he's caught them before.
You or your scriptwriter seem to have gotten cassowaries (big, dangerous birds from Australia) confused with ostriches (that are from *Africa*).
AI prob wrote it and Simon is prob AI creation
Nope native to Australia you ding dong
I assume it's just Simon reading. Like he read a couple of the animal names wrong in this video as well and it's rather common to hear him say names completely wrong.
Guy, he freely admits he's dumb as hell. They do a lot of reuploads, too. I'm guessing partly due to error correction.
Alternatively, quit hate watching RUclipsrs and go learn a new skill.
Most have got confused with the cassowary?
you won't be finding any wild ostrich in Australia and very few in captivity, instead you'll find the emu which is a much smaller yet still very large flightless bird, although the cassowary is considered to be much more aggressive and likely to kill you
@@_NicBPsure, but no one is afraid of the ostriches in Australia - but if you head into the rainforest, be wary of the cassowaries
a very very very very small feral ostrich population (estimated at around 50) the odds of someone seeing one is very low, the odds of a tourist seeing one is functionally 0
Stupid post
Most live on Sesame Street
I love the Whistler-verse but these science ones often push my pedantry into a crisis.
1) Smilodon was NOT more closely related to lion than a tiger. The reason it’s correct to say ‘cat’ and not ‘tiger’ is because it was part of the Felidae family, but was not part of the Panthera ‘big cat’ family to which both tigers and lions belong (and are just about closely enough related to be able to partially breed) and nor the family to which small cats, Felinae (everything from your domestic moggie up to Cheetahs and their closest relatives pumas / cougars / mountain ‘lions’). These sabre toothed cats specifically sat just outside these two groups within the Machairodontinae. Its mighty teeth were also likely weak point meaning they were probably not used as forcefully as a lion’s canines to asphyxiate prey but perhaps for inflicting fatal blood loss upon a victim already subdued by those mighty paws
2) Although fragmentary at best, there are more remains than a single Andrewsarchus skull exist, and in fact more than one species within the genus. I believe the latest indication is that it would count Hippos amongst its most closely related extant families, it appears to be equally as closely related to all cetaceans (whales and dolphins), and more closely related to the extinct Entelodont ‘hell pigs’ (which were not pigs…). The interesting thing about these is that they were most likely hoofed creatures which has led some to quip they were sheep in wolves clothing.
3) I don’t believe there is a consensus that the Phorusrhacidae had poor sense of smell, I’ve seen the statement repeated on some websites but the opposite reported in papers. The size estimates are realistic because there are many other species that have been more completely recovered. As these truly are the descendants of the terrestrial theropod dinosaurs, what I find amazing about these bird is that they picked up where their non-avian family left off after the Cretaceous extinction. They also survived until amazing recently, and far from being simply wiped out by ‘superior’ mammal predators, they were one of the few creatures to colonise North America when the two Americas joined rather than the majority of travel in the other direction. As for their only living relatives, the phorusrhacids are not the ancestors to the extant seriema but rather relatives. The phorusrhacids diverged from the Cariama and their last common ancestor necessarily predates the earliest terror birds at 53 million years ago.
^^^ this exactly!
Curious if you can answer this for me… Simon says andrewsarchus was found by the sea in Mongolia… to the best of my knowledge, there exist exactly 0 seas in Mongolia. Does he mean an ancient sea that has since disappeared? Perhaps one of the larger lakes in Mongolia? Or?
Absolutely love your comment by the way, very edifying.
@@italianstalionism I did try to reply to this once but RUclips seems to have crashed so apologies if this is shorter!
I don’t know much about the Irdin Manha Formation, a quick google suggest a rich variety of large terrestrial mammals are found here but there’s not too much about the palaeo environment. If you look up ‘ancient earth globe’ you should find a website called dinosaur pictures which has an amazing interactive globe. Looking at Inner Mongolia 50MYA, shortly before A.mongoliensis existed in the Eocene, the coastline appears to intrude further into China than at any other point since the Cretaceous.
The location of the remains doesn’t tell us too much about the ecology of Andrewsarchus though as it is most common that the most significant fossils come from remains of creatures that are quickly deposited by water and buried by sediment after death before scavenging, rot (in anoxic conditions) and erosion can take place and allow mineralisation to occurs.
This sedimentary rock in which the remains are found can tell us a lot about the location but much less about the animal itself as its final resting place was somewhat incidental.
Inference about the behaviour and diet of the creature would be better served by studying morphology and wear of its dentition. I believe isotopic analysis can be quite useful in calculating the source of its diet but I don’t know how far back in time this approach works..
With only a rough guess at where the fossils were found and a very quick google as I’ve not yet had time to really look, it seems like the formation was Inner Mongolia within China rather than Mongolia the modern state, which as you rightly point out has precisely 0 oceanic coastlines and I believe that same was true 40-50MYA
Added to this the fact that ostrich come from Africa ( not Australia) and the terrible scale of the human next to the Andrewsarchus graphic, I must conclude this upload is bordering on AI farm quality.
@@italianstalionismsea levels were much higher at the time Andrewsarchus was around (about 45 million years ago), so it was probably the shoreline of the ocean at that time.
5:13 “Snakes are very much the Marmite of the animal kingdom.”
That’s gotta be one of Simon’s all-time best quotes
what’s a marmite?
@@ericrodrigues9631 A spread made of yeast extract. "You either love it or hate it."
I remember going to a natural history museum in Australia, as a young boy, (so 40-45 years ago), and there was a model of a giant spider, about the size of a large dog. One of the facts I recall about it, was that it was so large, it needed lungs, which arachnids don't have.
I'm guessing it was the product of bad science, or subsequently disproved, as I've never really seen it represented anywhere else.
It was truly nightmare inducing, as evidenced by the fact I still can clearly recall the display...
Would it have been a megarachne? Its the biggest spider to have ever lived apperantly.
@choughed3072 normally I'd say yes, but if my memory serves, it was a museum about prehistoric Australia, which is why it was part of a school excursion. Megarachne wasn't in Australia, is my understanding. Given that much of what I learnt about dinosaurs as a child is now debunked, I figure this is one more example.
@@choughed3072 the megarachne was initially mistaken for a giant spider, but its not, turns out it was a notable eurypterid
Arachnids have book lungs which are a very basic version of a lung
It does depend a little bit on how old that fossil is, but keep in mind that the atmosphere has had higher concentrations of oxygen at various points in history, which meant arthropods could get much bigger. And they did. Dragonflies as big as eagles and millipedes the size of canoes.
2:45 - That guy behind Andrewsarchus is impressively tall! 😲
I was just about to rip on that fact too! C'mon editors get it together lol
Yes
How tall, stood up, not all fours, to who's shoulder, what's the man looking image for, why use illustration to be confusing of, wtaf and that'll do for now.
Between that diagram and stating that ostriches are from Australia, this video has put a big question mark on the channels credibility.
I was about to ask why they used Robert Wadlow as the comparison figure.
It has to be Jokic
1:12 "The Ostrich really is the Chuck Norris of birds."
Said by someone who is not familiar with the Cassowary, clearly.
0:35 - Chapter 1 - The smilodon
1:50 - Chapter 2 - Andrewsarchus
3:25 - Chapter 3 - The short faced bear
5:10 - Chapter 4 - Titanoboa
7:10 - Chapter 5 - The wooly mammoth
9:50 - Chapter 6 - Terror birds
Ostrich may be Chuck Norris, but the cassowary is Bruce Lee
Bro, the Cassowary doesn’t fuck around. I’m convinced they hate humans. 😂😂😂😂
So does that mean the shoe-bill stork is Adrian Brody?
So a goose is Steven Seagal ?
@@DrDeuteron dont you dare disrespect geese like that.
@@dantemoose420 idk, do you know another flightless waddling bird that likes strip clubs? I guess geese fly, I was all kinds of wrong.
lol why is Simon talking about ostriches being from Australia when they are native to Africa? Is he thinking of the Cassowary which is the most deadly bird and from Australia? Feel like this vid kinda misses a few factoids since ostriches are pretty unimpressive and would flee when provoked.
Although they may not be native to Australia they are quite often farmed there and there are small populations of wild ones there (due to escapees) I remember watching a video about it a while back. Also yes ostriches would tend to flee but if they cannot they will kick and farmed ones are particularly vicious 🤣
@@slayingroosters4355 hey, don't underestimate the emu, they beat the Australian army during the "Emu War".
@@slayingroosters4355 lol yeah I would never just automatically assume Australia when talking about them. They are farmed in America as well and their meat is pretty good, a little too lean for me but still. I thought he was gonna bring up the emu war lmao.
Animals often originated far from where they’re now found. Camels first appeared in North America. Opossums migrated to North America. And this is from before human intervention. Horses evolved in the American west, went extinct on this continent, but had established populations in Asia, and humans brought them back.
And an ostrich will stomp you to death. They often kill lions when attacked. Yes, their first choice is run, but when that’s not an option… They have several options for defense, like all animals.
@@ssmurf2990 i never heard of emu war. That's kinda hilarious
My most sincere apologies for the ostrich mixup.
Been doing this for too long for such amateur mistakes. Will do better :-)
LOL, Australian here. Funny as fuck though.
Personally think the Cassowary is a much more intimidating bird than an Ostrich.😂
Or even an Emu
Guy next to Andrewsarchus is 10 ft tall
We don't have ostriches in Australia hahahaha Emu and Cassowary yeah I'm pretty high rn but I've never seen a ostrich walking around out in the bush 😅 😂😂
I'm guessing the Ostrich must have flown from Africa to Australia 😆
How do you get marijuana in Australia? Or do you have different drugs?
@@astro-blaster4190 What do you mean hahahahah you can get drugs in any country 😂
Medical bud and some meth mate and there I am three days later no sleep and stoned as having Simon cook about ostriches in Australia 😂😂😂😂
@@_NicBP I was well aware there was obviously no native species and that obviously people had bought them here they didn't just pop up out of no where 😂
@madisson1018 I get the impression that you’d be fun at a party lol. As for the person asking about how you get weed in Australia, I’m assuming you grow it or buy it from someone who does, like everywhere else in the world…
"Your scientist were so preoccupied whether they could that they didn't stop to think if they should."
-- Ian Malcolm
"...the Chuck Norris of birds." made me spit out my drink. I love the unexpected humor of the writers and Simon's delivery.
"well over 6 feet tall at the shoulder"
*Shows a human for scale indicating maybe 4 foot height at shoulder*
Sabertooth CAT wasn't a tiger. It's not even a member of the panthera genus. It's a member of the felidae genus. Meaning the sabertooth is more closely related to your pet cat than a tiger.
Every single Aussie just face-palmed at the 10min mark... Enjoyable video though 😂 Keep up the fun content Simon 👍👍
@@_NicBP we have "feral" ostriches. 😉
i absolutely love this channel
The crazy thing is, most reptiles (especially snakes) don't really stop growing until death. Titaniboa could in theory, get even larger.
When are you doing a video about the giant? The one used to scale the Andrewsarchus. Can't wait to see that one!!!
You could quite reasonably argue that when it comes to animals, the world is a fairly fascinating place.
Thanks for sharing 😀👍
Just finished your video, great video by the way....
Question:
Are you going to make a part 2 of this? After all you failed to mention something the king from Australia that we were glad that it's now extinct. It's a species monitor lizard, except this one is approximately the same length as a school bus, and can weigh close to as much!!
9:57 Pretty sure that name has got nothing to do with Gorillas and more with Guillermo. 😂
Hello everybody, have a wonderful day!
thanks, you too!
You too buddy ❤
Meh 😑
What a champion comment ❤️ so simple yet so needed.
You have a great day too mate!
Don’t tell me what to do
Man I love this channel, but this video is mess with all the errors :|
You are all over the board with the subjects of your channels but I'm here for it.👍
The ostrich isn't even a native Australian species. Wack comparison.
Here early, but thankfully not early enough for these beasts to still be around 🙌
Cant wait for the dawg beeting video's later this week.
"Just how big were they? . . . Well, they were pretty big." Thank you, Simon.
Honestly, this doesn’t even even sound like Simon. It really sounds like an AI spoof channel.
Simon come visit South Africa to come see Ostriches!
I think you might meen cassowary there mate 👍👍
Sorry to burst your bubble, but Ostriches come from Africa, Australia also has two flightless birds, the Emu (much like an Ostrich but a bit smaller, it can be dangerous), and the Cassowary which is smaller again but much more dangerous, it has been known to disembowel people with its long claws on it's feet.
Best ancient animal video yet. Thank you for pointing out that all we have is fossils and in most cases very few. Also pointing out that all the statements made about the animals are at best educated guesses and least just normal guesses. Oh and btw we have dinosaur DNA as well since they have found living tissue of dinosaurs making them about then 5000-10000years old since science says that that tissue has a half life of 5000 years and that is observable science. I say if we bring back the mammoth and dodo we might as well go full Jurassic Park and bring back the dinosaurs. If your gonna play god don’t hold back go all in on it.
I would rather see the dodo bird brought back from extinction than the mammoth. I would also like to see the Moa bird than the Mammoth. Go team chocobo!
I'd like them to bring back the Tasmanian Tiger!
I already consider the ostrich a fluffy Easter chick when compared to the Cassowary.
Anyone else out there just assume that the paleontologist named Andrew Sarchus named the animal after himself?
Simon talking about ostriches like their from Australia is just dissapointing
Come on fact boi!😂😂😂😂😂
Simon, we are distinctly SHORT of ostriches here in Australia - only to be found in zoos! Methinks you're either thinking of the emu, which does have a mean kick if it could be bothered or, much more likely, the CASSOWARY, which definitely could disembowel you if you approached it the wrong way! For a fact man you can occasionally get things rather embarrassingly wrong!
Ostrich: Africa.
Elephant Bird: Madagascar.
Emu: Australia.
Moa: New Zealand.
Terror Birds: South America.
If you're talking about Emus, they're not particularly killy, but if you actually meant Cassowaries, then yeah, they'll kill you as soon as look at you! An Army friend of mine was chased up a tree by one while on training in the Daintree Forrest. This is in reference to the Ostrich section of the video...
1:44 If that artistic impression it's accurate,the Smilodon likely ate smaller prey and used their teeth as rakes instead of harpoons, as they can't open their mouths wide enough to bite large prey. Some food for thought. 😜
10:50 “3M (10M)”
Sox içivə
Dude in the comparison shoot must be like 12 ft tall if it was 6 ft at the shoulder
So close to a million subs!!!!
The Tasmanian Tiger is still alive today in a remote part of Papua New Guinea. An area cut off from humans high in the mountainous region.
No it’s not.
Actually, experts aren't sure whether it's still alive or not but there's much speculation including them living there but nothing has been confirmed.
I watched a short documentary about it just recently.
So you're saying in my lifetime, I could watch a polar bear attempt to hunt a woolly mammoth? Cool
Hello
Marmite! Thanks to a Brain Blaze episode I recently saw I know what this is and why it’s a funny reference!
Vasuki indicus new snake bigger than titanobao
If that's a 6' tall at the shoulder Andrewsarchus, then the human next to him is about 9' tall. The graphic scales could use some work.
Love the channel though!
Love all these videos on all the channels. If they re-engineer the wholly mammoth they won’t be mammoths. They’ll be more akin to the Borg than to the OG wholly mammoth after all the genome hacking and slashing. Still cool though.
Well a snake names vasuki indicus is also been found which is larger than titanaboa
I refuse to believe Sun Bears are actual bears and not just a man in a bear costume
DAMN NATURE! You scary!
As one of the snake loving people, the largest snake I ever owned was 17ft (5.1m) Retic. I miss him.
There are no claws that can rip thru steel not even ones made out of a harder material the problem with cutting steel is the fact the metal is really hard to move out of the way.
"Some experts claim could cut through steel", are these experts on steel? What kind of steel? This statement is too broad and isn't super impressive given that mild steel that's thin isn't hard to cut through.
I was thinking mythbuster style of expert when that was said
I do not doubt the strength of the cat but since the claws are made of keratin, I really don’t think they could cut through steel either. It is far more likely that the claws would snap off than slice through. I guess it was lucky for them that their prey were trapped in the Stone Age.
Entire scientific community: "Global temperatures are going to dramatically rise over the next 100 years."
Tech bro geneticists: "What if we make a mammoth?"
Simon, you should have included Arctodus simus which was the Giant Short faced bear that only died out toward the end of the last glaciation about 12,800 years ago. Some of these were believed to have been the largest land based carnivores to exist since the Dinosaurs perished in the mishap of navigation 65 million years ago !!
There are some who believe they may still be alive in the remotest parts of Alaska and Siberia - although no conclusive evidence has been found - its unlikely, but not impossible. The Yeti has been shown, at least from samples obtained from locals and monastaries, so be various species of known, but rare bears - which have rarely been seen or photographed
Monstrous killing machine, cuts to cubs playing 😄
the smilodon... cause when it SMILES at u, ure DONE for😂
1135 kg is exactly 1.135 tons. Why is it so hard for english speakers to divide by 1000?
Even if they bring mammoths back, it won’t be an actual mammoth because it will learn from elephants, so it will just be a hairy elephant
Instinct is genetic. 😂
It doesn't make sense to me that they even want to, it's been extinct for so long and there already isn't enough space for all the existing animals since we constantly make their habitats smaller. The dodo seems much more logical to me since it's been extinct for a much smaller amount of time but if I remember correctly it's a much more difficult process.
@@DaydreamingSophie I dunno about not having room for them. But they are of a different time and climate and probably wouldn't do well I'm a much warmer climate. On the whole though I am uncertain about the ethics of the whole thing. Seems wrong to me on that level.
The biomass of every living creature on earth would easily fit in one province of Canada. There's plenty of space.
@@dacatindahat8275 I don't mean it like that, but that we encroach on habitats more and more to make more space for us. Also, those habitats tend to not be connected to each other.
Of course the whole climate and time thing is a big issue too but experts know that and most likely account for that while reprogramming the DNA. I don't believe it's ethical either, maybe with a much more recent extinction I'd have a different opinion since they would probably still find a place for themselves in the ecosystem but the time for the wooly mammoth is definitely over and we shouldn't bring back animals that have no place in this world anymore. And who knows what would go wrong, I think of it a little like an invasive species and as far as I know there has never been a case where it hasn't created more problems even though the species was sometimes placed there to solve one.
Now that I think about it, that probably wasn't the ethical dilemma you were thinking of, was it?
Everyone who has played Ark: Survival knows these species, but even in the game, it can be hard to imagine just how big they were.
The Giant Southern Moa of NZ was about 3-3.6 metres tall and has only been extinct since around the 1400s. There was also the Haast eagle with a wing span of 3-3.6m that hunted them, so went extinct around the same time.
Just goes to show, no matter how much you get right, people will always focus on your wrongs.
You'll have no trouble finding an emu or even a cassowary in Australia, but if you want an ostrich, you'll only find ones owned by people.
Vasuki indicus you missed it
Given how at least some Terrorbirds had forward pointing stubby wings with two claws on each they were basically Sauropod 2.0. A literal Raptor, if you will.
You would sadly have better luck with a cassowary
Types of tigers still alive today, get *_much_* bigger than lions. Male Siberian tigers get nearly _double._ Even female Siberians ovelap with smaller (adult) male lions.
Hi Simon. Youre nice 😊
There's official video footage of Simon throwing a box full of half-alive newborn puppies into a Taco Bell dumpster.
Fun fact: last mammoths were alive while Pyramids were built
I've never heard 'turtles" pronounced so majestically!
That lion things claws look insane
8:08 - Woolly Mammoths on the Eurasian and North American mainlands went extinct 9,000/7,000 years ago. A small population on Wrangel Island off of Siberia only went extinct 4,00 years ago, and another population on an island off of Alaska lived until 5,500 years ago
Ostriches aren't from Australia though.
@@_NicBP perhaps not, but he very strongly implied it.
Andrew Sarchus sounds like an accountant with a pocket protector.
Titanoboa is fascinating
6:58 Modern day Burmese Pythons eat American Alligators in the Everglades...
So yeah, it definitely would have been eating crocodilians
How many channels has this guy got?
One of my favorite extinct animals, is the Platybelodon. An ancient elephant, with a hippo-sized mouth, inside it’s trunk. Google it, and watch your jaw hit the floor.
For bears, the Kodiak is also worth mentioning.
He definitely meant cassowary
Excellent episode, George
I just spit Diet Pepsi out my nose "very few dietary limitations 🤪🤪🤪🤣🤣😁😁😂😂😂
Smiley Don would make a nice pet.
They have ostriches in Australia? huh... I bet the veterans of the Emu Wars are glad they didn't show up...
(maybe we are conflating two completely different continents and or birds?)
He forgot that the andrewsarchus also gets a saddle with an auto turret on its back and drifts like a boss
All the ivory hunters just rubbed their hands together and went mwahahahaha!
The Andrewsarchus skull looks like a Cubone from Pokemon!
With a couple of recent lists like this one, maybe we could get a list of extinct animals from within the last 500 years or so?
Crikey! A fair difference between an emu and an ostrich! Think you got pranked by your script writer Si!
Ah yes, bringing the mammoth back just in time for the melting of the poles.
So... kelenken guillermoi was a massive meat eating toucan from a long lost paleolithic hell, *CHECK*.
On giant flightless birds the largest "Man" has co-existed with were the Moa in New Zealand. The largest known Moa is (i got the figure from Wikipedia) 3.6m / 12ft tall.
They were hunted to extinction by the Maroi in the 15th century, but archeologists have found more than bones- som sodt tissue ...skin, feathers, muscle have been recovered and studied - so this is another animal we could potentially revive (,given we are as a species responsible for its extinction it seem reasonable thing to me).