Something Has Been Making This Mark For 500 Million Years

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  • Опубликовано: 14 июн 2022
  • Paleodictyon, a hexagonal-patterned fossil, is a bit of a mystery. We don’t even know if it’s a trace fossil, or the organism itself. So… what could it be?
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Комментарии • 3,8 тыс.

  • @AvelierPlays
    @AvelierPlays Год назад +3400

    Only explanation is…intergalactic bees coming to Earth to turn the planet into a giant honey pot

    • @rickb3078
      @rickb3078 Год назад +61

      Most likely explanation indeed. I was thinking the same

    • @troylentz6580
      @troylentz6580 Год назад +83

      I mean any other conclusion would just be ridiculous

    • @solomonthefoolish
      @solomonthefoolish Год назад +18

      Brand new sentence right here folks step right up

    • @jimmylaze
      @jimmylaze Год назад +39

      It's bee people 100%

    • @SophiaAstatine
      @SophiaAstatine Год назад +21

      Lava bees

  • @jokervynehahaha5568
    @jokervynehahaha5568 Год назад +1954

    Even amongst fossilized mysteries, hexagons are the bestagons.

  • @ryanwalsh5019
    @ryanwalsh5019 Год назад +639

    Hexagonal stacking is actually the most physically efficient pattern. If you put a bunch of round bubbles together, they will actually make this pattern.

    • @dannycorrea6773
      @dannycorrea6773 Год назад +23

      I've seen that, always found it cool that it defaulted to hexagons.

    • @LineOfThy
      @LineOfThy Год назад +39

      PEOPLE?
      WHAT SHAPE IS THE BESTAGON

    • @TheTuxedoCreeper
      @TheTuxedoCreeper Год назад +19

      There's a hexagon cloud at the poles of the Saturn.

    • @dirk-hennerlankenau4899
      @dirk-hennerlankenau4899 Год назад +2

      honey combs

    • @harryniedecken5321
      @harryniedecken5321 10 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@TheTuxedoCreeper Yes that is there and completely expected based on how thermal convection works.
      You can see the same effect in some cloud formations from a passenger jet looking down.

  • @mersito3955
    @mersito3955 Год назад +56

    I'm swiss and I've found a rock with this honeycomb pattern while hicking in the alps. I thought it was a piece of concrete from a bunker or something like that. I never thought it was a fossil.

  • @toodlesX14
    @toodlesX14 Год назад +2784

    What a surprisingly thrilling fossil! The jump from "we don't know what this is" to "oh, it looks like it's still alive today" to "but....we still can't figure out what it is..." our world is just so endlessly mysterious and exciting!

    • @ryanadcox2654
      @ryanadcox2654 Год назад +30

      Something I think is interesting is that it could be made from frequency given off from earth. At the bottom of the ocean we see this perfect hexagonal pattern formed near the surface and requires not much weight to be on to so it can form. At the surface land level bees form perfect hexagonal designs and studies on how bees inform other members of the hive where flowers are is done through a "dance" where they state that clockwise and counterclockwise rotation plus the time taken to do this give direction but, they also shake during this which isn't mentioned as useful even though to me bees would navigate using 3 points since they fly. Finally perfect snowflakes also form symmetrical hexagonal patterns as they form in the atmosphere.

    • @DianaDeLuna
      @DianaDeLuna Год назад +37

      @@ryanadcox2654 Basalt erodes in hexagonal columns as well (think "Devil's Tower" & Giant's Causeway). Then there's the hugest hexagon in the solar system on the north pole of Saturn! What's up with nature settling into hexagons?

    • @mikethompson2745
      @mikethompson2745 Год назад +17

      Fish egg beds.
      Squishy spheres aligned together will make that pattern. Think on it.
      You're welcome,
      - Not my real name, attribute "in honor of Da Vinci"

    • @donivanpotter2762
      @donivanpotter2762 Год назад

      Hell, people can't even accept the fact transgender people are born. It amazes me how ignorant most people are and how truly little we know even about the human race.

    • @mikethompson2745
      @mikethompson2745 Год назад

      @@donivanpotter2762 ... I could interpret that a few ways... the interpretation most likely what you mean doesn't fair well for you.

  • @CyBirr
    @CyBirr Год назад +376

    One of the stranger episodes. The fact there is modern remains and zero confirmed source organism... amazing.

  • @austinwald2731
    @austinwald2731 Год назад +71

    I found a couple interesting specimens near Bismarck, ND, where there was once a large inland ocean. I thought they were honeycombs, but seeing as how they were found with a variety of other marine fossils, it must be Paleodictyon! One of the ones I found is even agatized!

    • @benvinar2876
      @benvinar2876 2 месяца назад

      There 3d cubes , the nature of space

    • @mm-qd1ho
      @mm-qd1ho 2 месяца назад +1

      Not necessarily. Look up images of Petoskey stones and fossilized Hexagonaria corals.

  • @gregkientop559
    @gregkientop559 10 месяцев назад +14

    Among the first fossils I found as a child. I followed a passion to become a geologist, now retired. Thank You for a great video!

  • @Dee-jp7ek
    @Dee-jp7ek Год назад +2277

    That's hilarious, every single time I'm nerding out about how little we know about the ocean I also need to include a little 'but not megalodon' because everybody's so hell bent on insisting it might still be out there

    • @boyinblue.
      @boyinblue. Год назад +136

      Every time I talk to my grandmother about extinct animals I preface with "it is no longer alive" and she still tries to say it could still be out there.

    • @BigChapDidNothingWrong
      @BigChapDidNothingWrong Год назад +183

      Who's to say it isn't Megalodon creating these patterns?

    • @cwillis92
      @cwillis92 Год назад +63

      @@boyinblue. I mean technically she has a point there have been multiple examples of species thought to be extinct, just for scientist to find the animals years sometimes decades later.

    • @boyinblue.
      @boyinblue. Год назад +133

      @@cwillis92 She is one of the Bigfoot crazed people, she keeps telling me that she thinks mammoths are in the artic causing earthquakes. I'm pretty sure her points are just coming from those paranormal shows.

    • @cwillis92
      @cwillis92 Год назад +43

      @@boyinblue. aww yea that's a bit much. It's always crazy how even the most logical ideas can still lead us to some of the most illogical ideas in other areas of life lol

  • @gabe4804
    @gabe4804 Год назад +535

    One of my favorite fossils, because ot literally represents what's fascinating about paleontolgy: it's like being a detective of the natural science, putting together the little clues you have to solve mysteries sometimes as old as life itself.

    • @johannageisel5390
      @johannageisel5390 Год назад +19

      Scientists: "What are you?"
      Paleodictyon: ...⬡⬡⬡⬡⬡⬡...
      Scientists: "That's no answer."
      Paleodictyon: ..........

    • @wallylasd
      @wallylasd Год назад +2

      Maybe they are related to bees

    • @PondScummer
      @PondScummer Год назад +5

      @@wallylasd highly unlikely

    • @allocater2
      @allocater2 Год назад +6

      reminded me of the quote: "Starfleet was founded to seek out new life - well, there it sits! ...waiting."

    • @johannageisel5390
      @johannageisel5390 Год назад +5

      @@wallylasd Or they are related to things that have realized that hexagons are one of only three geometrical figures with which you can tile an even surface completely. :)
      (The other two being squares and triangles.)

  • @brutalbrital
    @brutalbrital 2 месяца назад +4

    I found an ancient ocean basin above my house in the hills , I found many fossils and won an award for them at high school. I also found many hexagon fossils as well. I never knew what caused them…until now

  • @TechGorilla1987
    @TechGorilla1987 Год назад +1

    @2:37 - It always amazes me that a tattoo can absolutely change the dynamic of how you see someone.

  • @judeangione3732
    @judeangione3732 Год назад +1267

    This is gonna sound crazy but I have been thinking about this for a long time. There are other hexagons in nature - think Devil's Causeway and honeycomb. Here's the thing, if circles are packed touching each other and they expand, they turn into hexagons. There is an easy experiment you can try at home. Get a tube of refrigerator biscuits - not homemade, they have to be perfect circles - put them in a baking pan where they just touch. Bake them and when you take out the pan - hexagonal biscuits. My theory is that you end up with hexagons in nature because there was something there that was originally round - a round organism, a tube, a drop of water, an air bubble. Then they either expand or contract - Devil's Causeway - and voila hexagons. Is it possible that some of this stuff is merely geometry at work in nature.

    • @alexanderlapp5048
      @alexanderlapp5048 Год назад +193

      You just gave me an idea. If biscuits were cut into hexagons instead of circles, there wouldnt be waste dough between the biscuits when they are cut out.

    • @ArsenicDrone
      @ArsenicDrone Год назад +70

      You could have written something a lot more crazy than that. Perhaps there's evidence out there that the source of the fossils is organic, but I wonder if it's not even produced by an organism, but by crystallization of some sort. It would be a bit more surprising if the modern things on the sea floor weren't made by an organism, though.

    • @lordmeow7241
      @lordmeow7241 Год назад +89

      @@alexanderlapp5048 is this the start of a cookie revolution??!

    • @keirfarnum6811
      @keirfarnum6811 Год назад +37

      And many places with basaltic columns. You can find them in multiple places in the US; including the Devil’s Tower which is composed of such basaltic columns. I have been a number of places where they can be found on the side of the road where a highway has been cut right through them.

    • @shamblesgalore7468
      @shamblesgalore7468 Год назад +29

      Cookie theory is true, I've baked many

  • @KooriPlays
    @KooriPlays Год назад +81

    "Who knows what the next dive will bring us? Not Megalodon, that's for sure."
    Crushing dreams with facts and logic.

    • @Krishnath.Dragon
      @Krishnath.Dragon Год назад

      Eh, we might discover another giant fish, or another species of giant squid. You never know.

    • @youtubealt243
      @youtubealt243 Год назад +4

      Honestly, we’re more likely to find a fish sized mosasaur species than megalodon

  • @megardyn
    @megardyn Год назад +15

    All PBS Eons videos are pretty good, but for this one, the sound design really shines. The music is so fitting for the subject matter. Great job to the sound editor!

    • @PotRoast666
      @PotRoast666 2 месяца назад

      I was just thinking how unneeded the music is.

  • @SandyRiverBlue
    @SandyRiverBlue 5 месяцев назад +1

    I'm thinking of an animal that feeds a lot like a woodpecker. With the top layer of the sediment being less soluble than its underlying layer, as soon as an opening is made along with a counter shaft the sub strata of sediment dissolves and is carried away resulting in the hexagonal concavities.

  • @LieseFury
    @LieseFury Год назад +336

    Being a protist doesn't mean it's necessarily related to algae and amoebas. it's just the box we throw everything into when it's not an animal, plant. fungus, bacteria, or archaea.

    • @tsmspace
      @tsmspace Год назад +30

      I'm an antitist

    • @BackYardScience2000
      @BackYardScience2000 Год назад +2

      @@tsmspace you mean antitheist?

    • @TiagoH1710
      @TiagoH1710 Год назад +38

      @@BackYardScience2000 no, a non-protist xD

    • @tsmspace
      @tsmspace Год назад +3

      @@BackYardScience2000 well, not a protist anyway

    • @adhoclavaman
      @adhoclavaman Год назад +41

      Ah, seaweed. The plantiest non-plant to ever plant.

  • @67comet
    @67comet Год назад +402

    It's the crazy "We have no idea" stuff that makes my ears perk up. I loved the feeling when we found the first planet(s). It is a life experience to go from "We don't know" to "We found an answer" .. Great job as always Kelli (and yes, I know I probably spelled that wrong).

    • @Games_and_Music
      @Games_and_Music Год назад +28

      You probably meant exoplanets, haha, or, you're just _reeeaaallly_ old.

    • @67comet
      @67comet Год назад +10

      @@Games_and_Music correct.. Exo

    • @limiv5272
      @limiv5272 Год назад +6

      These videos have end credits with the names of all the people who worked on them if you're curious. They list "Kallie Moore" as one of the hosts, that must be her [seems they don't change the credits per episode to reflect who the current host was]

    • @kaboomsihal1164
      @kaboomsihal1164 Год назад +5

      Lmao someone just outed themselves as a vampire I see

    • @fandroid6491
      @fandroid6491 Год назад

      @@67comet The boy band? Oh no I've been listening too many Kpop songs lately

  • @harryhicks404
    @harryhicks404 11 месяцев назад +4

    I found a stone with the honeycomb pattern on my farm in Alabama. I believe the rocks there were from an ancient mud flat that may had hosted sea life and or simply foamed with bubbles that became stone. A lot of conglomerate there so it developed around different geological events.

  • @modliving
    @modliving Месяц назад +1

    These are likely formed like honeycomb. They are not formed in a hexagonal shape. They are circles placed next to each other and the tension creates the hexagon

  • @troutwarrior6735
    @troutwarrior6735 Год назад +445

    It’s actually not too unbelievable when you think of the geometric shapes that appear in molecules (such as carbon rings), or especially the hexagonal shape of honeycomb. Now I’m just a curious as to what made this!

    • @brentweissert6524
      @brentweissert6524 Год назад +60

      honeycomb is right. contrary to popular opinion, bees do not make honeycomb structures; they make round structures which, when they crowd in on each other, become hexagonal.. i wonder if a similar process is at work here.

    • @Caio-sw7hh
      @Caio-sw7hh Год назад +19

      o think it has something to do with the stability of the angles inside, although, when you study carbon rings deeper, you learn that they arent exact hexagons, they have boat and hat arrengements, cause molecules are 3D

    • @onebylandtwoifbysearunifby5475
      @onebylandtwoifbysearunifby5475 Год назад +20

      @@pbajnow Saturn's pole has a pentagonal ring caused by a double vortex. Oddly, we know what causes that, but not the ocean floor hexagons. Jupiter has a hexagonal pole vortex. It's remarkable such huge shapes exist in nature. And how small these shapes get too, atomic scale.
      This one is a puzzler. Hopefully we don't drive it to extinction before we figure out what caused these hexagons

    • @georgeuferov1497
      @georgeuferov1497 Год назад +13

      Because hexagon is the bestagon

    • @superluminalsquirrel9359
      @superluminalsquirrel9359 Год назад +6

      @@brentweissert6524 I’ve never heard this, more research is needed. ADHD dive into bees incoming lol

  • @cameronstewart8561
    @cameronstewart8561 Год назад +282

    I found paleodyction in core CT scans. Pyrite formed in the fossil which highlighted highlighted it in CT. As I was viewing the scans, I saw the flashes of hexagonal patterns with depth. It was thrilling.

    • @Zappygunshot
      @Zappygunshot Год назад +24

      I don't suppose you have any images or footage of that? Because if you do, and you're at liberty to share them, I imagine that'd look super interesting! And who knows, it might give someone more educated than I some ideas they hadn't thought of yet ;)

    • @coyleigh6902
      @coyleigh6902 Год назад

      Big deal.

    • @warpigs9069
      @warpigs9069 Год назад +2

      Did you catch it and eat it? If so what does paleodycteon taste like?

    • @benvinar2876
      @benvinar2876 Год назад

      It's the fabric of space.

    • @-oiiio-3993
      @-oiiio-3993 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@benvinar2876 The 'fabric of space isn't Spandex?

  • @CristhianYi
    @CristhianYi Год назад +4

    This exact pattern forms when some viscosity exists on the floor level and there is resonance from water above it, check videos of the honeycomb pattern formed on honey when water is stirred gently on top of it. Not so crazy to recreate on this medium.

  • @ericray1676
    @ericray1676 Год назад +1

    My Sister Gave Me Something Like That. She Said She Found It Near Rock Home Garden, In Illinois. The One I Have Looks Better Than Any You Showed. Different, Kinda More Tan. One Side Has Geometric Shapes. The Other Side Looks Like Kind of Tubes. It is My Favorite Rock. I Wish I Had A Camera So I Could Show You How Cool it Is. I Saw Your Picture, And Thought I Had Coral. I Am Glad, It Is Much More.

  • @crystaldragon471
    @crystaldragon471 Год назад +220

    I've found similar specimens in Utah near an extinct hot spring/ volcanic dome. The rocks are travertine calcite, and contain traces of petrified and/or mummiffied plant materials. The area was notably under water during deposition and would have been a geothermal vent where the specimens were found.

    • @_Painted
      @_Painted Год назад +13

      Maybe they are extremophiles, flourishing inside volcanic vents and expanding out to the surrounding sea floor at times when the water is heated during periods of volcanic activity. When the water cools, or maybe when some vented material dissipates, they retreat back into the vents or die off.

    • @_Painted
      @_Painted Год назад +7

      Maybe when a hot spring or vent brings up certain sulfur compounds or petroleum, this creature colonizes the area, scavenging the chemicals as its food source. It could even be a familiar organism that changes its behavior to build the hexagon structures only in certain scenarios to take advantage when an underwater eruption provides its favorite food. Or maybe it builds and uses the structures as a survival tactic only when food is particularly scarce or the environment is hostile. Maybe when exposed to rising levels of toxic gases, it builds the hexagons as a filtered environment to live in until a return to more livable conditions.

    • @crystaldragon471
      @crystaldragon471 Год назад +9

      @@_Painted I've thought maybe they are a crustacean that built hives similar to a wasp/muddobber that would have, as you said, sought food sources around geothermal vents. Or perhaps even some kind of organized microbial colonies or some kind of coral-like organism. Hard to say, but I tend to believe it is biological in origin.

    • @keirfarnum6811
      @keirfarnum6811 2 месяца назад

      I like my giant bee hypothesis. 😆

    • @benvinar2876
      @benvinar2876 2 месяца назад

      There 3d cubes, the nature of space

  • @ScooBdont
    @ScooBdont Год назад +232

    I have a few fossils that have this honeycomb pattern. there are relatively common where I live in southern Indiana. I put them in vinegar overnight and it really exposes the individual cells and remnants of what was inside them. Great video 🙂👍
    Edit: Just to be clear, the fossils I’m referring to are not fossils of the same creature featured in this vid, it just has the same honeycomb pattern ✌️🙂

    • @leagarner3675
      @leagarner3675 Год назад +12

      Ikr, I have a similar. I'm in Iowa. I assumed someone, just not me, knew what it was

    • @PerfectionHunter
      @PerfectionHunter Год назад +4

      Got any Twitter where we can see pictures of these bathed in vinegar?

    • @GTaichou
      @GTaichou Год назад +3

      Same here on the shores of Lake Michigan in Wisconsin!

    • @ScooBdont
      @ScooBdont Год назад +10

      @@PerfectionHunter for some reason I can’t say goo gull in the comments or it gets erased. This will be the third time I’ve tried to reply to you. Search the G word for “fossils in vinegar” or something similar. It’s commonly used to clean and/or expose fossils

    • @butterybiscuit346
      @butterybiscuit346 Год назад +2

      Fellow Hoosier here, but more north. Didnt know we had common bestagon fossils hanging around.

  • @CusterSurvivors
    @CusterSurvivors 10 месяцев назад

    I found a large chunk of this on my Texas property. It's definitely dried/fossilized mud, but the walls are hypnotizing. Three inches (~1 cm) in depth.

  • @taytayz3
    @taytayz3 Год назад

    I found these all the time. Crystalized so beautiful when they sparkle ✨️

  • @PendragonDaGreat
    @PendragonDaGreat Год назад +82

    I remember watching an IMAX movie about an expedition to find these guys probably 15 years ago, but I could never remember the name "paleodictyon" and I was beginning to think the entire thing was a dream, until just now with this vid.

    • @patlee8539
      @patlee8539 Год назад +5

      YES. I saw that film, but I could never remember the name! I even tried to Google it once, but I couldn't find it!

    • @mirthenary
      @mirthenary Год назад +12

      @@patlee8539 It's called Volcanoes of the Deep Sea, I've had a blu ray copy of it for years

  • @Lucius_Chiaraviglio
    @Lucius_Chiaraviglio Год назад +65

    This story of elusive sub-surface organisms reminds me of my experiences as a kid on the beaches of Georgia and its neighboring states: These beaches had common things that would squirt water (actually usually a mixture of water and sand) up after a wave would retract . . . and no matter how hard I tried I could never find the responsible organism. I also noticed that the beaches had plenty of tiny rapidly burrowing clams (Donax variabilis?), which would be plausible candidates for a squirting organism, but these didn't seem to do that.

    • @fried-dodo-thigh
      @fried-dodo-thigh Год назад +14

      Those are hermit crabs. If you dig deep and quick enough you can catch them.

    • @richardcarter9107
      @richardcarter9107 Год назад +1

      I'm in SC, and love the beaches.

    • @supme7558
      @supme7558 Год назад +1

      Thats cuz they dig once you start to

  • @annameowwwwww
    @annameowwwwww 2 месяца назад +1

    Volcanoes of the Deep Sea (2003) covers this topic! It has always been one of my favorite films

  • @Blessed_by_Yeshua
    @Blessed_by_Yeshua Год назад +3

    I could write forever about this subject. From the tiniest particles to the largest things in the universe, hexagons are everywhere. Molecular structures that make up chemicals are hexagons that are three dimensional, possibly four dimensional.
    I had a near death experience and when I lifted my head up I saw what I said was “golden honeycomb.” I muttered “golden honeycomb” over and over again. There were billions and billions or trillions of them three-dimensional as far as the eye could see. I couldn’t see past them. I knew if I walked in that direction I would walk through the veil and I would be dead and in a heavenly realm.
    Two years later my father died and when he did, I felt his body move through me or was pulled through me by the Holy Spirit or an angel. As he was pulled through me I felt him in every molecule of my body and saw that same golden hexagonal pattern across his forehead as he passed through me. I could feel it. I don’t know how to explain it other than to say I could feel the hexagons I could feel my father‘s presence I could hear him. He said four words to me that he had never said in my lifetime. It was hard for him to express himself. He wasn’t taught growing up by his parents to say I love you or express pride in his offspring. He said “I’m proud of you.“ I heard it in every tiny molecule of my body. Then as he faded through me and away I jumped up and down and laughed and cried and threw my arms up in the air, saying “thank you.“ He had given me the best gift I really ever got in my life.
    Hexagons are the foundation of everything. I am so surprised that people who have near death experiences don’t describe anything like that happening.

  • @ericwilson8867
    @ericwilson8867 Год назад +80

    I love how in science, "we don't know yet" is just as interesting as an actual answer, sometimes even more.

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad Год назад +11

      I like it when there are multiple competing theories for what it is and all of them are equally possible until further evidence is found.

    • @demonzabrak
      @demonzabrak Год назад +1

      @@WanderTheNomad *appear equally possible
      The rules, while including things like observer effects, are not themselves subject to observation effects. The right answer was right the whole time, it only appeared to be as likely as the other wrong answers. The difference is subtle, but important.

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad Год назад

      @@demonzabrak I didn't think I would ever say this, but isn't that just semantics?

    • @demonzabrak
      @demonzabrak Год назад +1

      @@WanderTheNomad in a surprising plot twist, semantics are important. It’s literally how any of us can convey information reliably. (Yes. It is 100% semantics. Feel free to ignore the rest)
      That said, I’ll try and make more sense. The original phrasing you used implies that the rules of physics become concrete and definite when observed, which is something you should avoid implying about a rule set that includes literal changes based on if something is observed or not. Double slit experiment, electron uncertainty, quantum states changing between entangled particles, things of that nature.
      It muddies the waters a bit, and I kinda feel like a lot of modern problems could be significantly mitigated if we were all sorta just better at communicating. So I make a lot of semantic arguments and meta arguments about other peoples arguments to people on RUclips.
      It’s basically trolling, but in a way that hopefully makes people better at communicating.

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad Год назад +2

      @@demonzabrak If your goal is improving people's communication skills, this seems like quite the roundabout way to do it.

  • @diegog1853
    @diegog1853 Год назад +243

    I was about to comment something like: We will never know what could possibly have made such strange fossils. Then a miracle happens, the strange animal actually is still alive among us (Edit: we might have to improve our mining craft in order to excavate these seemingly fallen guys out of their sub-aquatic forts at night), how often does that happen? And still... we don't know what it is, such a bizarre mix of events.

    • @PigeonLord
      @PigeonLord Год назад +29

      It happens more often than you’d think; I mean, it’s still unlikely and quite rare but they’re called Lazarus taxon. I’m not sure if that applies to this thing entirely since it never really disappeared from the fossil record, but was found to still exist in modern times after fossils of it were found… so maybe?

    • @JohnVKaravitis
      @JohnVKaravitis Год назад +1

      English, please.

    • @diegog1853
      @diegog1853 Год назад +12

      @@JohnVKaravitis Sorry, not first language.

    • @assgoblin-uh9zu
      @assgoblin-uh9zu Год назад +26

      @@diegog1853 Your english is perfectly fine. Perhaps John was referring to some of the scientific terminology in Pigeon Lord's comment?

    • @brunona7361
      @brunona7361 Год назад +20

      Amogus

  • @JDrwal2
    @JDrwal2 Год назад +1

    I found exactly the same stone with the same pattern on a river bank in Rochester Hills, Michigan, USA.
    That is near the Great Lakes.

  • @vomm
    @vomm 8 часов назад +1

    My first thought was: Crystals.

  • @richardedgemon758
    @richardedgemon758 Год назад +80

    That allergy test comparison was so specific but I'm shocked at how accurate that is. Eons sure does know their audience 😂

  • @lizzykay9912
    @lizzykay9912 Год назад +33

    The regular pattern reminded me of something you'd see with a sand dollar on the shore, they burrow and leave regular patterns. So I would have guessed something from the urchin family (Clypeasteroida) , but it's amazing to have such clear fossil records going back so far with little change.

  • @KaiiWinter-nw4vi
    @KaiiWinter-nw4vi 2 месяца назад +1

    That kind of digestive adaptation would be a useful trait to engineer .

  • @xemiii
    @xemiii Год назад +2

    this is by far the most interesting I've ever heard of in paleontology or biology, looks so surreal and other-wordly

  • @Krane2000
    @Krane2000 Год назад +74

    Do we know for sure these tubes are made by an organic creature? I know hexagons show up a lot in things like thermal geology, and if they’re found on the sea floor near vents it might be related to that?

    • @elijazfrazelsassafraz3100
      @elijazfrazelsassafraz3100 Год назад +18

      I feel like the people working on this have probably either ruled that out or they don't have enough info to do that yet.

    • @rdizzy1
      @rdizzy1 Год назад +4

      Can probably tell by the chemical make up of the fossil, or samples from these in the ocean, there would inherently be chemical deposits from the venting.

    • @abebuckingham8198
      @abebuckingham8198 Год назад +2

      Hexagonal lattices are a common crystal shape but typically they'd get this property from their molecular structure and it becomes less uniform as you scale up. These are uniform at large scales and made of sediment so that suggests a living creature rather than a geological phenomenon.

  • @geoffzuo9831
    @geoffzuo9831 Год назад +137

    Very cool, would like to see more content on the more ambiguous stuff like this

    • @pwned689
      @pwned689 Год назад +3

      See their podcast!

    • @KellyClowers
      @KellyClowers Год назад +4

      Pretty sure they have an episode about the Tully Monster

  • @sandruu
    @sandruu Год назад +1

    You know, I once found a bucket in the sea taken over by a web of coral in hexagon shape while scuba diving.

  • @scraps7624
    @scraps7624 Год назад

    8:12 "As if perhaps they were doing some sort of hydroponics things to farm their poop bacteria"
    Man what a sentence that was

  • @liambohl
    @liambohl Год назад +46

    Maybe paleodictyon lives as a biofilm on the walls of the tubes? Or maybe it's something with legs that digs and maintains the burrows like an ant? This is such a fascinating find!

    • @Bluepizza1684
      @Bluepizza1684 Год назад +11

      all i can think of is sea ants and how wierd they might look
      (edit: so there is a species that is called a sea ant/lice but i was thinking more litteral sea ants)

    • @limiv5272
      @limiv5272 Год назад +8

      Hmmm could a biofilm create tubes? That would be scary

    • @PondScummer
      @PondScummer Год назад +5

      considering it's age it might be unlikely to be anything with legs

    • @DelinahLovesHouseBunnies
      @DelinahLovesHouseBunnies Год назад +4

      The host said that it couldn't be dug burrows, because the corners were too sharp (4:11-4:22). Given the info in this video, which is all I know so far, I'm leaning toward paleodictyon being a glass sponge, rather than a xenophyophore. But, I wonder if it could possibly be both!?
      Could a xenophyophore have symbiotically combined with a glass sponge, the way algae combined with corals? Mmm, or maybe not symbiotically; hiding in the hexagonal tubes and waiting for the food to be swept in would benefit the xenophyophore in feeding and avoiding predation, but I'm not sure how the glass sponge would benefit from the arrangement. ////Bunny kisses for all!

  • @joemerino3243
    @joemerino3243 Год назад +39

    Inexplicable geometric markings from across the unbridgeable gulfs of time, made by organisms native to the fuliginous abyss, still extant, yet totally unknown to modern science?
    Lovecraft would have loved this episode.

    • @Ragnarra
      @Ragnarra 10 месяцев назад +1

      Indeed he would have.

    • @tomspoors768
      @tomspoors768 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@Ragnarra Perhaps he wrote it...😐

  • @jforce91
    @jforce91 Месяц назад +2

    So with no organic remains associated with the fossils, and no one home in the actual burrows on the sea floor (so far) are we sure this isnt some gas (or fluid) escape structure, which would be why it's so common in turbidites and near hydrothermal vents?

  • @jsmcguireIII
    @jsmcguireIII Месяц назад +1

    The study site is so extreme it’s like a mars mission.

  • @Beryllahawk
    @Beryllahawk Год назад +36

    The first thing I thought on seeing the fossil was "beehive" - and then I thought about just how common a hexagonal shape can be in certain things. Like chemistry, right? It's kind of a natural form that performs certain functions, but there's so MANY functions that can link to that arrangement - definitely a puzzler!! And fascinating that even though they found modern "new" ones, there was no one home?! That's so weird and wondrous!

    • @fubberpish3614
      @fubberpish3614 Год назад +2

      beehive was my first thought as well! but if it's known from 500 million years ago from deep sea sediments, I don't think it's a beehive :P

    • @audreydeatherage2131
      @audreydeatherage2131 Год назад +1

      check out the video "hexagons are the bestagons" by CGP Grey!

    • @Beryllahawk
      @Beryllahawk Год назад

      @@audreydeatherage2131 Yeah! That's a great one!

    • @johnfreeman4435
      @johnfreeman4435 Год назад +5

      Hollow hexagons occurring is no surprise, since any group of multiple things of malleable form, but equal size (like bubbles), will automatically seek to fill in as densely as possible (because gaps are weak spots, and as 'nature abhors a vacuum', natural movement will 'seek' to fill in the weaknesses in the pattern) and form hexagons. However, what makes these formations so interesting is that they are solid hexagons with hollow sides (tubes)! This means it's NOT forming from the automatic process of the settling of malleable equal size bodies, but forms theoretically UNDER a fully opaque mass (mud), yet with extreme regularity!
      As the diagram showed when she was talking about the vent tubes not all being the same height, those vent tubes form in the MIDDLE of single submerged tube lines, NOT at the intersections...but how did those positions end up so constantly equidistant, and spaced exactly as needed to keep from crowding any OTHER coming (or prior) tube positions? The tube height difference WOULD seem to point to the organism(s?) originating from the center point and expanding outward, but then WHY would the tubes be so perfectly spaced in relation to each other even as it expanded outward?? Logic (and normal biological patterns) would call for the arrangement to get more widely spaced the further the growth of the creature (colony?) got from the point of origin, yet in total denial of that tendency to expand through growth, the pattern remains consistent, no matter how far from the high tube 'center' of the organism (colony). And the fact that ALL tubes connect to ALL OTHER tubes in the same way, without ever breaking away on the edges...
      I'd never been aware of this fossil before this video (that I recall, I'm old enough that memory no longer serves so well), and I find the whole thing fascinating!

    • @Cocollyt
      @Cocollyt Год назад

      Sonja, you gotta watch CGP Grey’s hexagon video. It’s fascinating. I’d link it but RUclips will assume I’m a bot, it’s easy to find and worth a watch. ✨

  • @jayw6034
    @jayw6034 Год назад +66

    I used to find myself thinking "I mean, really though?" when I watched scifi. Then I hear about stuff like this and then I realize how unimaginative scifi really is compared to real life.

    • @pauloazuela8488
      @pauloazuela8488 Год назад +7

      Writers are humans whatever inspiration we have is always connected to what we know . Being too abstract in Sci-fi can also ended up ruining it like a random brush stroke of paints that doesn't resemble anything

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 2 месяца назад

      It's not that sci fi is unimaginative.
      It's more that the process of natural selection is the ultimate random number generator for species differentiation.
      The human brain cannot hope to compete with over 600 million years of continuity with that process .

    • @larsonfamilyhouse
      @larsonfamilyhouse 2 месяца назад +2

      Truth is stranger than fiction.

  • @mydogbrian4814
    @mydogbrian4814 10 месяцев назад

    > Bees don't make hexagon shaped wax cells.
    - They make round ones. Which, because of their composition, stretches into more stable hexagon shapes.
    - These 500 million year old fossils may work on the same principle. But may be natural gas bubble channels doing the same thing in certain types of soil.

  • @mrhassell
    @mrhassell Месяц назад +1

    Bees are central to pollination of many plants, evolved on Earth. It stands to reason, Bees!

  • @lubetester
    @lubetester Год назад +4

    I live on a farm in Northern Illinois on top of the Marengo Ridge, and every year after the plows come through the fields, I find these.

  • @tiktaalik7160
    @tiktaalik7160 Год назад +97

    I’m confused.
    The only reason we found these things living today was because we found the holes they make. They use those holes to feed with. Despite that, we found no dna and nothing inside it, like it was already abandoned. But it had to have been there, since the only reason we found it was because of the holes it uses to feed with. Did I miss something or did this just make things weirder?

    • @eljanrimsa5843
      @eljanrimsa5843 Год назад

      We shot a squirt gun at it.

    • @BobbyHill26
      @BobbyHill26 Год назад +95

      She mentioned that sediment only builds up in the areas they are found at a rate of 1 cm every 650 years or something like that, so these whole could be abandoned for decades or even centuries and would be nearly unchanged in appearance.

    • @tiktaalik7160
      @tiktaalik7160 Год назад +7

      @@BobbyHill26 oooo yah that makes sense.

    • @limiv5272
      @limiv5272 Год назад +26

      @@BobbyHill26 I really hope whatever made these shapes hasn't gone extinct in that time

    • @smittywerben1849
      @smittywerben1849 Год назад +24

      @@limiv5272 well the bottom of the ocean is pretty much untouched by humans thankfully so whatever it is it has a better chance down there.

  • @noatrope
    @noatrope 9 месяцев назад

    "But what about the IOUIs?"
    "Invertebrates of Uncertain Identity? I don't think they exist."

  • @TEE19622
    @TEE19622 Год назад +1

    One concept caught my attention... when she described how they seem to prefer areas where sedimentary buildup was slower... wouldnt they be hidden in areas where buildup was faster? How is it known that they arent there as well?

    • @FlorianWendelborn
      @FlorianWendelborn Год назад +1

      Well, given that it’s likely that they need or at least want the water circulation they’d probably die if buildup is too fast for them to outgrow

  • @WildFyreful
    @WildFyreful Год назад +68

    This is a fossil I've *never* heard of before now. Fascinating!

  • @tokilladaemon
    @tokilladaemon Год назад +41

    Im so mad that I did an entire marine biology degree and no one ever mentioned this

    • @MrZoomZone
      @MrZoomZone Год назад

      dont be mad, it's a fossil. It might have been land based - like ancestors of bees building these things ... for their degree courses.

  • @mjfrohlich
    @mjfrohlich 3 месяца назад

    Will there be more Eons podcasts made? They're so neat! I listen to them when I'm lying in bed. They're relaxing, but also compelling.

  • @darianbell9614
    @darianbell9614 10 месяцев назад

    The pattern immediately makes my brain go to those videos where they set sand on top of speakers and the vibrations cause the sand to form into a complex geometric patterns.

  • @neemapaxima6116
    @neemapaxima6116 Год назад +138

    I'm trypophobic but I still managed to watch this whole episode for the sake of science

    • @stephanie3121
      @stephanie3121 Год назад +13

      Same 😂😅

    • @SPECTRE_Madman
      @SPECTRE_Madman Год назад +12

      I have trypophobia as well

    • @bartho5212
      @bartho5212 Год назад +12

      That’s awesome! You did your own exposure therapy 😊 (Side note: I am sincere, I know tone can read obscure at times.)

    • @eyle6839
      @eyle6839 Год назад +9

      It was kind of hard for me, i had to just listen at some points

    • @bigpicturethinking5620
      @bigpicturethinking5620 Год назад +10

      Lol, that “fad” was a few years ago. You can all drop the quirky act now. We get it, you’re different.

  • @justmilfy
    @justmilfy Год назад +253

    During a dmt trip, it looked like the universe had a neon blue gridding all over (mapping out space) that had the same pattern. Obviously doesn’t mean much, but it’s interesting how geometrical shapes seem so unnatural to us to form in nature.

    • @ThePoxx
      @ThePoxx Год назад +5

      Yo can you tell me more about Ur trip?

    • @lulumoon6942
      @lulumoon6942 Год назад +9

      Seen that same netting.

    • @gfloflo
      @gfloflo Год назад +27

      I was on Shrooms and every i looked I saw fractals and hexagons like that. Nuts what we can create with some chemicals in our mind

    • @Nedula007
      @Nedula007 Год назад

      yea yea yea. OK druggie

    • @himedo1512
      @himedo1512 Год назад +37

      That's just the grid map. We're in a Turn based strategy

  • @LandonStevens
    @LandonStevens 8 месяцев назад

    Scientists: we don’t know, but it’s rad as hell

  • @spellingquestionable
    @spellingquestionable 2 месяца назад +1

    Insects were at their largest around 300 million years ago, during the late Carboniferous and early Permian periods. This was the time of the griffinflies, giant dragonfly-like insects with wingspans of up to 28 inches.
    Heritage Daily
    The Carboniferous period lasted from about 359 to 299 million years ago. Fossils from this period show that giant dragonflies and huge cockroaches were common.
    The Paleozoic era, which lasted from 542 to 250 million years ago, is divided into six periods. The last two periods, the Carboniferous and the Permian, saw the development of the largest insects.

  • @BoomBoomBrucey
    @BoomBoomBrucey Год назад +11

    The only thing we know for sure is, hexagons are bestagons.

  • @gottathinkupanewone
    @gottathinkupanewone Год назад +13

    I used to have a Y-shaped piece of fossil like that. I always just assumed it had once been part of an organism from the bottom of a long-gone body of water. It just had the look of a petrified organism.

  • @Hezekiah1
    @Hezekiah1 2 месяца назад

    Sphere stacking will always make this pattern as long as a sphere are the same size. Kepler conjunction naturally occurs everywhere

  • @electricwizard3000
    @electricwizard3000 2 месяца назад

    A grid of bubbles form on the ocean floor from gasses, which escape from below. The mud hardens, but eventually all but the base of these grids wear away, leaving these naturally occurring patterns.

  • @lordgarion514
    @lordgarion514 Год назад +17

    "Squirt guns for science"
    Fun fact: the Super Soaker was invented by a literal rocket scientist.

  • @TomatoFettuccini
    @TomatoFettuccini Год назад +8

    I love how every few episodes either PBS Eons or SciShow reminds us that Megalodon hasn't survived.
    "No guys, Megalodon definitely _is_ extinct."

    • @Secret_Takodachi
      @Secret_Takodachi 7 месяцев назад

      there a lot of idiots in florida that need to be reminded of that daily 😂

  • @veronicavoehl
    @veronicavoehl 5 месяцев назад

    When I think of the consistency of Paleodictyon I think of the Earth's frequency being the constant and somehow the vibrations creating the pattern and it solidifying over time.

  • @awesometopics1988
    @awesometopics1988 2 месяца назад

    Or an animal that burrows holes in the ocean bottom and when it hardens its like tubular structures , when pressed against eachother makes hexagons ..circles make hexagons when pressed against itself maybe

  • @sugarfrosted2005
    @sugarfrosted2005 Год назад +8

    5:15 Protist is more or less a junk drawer. They can be as related to each other as plants are to animals.

  • @Krypto137
    @Krypto137 Год назад +7

    When I saw your community post about it, my first thought was it might be imprints from those scale trees you made a video about years ago. They look identical. But then I looked it up and these are found in the ocean, so it couldn't be.

  • @lazarusrat6159
    @lazarusrat6159 Месяц назад +1

    IDK if it's possible but it would be really cool if they found out it was a really really ancient thing like, from the time of Charnia.

  • @the6ig6adwolf
    @the6ig6adwolf 4 дня назад +1

    That's the tread pattern of a Vans shoe.

  • @jakenguyen7463
    @jakenguyen7463 Год назад +11

    Really heartening to see how quickly this channel has grown.

  • @PharaohFluidity
    @PharaohFluidity Год назад +28

    Mind-blower, wow. Seems that the hexagonal formations have a maximum size, which steers me away from corals, sponges, mollusk colonies, worm colonies, bacteria and fungi. An individual organism is my best guess. Echinodermata, the starfish family have very geometric shapes and a limited size.

  • @xbrandi12345x
    @xbrandi12345x Год назад

    I love this comment section. I have never seen so many people happy or thrilled about hexagons. Hooray for hexagons!! 🥳

  • @prestonbacchus4204
    @prestonbacchus4204 2 месяца назад +1

    It's left over from a fossilized fungal colony formation.

  • @r-pupz7032
    @r-pupz7032 Год назад +6

    Hexagons are the bestagons. Nature knows what's up ✨

  • @kmk8284
    @kmk8284 Год назад +27

    As CGP grey once said:
    Hexagons are the bestagons

  • @mikekilburn3552
    @mikekilburn3552 Год назад

    When you add sound vibration to this honeycomb texture it will actually vibrate within the circles themselves And causes levitation. Hence the reason bees hum and fly.

  • @nodescriptionavailable3842
    @nodescriptionavailable3842 Год назад

    I'm a paleogeologist and can tell you without a doubt that these are the footprint of a vans slip on loafer

  • @SplatterRaptor
    @SplatterRaptor Год назад +14

    Kind of remind me of Rhabdammina spp. tubes. See three way junctions and tubes in micro palaeo preps quite often from quiescent environments. Also see a lot of pyrite rods from time to time of unknown origin, usually just call them burrows. Could be these. Something I’ll pose to my work colleagues.

  • @proximacentaur1654
    @proximacentaur1654 Год назад +6

    05:05 Xenophyophore might be my new favourite animal. I heart the deep sea.

  • @thomasdimlad8112
    @thomasdimlad8112 Год назад

    I have seen this hiking in the Utah desert, but we were under a prehistoric sea once upon a time.

  • @1244CC
    @1244CC 2 месяца назад

    I have a large one I found in the upper peninsula of Michigan from the ancient sea bed that was here once upon a time.

  • @edschultheis9537
    @edschultheis9537 Год назад +4

    It is not a surprise that these are nested and hexagonal in shape. Such a hexagonal shape is simply the most efficient way to approximate a round hole (or cell) while covering a comparably large area and while leaving no unused spaces between cells. Honey bees have also figured this out. Another example... When many round balls are put onto a 2-dimensional surface and then bunched together, they will ALWAYs bunch together in a hexagonal pattern, as that is the position which requires the least energy to maintain its shape.

  • @BigNWide
    @BigNWide Год назад +40

    Repeating hexagons is a "tiling" pattern, not a "fractal" pattern. Fractals have repeating parts that are different in size, unlike Paleodictyon. Since the repeating pattern of this fossil is all the *same* size and shape, the pattern is called a "tiling" or a "tessellation".

    • @jacobc-k9224
      @jacobc-k9224 Год назад +14

      You’re right that this particular pattern is definitely a tiling, and not really a fractal, but things are little more complicated than that. First, a tiling can also be a fractal, in the case of tessellated squares or equilateral triangles, for example. But also, fractals need not be self-similar at all, and don’t need to have repeating elements except in the most abstract sense. For example, the rough shape of a coastline is a fractal, since it will exhibit that roughness more-or-less at any distance scale.

    • @UnitSe7en
      @UnitSe7en Год назад +2

      Tessellations are fractal in nature, by definition. You are wrong.

    • @BigNWide
      @BigNWide Год назад

      @@UnitSe7en Please cite a source for your claim. Even a simple search shows that "Fractals are infinitely complex patterns that are self-similar across different scales." and they are "an irregular geometric structure that cannot be described by classical geometry"

    • @BigNWide
      @BigNWide Год назад

      Things are always more complicated, if you dive deeper.

  • @Stroopwaffe1
    @Stroopwaffe1 12 дней назад +1

    Flying spaghetti monster or something similar feeding holes is my best guess

  • @briansimmons6832
    @briansimmons6832 Месяц назад

    They are tube worms I've seen them diving around 110 ft. On the sand bottom they form this shape with the large numbers of them crowded together!

  • @westrim
    @westrim Год назад +4

    At the beginning I thought "seems obvious to me that it's the cells of a nest for larvae or eggs" and I still think that.

  • @Games_and_Music
    @Games_and_Music Год назад +14

    That's pretty cool, my guess would still be some kind of sponge or coral.
    Then again, some kind of worm could still be possible as well, as the center worms would be 'older' and bigger than the ones on the edges, which could explain why the center tubes are slightly bigger.
    But it would be a weird construction for worms, as they usually don't share burrows as far as i know, unless they're clone clusters.
    Corals would also be a stretch, as there would have to be living tissue inside those tubes blocking the water flow, which would basically negate the 'current flow theory' use of the tubes.
    Sponges would seem the most likely still, or, seabees.

    • @nothingnobody1454
      @nothingnobody1454 Год назад +3

      Seabees

    • @Dragrath1
      @Dragrath1 Год назад +1

      To be fair while sponges or a near relative could fit the bill its also possible it might not be an animal at all frankly it could even be prokaryotic since multicellularity has evolved a number of times in bacteria.
      Whatever it is if we define it to be a sea bee we can change the question to what is a sea bee. :P

  • @randallmarsh446
    @randallmarsh446 Год назад +1

    I found similar items in rock quarrys ..mostly out in the desert southwest .. i finally came to the realization that these were hornet nests .which were made by ground hornets only after walking by a ledge in a quarry did i see hornets and bees comming from the side of the ledge .. as i got closer i came to the conclusion that what i wa sseeing layng on the ground printed in hexagonal shaapes were from the insects who had tunneled and made their nests in the ground.
    when the heavy monsoon came these nests would fill up with silt ,clay and other minerals sealing them in an airtight form then when they would dryout the levels would break of into sheets depending on the size of the colony ..

  • @trumanlarelllambros5808
    @trumanlarelllambros5808 Год назад +1

    I’ve seen what looks like rust in perfectly circular patterns on sandstone in Southern Utah. I want to know where those come from

  • @Pawfunia
    @Pawfunia Год назад +6

    Oh my, I have this fossil. I was always sure it's just a part of some building, never sure what to think about it

  • @cobalt6467
    @cobalt6467 Год назад +8

    Ah yes, the honeycomb shape. Still feels weird that nature makes a lot of them in a lot of places

  • @ericheine2414
    @ericheine2414 11 месяцев назад

    Maybe it's a coral. Like an Coral.
    You know sponges, Coral, jellyfishes,
    The big three of the invertebrates.
    That's what you'd expect to find down there.

  • @wcraft
    @wcraft Год назад

    That's funny. That same pattern is on the back of a lot of porcelain floor and wall tiles. It provides a little more surface area for mortar to adhere to.