Fossil Found in Kitchen Counter | National Geographic

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  • Опубликовано: 28 май 2009
  • After a factory had found a 40-million-year-old whale fossil in a limestone kitchen counter, researchers investigated the stone's fossil-packed quarry, which could shed light on the origins of African wildlife.
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    Fossil Found in Kitchen Counter | National Geographic
    • Fossil Found in Kitche...
    National Geographic
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Комментарии • 626

  • @unapologeticallyme8513
    @unapologeticallyme8513 4 года назад +68

    That would make the coolest counter top ever!!

    • @jeffreylindsey1757
      @jeffreylindsey1757 4 года назад +3

      Yes it would. Would make one heck of a conversation piece! Part Kitchen counter, part museum. 😊

    • @ME_Toons
      @ME_Toons 3 года назад

      True and pretty ecpensive

  • @cillyhoney1892
    @cillyhoney1892 8 лет назад +423

    I would pay so much $$$ for a marble counter top with fossils in it.

    • @hanoverfisk570
      @hanoverfisk570 6 лет назад +12

      I can make that countertop

    • @maces1405
      @maces1405 6 лет назад +8

      Cilly Honey I would too. But only for my retirement house. Lol.

    • @lezzman
      @lezzman 6 лет назад +5

      I'd buy one to mount on my wall as art!

    • @judeirwin2222
      @judeirwin2222 6 лет назад +16

      Go to Portugal. There are dozens of marble and limestone quarries and MANY of the slabs I have seen contain fossils. It's very common to see fossils in marble. And it isn't expensive to buy when you go to source and cut out the middlemen. Practically every Portuguese house has counter tops and stairs of marble. Go to any big public building or hotel and take a look at the flooring. I bet you spot plenty of fossils - mainly cross sections of bivalves and belemnites.

    • @janmac86
      @janmac86 6 лет назад

      that's amazing

  • @leighton300
    @leighton300 4 года назад +90

    10 years later i get a recommendation!?

  • @RevBillyRayCollins
    @RevBillyRayCollins 13 лет назад +133

    I live up here in Williamsburg, Virginia by Waller Mill Lake. There are some creeks that flow into the lake, and I go there every now and then searching for fossils. I've found some shark teeth and some old bones but the most interesting item I discovered was a vertebrae of some sort of animal. It's obviously really old and preserved like a rock, but I've done volunteering with the Jamestown Archaeologists before and I've taken courses in geology at college, so I know the difference between rock

    • @Aramintava
      @Aramintava 7 лет назад

      Either whale or mammoth. That whole area was underwater in the Pliocene and whale fossils are everywhere.

    • @3DPDK
      @3DPDK 6 лет назад +6

      Hi Rev. I grew up in Richmond. Most of tidewater Va. is sandstone sediment, not really conducive for finding really old fossil remains. You are more likely to find artifacts of the Mattaponi (north of the James R.) and Powhatan (south of the James R.) Indians who lived and hunted most of eastern Va. There are various places in Va that give up the occasional fossil, but most of what you will find are from marine life. Keep hunting - you never know ... The most ancient fossils of all fossils can be found out in the Blue Ridge Mountains. People all the time find trilobites and other fossilized shell and exoskeleton creatures which lived in the sea during the Paleozoic era.

    • @droolingfangirl
      @droolingfangirl 6 лет назад

      On the Maryland side of the Chesapeake Bay is Calvert Cliffs State Park, well known as a place you can find fossils.

    • @judeirwin2222
      @judeirwin2222 6 лет назад +1

      A "vertebra" (singular); some "vertebrae" (plural).

    • @DarnellHendeason-dk3uw
      @DarnellHendeason-dk3uw 6 лет назад

      RevBillyRayCollins : I'd like to volunteer

  • @hosarisariho3423
    @hosarisariho3423 4 года назад +34

    They have been studying so much and spending money on animal bones.
    Why not spend a part of that money to protect and conserve animals that exists today.

  • @jakewestmusic
    @jakewestmusic 10 лет назад +129

    What's a Hwale?

    • @ImAlwaysHere1
      @ImAlwaysHere1 6 лет назад +26

      Was gonna say the same. It must be Stewie after he grew up.

    • @kesselrunner
      @kesselrunner 6 лет назад +39

      It's that big creature that swims through the hwater. ;-)

    • @nickyannajones
      @nickyannajones 6 лет назад +3

      Jake West bahahahahaha bahahaha nice

    • @dejavum2685
      @dejavum2685 6 лет назад +16

      At first I thought he was saying quail, like the birds

    • @judeirwin2222
      @judeirwin2222 6 лет назад +5

      WHALE. Largest mammals in the world. For goodness' sake.

  • @mohammadgilangfauzan4142
    @mohammadgilangfauzan4142 4 года назад +23

    Welcome to "the think that i found in recommendation"

  • @conversely123
    @conversely123 15 лет назад +31

    Easily answered! As the sea receded, any low lying areas of the sea bed would have been cut off by the receding water, forming huge lakes. Just like the old salt lake at 'Salt Lake City'.
    The same thing applies for the area of Egypt where this fossil was found. An area of sea became land-locked, the water evaporated to be replaced by deserts, leaving the buried remains of sea creatures.
    Deserts are made of sand, and sand is made by water. Ergo; where you have deserts, you once had water.

    • @wafercopenhafer8536
      @wafercopenhafer8536 6 лет назад

      conversely123 ayy i live by the great salt lake

    • @DavesNotHereEither
      @DavesNotHereEither 6 лет назад +6

      The most common component of sand is silicon dioxide in the form of quartz. The Earth's landmasses are made up of rocks and minerals, including quartz, feldspar and mica. Weathering processes - such as wind, rain and freezing/thawing cycles - break down these rocks and minerals into smaller grains...

    • @maxbrewster245
      @maxbrewster245 6 лет назад +3

      @conversely123: Not likely. If whales got trapped in a lake that then dried up, they would likely die in the lake well before the lake fully dried up, due to there not being enough food in the lake for them to eat and/or the lake becoming too shallow for them to swim around. So then you'd have whale carcasses lying around in shallow water, where the remaining creatures in the isolated lake would scavenge the whale remains. It would also rot and fall apart and bacteria would feast on it too. Finally, the lake might completely dry out, leaving the bones exposed to the sun and wind, which would eventually turn them to dust, leaving no trace of the whales.
      The only way a whale could be fossilised is if it was rapidly buried under much sediment so that scavengers could not disrupt the body, and so that the mineral rich moisture in the sediments could petrify the remains.
      To rapidly bury a whale under much sediment requires some catastrophic event like a major flood sweeping a large mudflow into the area and overpowering and burying the animals there. Noah's flood is an excellent candidate to explain the presence of fossils all over the world.

    • @Jungleland33
      @Jungleland33 4 года назад

      There's a desert in Antarctica.
      Not much sand though.

  • @MREGO871
    @MREGO871 6 лет назад +1

    This is so bizarrely surreal! So awesome! Great documentation and video National Geographic!

  • @npeace312
    @npeace312 4 года назад +1

    I worked for a high end builder for several years and loved going to the local stone and marble supplier to look at their stock. Some amazing slabs from around the world. Even saw a couple with great fossils. They were very expensive though. Our clients could afford them. Me not so much.

  • @DurzoBlunts
    @DurzoBlunts 4 года назад

    Oh my... Talk about a one of a kind kitchen. Amazing find!

  • @Mrbfgray
    @Mrbfgray 8 лет назад +14

    "Exotic marble, colorful granite".... maybe just a sloppy sentence but it sounds like granite and marble are the same thing, they are NOT. Oh...and landmasses *are still shifting*, they never stopped. One can 'often' find fossils in marble because it's a direct decedent of sedimentary rocks where as one NEVER finds fossils in granite as it originates from molten rocks. Fascinating vid however.

  • @7Ghos
    @7Ghos 13 лет назад +31

    awesome kitchen top

  • @wirelessone2986
    @wirelessone2986 5 лет назад +2

    Amazing counter top!

  • @chocobrowniewin
    @chocobrowniewin 6 лет назад +51

    Don't read the comments guys... just don't. XD

    • @BlGGESTBROTHER
      @BlGGESTBROTHER 4 года назад

      I just started to read them. I'm guessing the comments are full of creationist claiming that this is proof of Noah's flood. Let's see if I'm right!

  • @jannisares
    @jannisares 11 лет назад

    That is seriously a great find, the cutter did a fine job.

  • @johnhail6981
    @johnhail6981 4 года назад +10

    They shower the giraffe but he didn’t get a shout out like the other animals

  • @ZombieNoodles13
    @ZombieNoodles13 5 лет назад +1

    Honestly, a table with a fossil in it would be really cool.

  • @donhouse2920
    @donhouse2920 6 лет назад +2

    Pretty KOOL 🖒
    how much for a Italy granted countertop 🤔

  • @brianjones866
    @brianjones866 4 года назад

    That dude handled that fossil through the doorway. “Kart yea I’ll just carry it guy”

  • @heidi681
    @heidi681 6 лет назад +2

    🌿👀 thank you, good vid

  • @jlettis
    @jlettis 13 лет назад

    You have been giving me some daily chuckles with this funny chatter. It's like trying to explain a calculator to a cow. You either have to be drunk or have a good sense of humor to try. I have a good sense of humor and drink. :)

  • @jason9307
    @jason9307 15 лет назад

    they are amazing group of people.
    Its a difficult job, discovering the bones especially.

  • @SchoolrejecT
    @SchoolrejecT 15 лет назад +35

    A Wh-ale?
    Say Way-
    Now say Ale.
    Now say Whale
    "Wh-ale"
    NO -SLAP!

    • @peety6333
      @peety6333 4 года назад +1

      Ha ha ha ha ha ha

  • @evalevy2909
    @evalevy2909 6 лет назад

    Where can I see the full episode?

  • @Olivelover
    @Olivelover 15 лет назад +1

    That's awesome!!!!

  • @jeffreylindsey1757
    @jeffreylindsey1757 4 года назад

    Facinating Geology stuff!

  • @betosgarage
    @betosgarage 4 года назад +1

    Imagine finding a counter top in your fossil

  • @hudsonh3985
    @hudsonh3985 6 лет назад +20

    Yo how much for a countertop with a fossil you think?

    • @wirelessone2986
      @wirelessone2986 5 лет назад

      Thousands...they are very expensive...a company sells them out of the green river formation

  • @TEDavis
    @TEDavis 4 года назад +3

    'En-countered' Fossils.

  • @bluesdirt5889
    @bluesdirt5889 6 лет назад

    At the thorton lime stone quarry in Illinois they found a 900 lbs meteorite . At one time it was a sea

  • @foxshows
    @foxshows 15 лет назад

    That would be so cool to find one in you counter top at home!

  • @redlipsblacklace3373
    @redlipsblacklace3373 4 года назад

    BEAUTYFUL thank you ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @GunmetalRaven
    @GunmetalRaven 15 лет назад

    There's a sort of relative of theirs called an Okapi. it has a neck longer than a normal gazelle but not quite as long as a Giraffes.

  • @eddieking2976
    @eddieking2976 4 года назад +2

    I would literally💩 myself if I found fossils in my kitchen countertop. I mean literally💩 myself 🤪

  • @markpianoman
    @markpianoman 15 лет назад

    Exactly!

  • @HenryGarcia7714
    @HenryGarcia7714 15 лет назад

    Ima search for fossils on my kitchen counter top now lol

  • @blackeaster
    @blackeaster 15 лет назад +1

    Yes, they can. *Carbon* dating has a limit up to ~50,000 years. There are other isotopes they use for radiometric dating and you can go back further than 50,000 years.

  • @isaiahwolftail867
    @isaiahwolftail867 4 года назад +1

    I think humans should be waaay more careful for every stone we cut. Every ground we dig

  • @kadhine
    @kadhine 15 лет назад

    Very cool!

  • @drgoodtom
    @drgoodtom 12 лет назад +15

    sometimes, i think i really need jesus in my life. I've got this deck i'm trying to build and i think he'd have some good ideas on how to go about it.

  • @anural25
    @anural25 15 лет назад

    Great video!
    A mason - a builder in stone, brick, etc.

  • @halflifefreak1
    @halflifefreak1 13 лет назад

    @8zeitgeist it was a regular stone at first but they just made it into a kitchen counter tile.

  • @tobyclark1399
    @tobyclark1399 4 года назад +3

    Wow would love to have a fossil in my countertops!

    • @MR.73
      @MR.73 4 года назад

      They found a new one in a countertops in egypt

  • @liamdineen-herzog3059
    @liamdineen-herzog3059 11 лет назад

    Interesting

  • @Halloween6969
    @Halloween6969 15 лет назад

    Cool !

  • @jlettis
    @jlettis 13 лет назад

    Last night as I was looking at my overgrown lettuce with the seeds and their fluff. I pulled out some seeds and looked at them and noted the way the seed carrys itself through the air with the fluff. So what do you think about that? 1. Wow isn't it amazing how the plant perceived that their was wind and figured out that this cotton texture was the best way to carry itself through the air to reseed further away. How it intuitively understood aerodynamics and through random chance came to be.

  • @Fdeubcfhbbjhfd
    @Fdeubcfhbbjhfd 3 года назад

    I just had fossil granite just installed. It’s BADASS

  • @amuruderanto4442
    @amuruderanto4442 4 года назад +8

    I thought he said quails
    😂

    • @jessicak88
      @jessicak88 4 года назад +1

      Amuru Deranto omg same! That’s all I hear 😂

    • @amuruderanto4442
      @amuruderanto4442 4 года назад +1

      Glad i'm not the only one
      😅

  • @jessedrake1033
    @jessedrake1033 4 года назад

    Now that's way kewl

  • @maayongaga729
    @maayongaga729 4 года назад

    Omg I would be lucky if my countertops has a design of dinasor's fossils.

  • @f.demascio1857
    @f.demascio1857 6 лет назад

    So cool.

  • @Brianswers
    @Brianswers 15 лет назад +1

    I want that countertop :)

  • @jakeknelsen2318
    @jakeknelsen2318 4 года назад +12

    40,000,000 years ago?
    Are you sure?

    • @alexaez2946
      @alexaez2946 4 года назад +1

      They said what ever they wanted - they think we are stupid enough to believe them

    • @wokeeye6441
      @wokeeye6441 4 года назад +2

      They said 4000 years ago!! Didn't you hear them? If you want crazy evolution stuff go to "Answers in Darwin" and listen to A.Ham. leave the scientific community alone you evolutionist!!!

    • @jakeknelsen2318
      @jakeknelsen2318 4 года назад

      Eye Pop Compilations
      Your sarcasm is dry. Lol!!

    • @wokeeye6441
      @wokeeye6441 4 года назад +1

      @@jakeknelsen2318 I beg to differ, i just refilled it a second ago

    • @jakeknelsen2318
      @jakeknelsen2318 4 года назад

      Eye Pop Compilations 😂😂👍

  • @pmarceau
    @pmarceau 15 лет назад

    Giraffes' necks grew longer?
    I didn't know there were short or medium necked Giraffes.

  • @gayeinggs5179
    @gayeinggs5179 4 года назад

    If you look at the limestone blocks in many places in bath for instance you can see fossils in the blocks

  • @austinbartose6527
    @austinbartose6527 4 года назад +6

    So the oceans used to be higher. Guess we caused the oceans to rise during the Jurassic period too

  • @Cosmickitten2012
    @Cosmickitten2012 6 лет назад

    so crazy wow

  • @syahran1518
    @syahran1518 6 лет назад +1

    it's been almost a decade since this video uploaded

  • @drunkgorilla
    @drunkgorilla 15 лет назад

    wow.

  • @GunmetalRaven
    @GunmetalRaven 15 лет назад

    They actually have. If you look back, they used to be MUCH bigger and many actually had gills outside their body - like the primordial gill shark. Alligators used to be much larger and smaller as well (alligator-crocodile-cayman are the main types today).
    But you should also take into consideration that things that are more successful tend to have more babies and tend to thrive. If a mutation pops up that helps either animal in lifestyle - you'll eventually see more of them.

  • @SbrBiker
    @SbrBiker 6 лет назад +1

    I would love to have a counter top in my kitchen or bathroom with fossils embedded in it!!

  • @judeirwin2222
    @judeirwin2222 6 лет назад

    Cripes. The 'locator square' for Egypt on the NGS animated map of shifting continents was big enough, don't you think?! It was supposed to 'locate' modern day Egypt, but took in quite a few other countries. Not the most precise model, and one that isn't something you'd expect from "geographers"!

  • @janegael
    @janegael 13 лет назад +5

    Wouldn't you just kill to have a fossil whale on your counter top?

  • @russianbot8423
    @russianbot8423 5 лет назад +4

    Metamorphic rock does not contain sedimentary soft tissue fossils.

    • @BlGGESTBROTHER
      @BlGGESTBROTHER 4 года назад

      Did you even read the description? It says it was a LIMESTONE counter top. Limestone isn't a metamorphic rock, it's a carbonate sedimentary rock!

  • @JnixMarshel
    @JnixMarshel 6 лет назад

    nice

  • @michaeluvnikita
    @michaeluvnikita 15 лет назад

    Is your fridge really that dirty lollllll

  • @MissMarshall
    @MissMarshall 4 года назад

    Sad to watch the earth being sliced and diced.

  • @crownroyal111
    @crownroyal111 15 лет назад +2

    Id love one of those slabs for my counter top :D

  • @hill89
    @hill89 15 лет назад

    i wish i found something like that

  • @stxguy
    @stxguy 15 лет назад

    i agree - but what does that have to do with ancient whale bones?

  • @Windwakernoob
    @Windwakernoob 15 лет назад

    There are other isotopes they use for radiometric dating and you can go back further than 50,000 years.

  • @RHawkeyed
    @RHawkeyed 13 лет назад

    @jlettis yep, it's a theory along side the theory of gravity.

  • @maranatha8768
    @maranatha8768 4 года назад

    Wow

  • @vincej4319
    @vincej4319 4 года назад

    Breathtaking bull!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @ihavetreefiddy
    @ihavetreefiddy 15 лет назад

    I don't know.
    All I wanted to hear was an answer, not questions.

  • @Bicth97
    @Bicth97 15 лет назад

    they could make that as a cool counter but put fake ones in and sell it i would buy it XD

  • @MyLifeOfficial
    @MyLifeOfficial 4 года назад

    This dude's like... *Hkhquale*

  • @speedwagonfoundation9693
    @speedwagonfoundation9693 2 года назад

    Imagine finding a fossil in your bathroom floor tile

  • @NathanChisholm041
    @NathanChisholm041 6 лет назад

    Problem is the world hystory has been so mix and muddled up know one knows what is what!

  • @Flyborg
    @Flyborg 15 лет назад

    Although it would be entirely possible that we could have been the only species to have evolved in our direction, there were several other human-like branches. One example is neanderthals, which were physically very different then us and genetic evidence confirms that they were not human, however they built tools and buried their dead. There's a decent series on RUclips called "how evolution works". I can't quite remember if it covers primate evolution, but it certainly covers the basics.

  • @RHawkeyed
    @RHawkeyed 13 лет назад +2

    @jlettis "Why how does a frog become a lion through random mutation?"
    It doesn't.
    The frog and lion share a common ancestor.
    If you mean, how new species come to be? It's called the theory of evolution, you should try and read about it sometime. It involves survival of the fittest and varying environments.

  • @muhammadshafeeque3094
    @muhammadshafeeque3094 4 года назад

    Hello sweet heart. ....darling ooouhhh. ...really kimti jagah ki baat hi bahetar hoti hai jo patthar is wakht hashil kiye ja rahe hai sach mein ye apne aap mein kabile tarif hai wandar full fantastic

  • @spykexboi
    @spykexboi 15 лет назад

    i cant tell if you're serious or being sarcastic lol but thank you

  • @xander55577
    @xander55577 14 лет назад +1

    Wouldn't you expect to find the same diversity of animal life in a layer of mud from a flood deposit that we see today rather then different speices at different layers, many of whom no longer exist?

    • @BlGGESTBROTHER
      @BlGGESTBROTHER 4 года назад

      Please don't use logic with the creatards. It causes them extreme mental anguish.

  • @CalebZed
    @CalebZed 15 лет назад

    where'd you hear that?

  • @PaisleyPlace
    @PaisleyPlace 15 лет назад

    Gonzo: Actually you are wrong. There is a lot of information important to professionals online; hwr, to gain access to the information requires an acct w/a professional of specific fields or accts via hospitals & major medical institutes where professionals can go online to read various current and archived medical journals. I've read plenty of medical journals in my time. It's much easier to bring up the info digitally, when available, than tossing through yrs of print back-issues.

  • @ihavetreefiddy
    @ihavetreefiddy 15 лет назад

    lol. i didnt want to get you mad or anything. its just that i am really curious about this. thanks.

  • @wesjohn2
    @wesjohn2 13 лет назад

    @80VideosMan08 I only use them as fire starters, reading them sucks.

  • @RevBillyRayCollins
    @RevBillyRayCollins 13 лет назад

    and a bone. But this is no rock, I've shown it around and everyone agrees its a bone, but to what animal? This vertebrae is at least 6 inches in diameter and maybe a little over 4 inches tall. I need to find out , however, if this thing is from a whale, which I believe, or perhaps another large creature, possibly extict, like a dinosaur. Either way, Im glad I found it and glad I did my part to preserve history.

  • @LessTalkMoreDelicious
    @LessTalkMoreDelicious 4 года назад

    Spaghettiiiii! *italian accent*
    😆🍝

  • @bazookallamaproductions5280
    @bazookallamaproductions5280 4 года назад

    but fossils are really common... nearlt any sedimentary rock will be FULL of fossils. especially in places that were once underwater. eg, south jersey, kansas, any coastal areas, lowlying regions, ancient lakebeds, anywhere with limestone, etc.
    just google "how to identify sedimentary rocks" then break them open along the seams.

  • @CalabusDabus
    @CalabusDabus 15 лет назад

    The coccyx as you call the "tail bone" Is not vestigial as is it connected to various tendons, muscles, and ligaments. Also, to be transitional, you need a lot more then a few hundred to claim its transitional, for the amount of time being said.

  • @caseyclawson91
    @caseyclawson91 15 лет назад

    me too

  • @susietowers7331
    @susietowers7331 6 лет назад

    Great...now everyone is going to want one...

  • @aaronschannel373
    @aaronschannel373 6 лет назад

    If Egypt was submerged during the time of the dinosaurs how could have there been whales. The time differences between whales and dinosaurs is huge

  • @sirMAXX77
    @sirMAXX77 15 лет назад

    if you were the supervisor of the stone yard would you give the slabs containing fossils away to reaserch or see an opportunity and sell them at a very lucrative price to "exclusive" clients?

  • @CalabusDabus
    @CalabusDabus 15 лет назад

    You obviously didn't read what I said. "Just because a wolf is different than a dog, doesn't mean it evolved differently, it simply means they adapted to their environment differently."

  • @johncgibson4720
    @johncgibson4720 6 лет назад

    Thumbs up. Not bad at all.

  • @Brianswers
    @Brianswers 15 лет назад

    yes ;)