The oldest fosil bearing rocks are generally on land, apart from a few places like the sunken continent of zealandia which could have some interesting fossils
Ancient cratons are almost exclusively on land due to the tectonic processes, ocean rocks are mostly dense basalts and are created in the mid ocean ridges, which are then subducted so are very young geologically, continental crust (i.e. sedimentary rocks, which include ocean margins such as depositional basins which my contain fossils) is lighter and has more chance to endure longer without being subducted or buried sufficiently deep to undergo metamorphic changes destroying the fossil evidence.
That image is really badly photoshopped, i don't know why they're using it. If you look up the borealopelta you'll see that it doesn't have that fake jaw and teeth. I swear it's just so they could use it as the thumbnail for clickbait.
@@killerplane1136 sorry to be that guy from like a year in the future, happy 2023 but birds ARE dinosauria it's not that hard look at Wikipedia's dinosaur classification page. Explains it all.
@@iminfinite3412 Made up by palaeontologists as opposed to buyers. But dinosaurs didn't have names, true or otherwise, before palaeontologists named them, seeing as names are labels given to things by humans, and there weren't any around at that time.
@@edgabrielocay3376 What an odd response. Religious people are the most open minded people I've ever known. They simply live by a standard of discipline that increases ones chance at happiness & fulfillment
I have an astronomer friend and he uses this analogy. If you were to stretch out your arm, and take a nail file and file one swipe of your finger nail off. That is the human race. 🤣 It kind of puts it into perspective. Also to know that 99.9 % of all species ever here on earth, have come .... and gone, is also a lesson in perspective and humility. Perhaps something we as a species should be more mindful of.
Love how despite number 1 being one of the most preserved and important fossils In history you not only failed to tell everyone it,s name which is borealopelta and that you didn't mention on how it was so well preserved it had the chemical it used for colour still on it and they know exactly what it looked like and you didn,t even show the correct rendition
If you look up a Nodosaur or the Borealopelta online, both come up with the same mummified Dinosaur. I've ALWAYS known as that Dinosaur as the Nodosaur, as I had not seen it as the Borealopelta.
I have actually seen that borealopelta fossil in person a few times already; it has much more than just the skin and armour preserved, but stomach contents and even melanosomes (which scientists can use to determine the general colour a creature was, this dinosaur in question had a reddish tone). I will say, however, that this fossil is nowhere near the museum’s sole pride and joy. The very same exhibit is home to a fossil exhibiting the (at the time) only known instance of a non-fatal fight between two mosasaurs. The exhibit just prior to those two fossils boasts Black Beauty, among one of the best tyrannosaurus rex skeletons preserved, and known for her black bones
Agree with Katelyn G. The borealopelta / "nodosaur" fossil is stunning. However, the rest of the Royal Tyrrell museum is also incredible, and is well worth the visit even in the absence of the stunning borealopelta fossil.
Did you not notice the fake version of that fossil that this video uses? They spliced the image with another fossile that had an open mouth with sharp teeth!
I've seen Sue at the Field Museum while visiting the Chicago area on business in 2000. Photos and videos don't do her justice...she is truly an amazing beast to behold!
Funny how while talking about the diplodocus and its shorter front legs you literally showed a photo of the brachiosaurus which is known for its much longer front legs, and even circled it. LOL!
My name is Lincoln my mom lets me use her phone to watch dinosaur videos I am 8 years old. My favorite was the trapped fighting dinosaurs! I do really really love collecting fossils, my mom does too!
Dear O.E (Origins Explained) I am ScarVenGer from Myanmar, many of my friends don't speak english or understand them, they say they love your videos but cannot understand them so I want you to study Myanmar urban folklore myth or somethin g I do not know anything about my country so I love all of your videos so Keep Up The Good Work.
i have seen the nodosaur, it was awesome :) it took us 3+ hours to go there, but the whole museum is amazing and has videos from kurzagat in it. forgive the spelling ^
The process of finding a fossil is already so complicated yet it doesn’t end there, ownership and claims over it makes it 10x more complicated. All fossils should be put in museums without people claiming ownership of it when it’s LITERAL HISTORY
I'm not often thankful for business like McDonalds. But they do put money forwards to help academia buy fossils that would otherwise end up in private collections. So they get my thanks for that.
@@kcvail7409 For something like this, I give actual paleontologists the edge over the dictionary (which isn't perfect). I have NEVER heard a paleontologists pronounce it with hard "o"s in all my 27 years.
im surpised you didnt mention the fighting dinosaurs, its a protoceratops and velociraptor that were fighting when they died, and they are still locked in combat. the fossil is currently in mongolia
I've been to the Tyler Museum twice and it is such a great place to be amazed and be a kid again... I went to The Columbia Icefield in BC Canada in 2008 and at the base of the ice field, to the right is a pool of water runoff from the icefield that almost look like a small lake. I grabbed two pieces of golf ball size rocks and slammed them together in hopes of finding a fossil. One of the rocks broke clean in half and there it was! a half inch size TRILOBITE!!! It could possibly be 240-260 Million years old!!!
This creature was like a dinosaur but with "wings, feathers, and hollow bones" ....many, many dinosaurs had feathers and hollow bones and quite a few had wings
It would have been a real sensation if the mosquito actually contained 46mil yr old dinosaur blood, considering the fact that dinosaurs went extinct 67 mil yrs ago...
So the Australopithecus Afarensis, one of the biggest discoveries of Humankind History was named Lucy because of a song that is literally about LSD. I love that.
DNA can definitely last longer than 50 years guys. We have samples of DNA from thousands of years ago. It doesn't last more than a million years, but 50 is slightly inaccurate.
You're a little bit incorrect about Diplodocus, Katrina. It's now no longer thought that Diplodocus could only eat low-lying shrubs and other plants like that. It's now pretty much common knowledge that all Sauropods held their necks at about a 45-degree angle to their body.
New Jersey Hadrosaur? I have this odd image of a dinosaur with an Italian accent telling another dinosaur to make that ankylosaurus 'A deal he cant refuse'
I liked the narrators voice. It is so much more pleasing to the ear than the usual mono toned bores that do this type of work. Thanks so much for the change.
Not for nothing, I get wanting the views and stuff, but the Borealopelta was not carnivore. It is really cool, but the complete fossil should speak for itself without photoshopping carnivore teeth on to it.
No why did you photoshop Borealopelta? My beloved Nodosaur was an herbivore, and did not have sharp teeth. He ate ferns and burnt plants, not other dinos.
Add Cosesaurus to your list. It's a pre-pterosaur without wings, like Sharovipteryx, currently in the Barcelona Geological Museum. It's so well preserved a jellyfish is stuck to its foot.
Imagine a wet single grain of sand with the tiniest amount of oil stuck to it and you basically have the Athabasca oil sands in Canada. No drilling for crude whatsoever.
The dont technically have true teeth. True teeth are made of dentin. Geese have cartilage spikes in their mouth known as tomium. They still hurt though from what I hear!
Referring to the first dinosaur ever discovered- the iquanodon was found before the megalosaurus but it was misidentified. The iguanodon was found in 1822 and the megalosaurus 2 years later was named the first ever dinosaur in science
Turns out they HAVE found intact Dino cells in semi fossilized dino bones. Dinos are only around 10-12k years old and died out early on in earths history.
No they haven't. What was found by Mary Schweitzer were remnants of organic structures preserved in materials less prone to degradation and more likely to survive over long periods of time. They found what looked like blood vessels made from preserved cross-linked proteins and other structures that looked like blood cells made from heme, the iron. If you actually read the papers you would see that they never discovered 'intact dino cells' nor were the fossils 'semi fossilized'. They were literally removed from sandstone and the 'structures' had to be freed from the mineralized fossils with acid soaking.
@@amaizingworld880 No they didn't, they found heme. Just because you saw a video doesn't mean you understood what you saw or that what you saw was real. They have never found blood cells in dinosaur fossils.
@@thehowlingjoker There are loads of Professional scientists whom agree with me. There is no concesus on this either way. Only theroies with holes. Some more plausable than others. Bashing my knowledge with assumptions helps no one.
Aside from Myanmar (Burmese) and its dialects, the hundred or so languages of Myanmar include Shan (Tai, spoken by 3.2 million), Karen languages (spoken by 2.6 million), Kachin (spoken by 900,000), various Chin languages (spoken by 780,000), and Mon (Mon-Khmer, spoken by 750,000).
The Borealopelta seen right at the start of no. 10 has the original lower jaw shut. Someone has added a second lower jaw below the original so that the jaws appear open. They then added Tyrannosaurus teeth to both lower jaws ! Why would anyone do that? It's unscientific and look silly.
The black Hills thing seems heartbreaking. Imagine you paid someone to dig on their land for fossils and after taking your money Money they smell so much more money and renege and try to take the entire thing. I mean this is assuming they told the landowners they intended to take the fossils which I would think for a $5000 fee they would.
Hey everyone, hope you're all doing well during the current madness! Stay safe!
Thanks, you guys do the same. That makes a good episode..."Most Deadly Virus in the World"
In Malaysia especially my hometown kota kinabalu sabah got more cases.. I pray you and everyone here stay safe and take care
@Aunt Cynthia thanks you too i hope you safe and healthy as well
You as well. Stay safe and healthy and keep on doing these videos. Love it
thank you. i appreciate it.
Why in the world did you photoshop theropod teeth on a nodosaur skull?
Cause it's cool
Ikr?!?
My thoughts exactly. Why would a herbivore need sharp teeth...
@@GoHARD99 😂
I came here to comment that same thing
Can you imagine what lies beneath the oceans? What we’ve discovered really is just a small fraction. Amazing.
Very little unfortunately due to the way tectonic plates 'recycle'.
The oldest fosil bearing rocks are generally on land, apart from a few places like the sunken continent of zealandia which could have some interesting fossils
Shiver! I’d hate to see what big things use to be in the ocean!
Probably not much
Ancient cratons are almost exclusively on land due to the tectonic processes, ocean rocks are mostly dense basalts and are created in the mid ocean ridges, which are then subducted so are very young geologically, continental crust (i.e. sedimentary rocks, which include ocean margins such as depositional basins which my contain fossils) is lighter and has more chance to endure longer without being subducted or buried sufficiently deep to undergo metamorphic changes destroying the fossil evidence.
What is that Nodosaurus image in the thumbnail though. Why did you slap some random carnivore teeth on it?
c l i c k b a i t
#10 - Those do not look like the teeth of a vegetarian. If they are, they must of had some really fleshy plants back then.
That image is really badly photoshopped, i don't know why they're using it. If you look up the borealopelta you'll see that it doesn't have that fake jaw and teeth. I swear it's just so they could use it as the thumbnail for clickbait.
Those arent the same fossils, at all. I dont know what they were thinking. If you want to know more about it, look up the sleeping dragon fossil.
dinosaurs are dragons.
@@primodernious Dinosaurs are NOT dragons. Dinosaurs are related to birds.
@@killerplane1136 sorry to be that guy from like a year in the future, happy 2023 but birds ARE dinosauria it's not that hard look at Wikipedia's dinosaur classification page. Explains it all.
The amount of mispronounced names and misinformation in these videos is astounding for something charading as educational.
I had to rewind multiple times because I couldn’t believe how badly they mangled Deinonychosauria
It doesn’t matter what’s it called. The names were made up by the fossil buyers. We will never know the true names of these dinosaurs.
@@iminfinite3412 .......like bob?
@@iminfinite3412 it's like genus names
@@iminfinite3412 Made up by palaeontologists as opposed to buyers. But dinosaurs didn't have names, true or otherwise, before palaeontologists named them, seeing as names are labels given to things by humans, and there weren't any around at that time.
Its amazing just how young the human race is in the whole time scale scheme of things.
Too bad close minded religious people disagree.
@@edgabrielocay3376 What an odd response. Religious people are the most open minded people I've ever known. They simply live by a standard of discipline that increases ones chance at happiness & fulfillment
People jus need excuses to target religious people seriously.😕
I have an astronomer friend and he uses this analogy. If you were to stretch out your arm, and take a nail file and file one swipe of your finger nail off. That is the human race. 🤣 It kind of puts it into perspective. Also to know that 99.9 % of all species ever here on earth, have come .... and gone, is also a lesson in perspective and humility. Perhaps something we as a species should be more mindful of.
Blink of the eye.
Love how despite number 1 being one of the most preserved and important fossils In history you not only failed to tell everyone it,s name which is borealopelta and that you didn't mention on how it was so well preserved it had the chemical it used for colour still on it and they know exactly what it looked like and you didn,t even show the correct rendition
I also didn't get the thought process behind photoshopping serrated teeth onto the facial structure when the video clearly states it's an herbivore
If you look up a Nodosaur or the Borealopelta online, both come up with the same mummified Dinosaur. I've ALWAYS known as that Dinosaur as the Nodosaur, as I had not seen it as the Borealopelta.
Thanks ! Now I’m not gonna waste my time watching this video lol
@@killerplane1136 borealopelta is a genus of nodosaur, but not saying the actual genus name can be misleading
I have actually seen that borealopelta fossil in person a few times already; it has much more than just the skin and armour preserved, but stomach contents and even melanosomes (which scientists can use to determine the general colour a creature was, this dinosaur in question had a reddish tone). I will say, however, that this fossil is nowhere near the museum’s sole pride and joy. The very same exhibit is home to a fossil exhibiting the (at the time) only known instance of a non-fatal fight between two mosasaurs. The exhibit just prior to those two fossils boasts Black Beauty, among one of the best tyrannosaurus rex skeletons preserved, and known for her black bones
Agree with Katelyn G. The borealopelta / "nodosaur" fossil is stunning. However, the rest of the Royal Tyrrell museum is also incredible, and is well worth the visit even in the absence of the stunning borealopelta fossil.
I have a real one in my backyard
Did you not notice the fake version of that fossil that this video uses? They spliced the image with another fossile that had an open mouth with sharp teeth!
I've seen Sue at the Field Museum while visiting the Chicago area on business in 2000. Photos and videos don't do her justice...she is truly an amazing beast to behold!
million years later:
most amazing human fossils discovery by aliens
True lol
Can you imagine how weird humans would look when we are found?? There’s no evidence of ears, or noses or lips
@@jayv5658 Yeah I always wondered if humans had feathers or scales 🤔
I’m 55 years old, and dinosaurs are still cool.
ok boomer
It's so cool you still like them! I'd recommend Ben G Thomas and Trey the Explainer. Those are actually good channels.
Ok I'm 71 and still think dinosaurs are cool
@@carlosdelarosa2747 WHAT DID YOU JUST SAY
when u die they’ll still be cool
Funny how while talking about the diplodocus and its shorter front legs you literally showed a photo of the brachiosaurus which is known for its much longer front legs, and even circled it. LOL!
My name is Lincoln my mom lets me use her phone to watch dinosaur videos I am 8 years old. My favorite was the trapped fighting dinosaurs! I do really really love collecting fossils, my mom does too!
People who REALLY love dinosaurs were dinosaurs before XD
That could be true....mind blown
I love dinosaurs
We could also have been ants....
No, that could never be true.
How???
Dear O.E (Origins Explained)
I am ScarVenGer from Myanmar, many of my friends don't speak english or understand them, they say they love your videos but cannot understand them so I want you to study Myanmar urban folklore myth or somethin g I do not know anything about my country so I love all of your videos so Keep Up The Good Work.
Need to update. Sue is no longer the most complete T-Rex found. It is now Victoria
Nope scotty is the biggest
@@Brutaloris They're talking about the most complete, not the largest...
i have seen the nodosaur, it was awesome :) it took us 3+ hours to go there, but the whole museum is amazing and has videos from kurzagat in it. forgive the spelling ^
The process of finding a fossil is already so complicated yet it doesn’t end there, ownership and claims over it makes it 10x more complicated. All fossils should be put in museums without people claiming ownership of it when it’s LITERAL HISTORY
I'm not often thankful for business like McDonalds. But they do put money forwards to help academia buy fossils that would otherwise end up in private collections. So they get my thanks for that.
Dih-plod-uh-cus. There are no hard "o"s in Diplodocus.
Layla Lockheart THANK YOU
Actually, she is correct dictionary.cambridge.org/pronunciation/english/diplodocus
It’s the matter however you say it
I looked through a lot of dictionary do you say in different ways even Google It’s just how do you see it
@@kcvail7409 For something like this, I give actual paleontologists the edge over the dictionary (which isn't perfect). I have NEVER heard a paleontologists pronounce it with hard "o"s in all my 27 years.
im surpised you didnt mention the fighting dinosaurs, its a protoceratops and velociraptor that were fighting when they died, and they are still locked in combat. the fossil is currently in mongolia
This is what I thought their Dueling Dinosaurs entry was, I was so confused!
I've been to the Tyler Museum twice and it is such a great place to be amazed and be a kid again... I went to The Columbia Icefield in BC Canada in 2008 and at the base of the ice field, to the right is a pool of water runoff from the icefield that almost look like a small lake. I grabbed two pieces of golf ball size rocks and slammed them together in hopes of finding a fossil. One of the rocks broke clean in half and there it was! a half inch size TRILOBITE!!! It could possibly be 240-260 Million years old!!!
The Number 10 was a Ankylosaurus. It's a Large plant-eater armored using he's tail with rock it use to protect by itself on the predator like Trex
It's Borealopelta
Lol you nerd
This creature was like a dinosaur but with "wings, feathers, and hollow bones"
....many, many dinosaurs had feathers and hollow bones and quite a few had wings
Yeh, I saw one fly past my window a moment ago.
i think she's referring to the non avian dinosaurs
@@thehowlingjoker umm ones in my garage o o f I’m gonna die
I luv watching all your videos. I've never missed one video whenever it's uploaded. Thank you for sharing with us Origins Explained 😎👍🏼
It would have been a real sensation if the mosquito actually contained 46mil yr old dinosaur blood, considering the fact that dinosaurs went extinct 67 mil yrs ago...
So the Australopithecus Afarensis, one of the biggest discoveries of Humankind History was named Lucy because of a song that is literally about LSD.
I love that.
10:20 me in Minecraft with an elytra after mining...
What about Zuul or the mother Maiasaur nest or the Protoceratops being attacked by the Velociraptors find?
There is no Dana only Zuul
Ship's an awesome dinosaur.
Those teeth on the mummified nodosaur (borealopelta) are ridiculous. It was a herbivore, yet here it has dagger-like carnivore teeth? Come on!
While Sue is the most complete Trex found, I believe the title for the largest actually goes to Scotty. Can anyone back this up?
It's true! Google it up!
DNA can definitely last longer than 50 years guys. We have samples of DNA from thousands of years ago. It doesn't last more than a million years, but 50 is slightly inaccurate.
I saw Sue many times as a child and it was always just as stunning as the first time each time I saw it
ever wonder how many miners have found dino skeletons and just said screw it and broke it
Just goes to show that the earth has so many secrets to be found, and some are waiting to be discovered
'this was before the idea of a dinosaur was even i n v e n t e d '
You should change the title of this video to "10 Most AMAZING Stock Videos from Shutterstock"
T-Rex is so badass he/she caused a legal dispute in the future involving the FBI.
Me: //hears New Jersey//
My brain: EvErYtHiNg Is LegAl iN nEw JeRsEy
You're a little bit incorrect about Diplodocus, Katrina. It's now no longer thought that Diplodocus could only eat low-lying shrubs and other plants like that. It's now pretty much common knowledge that all Sauropods held their necks at about a 45-degree angle to their body.
* looks at thumbnail *
What the HELL is going on?
New Jersey Hadrosaur? I have this odd image of a dinosaur with an Italian accent telling another dinosaur to make that ankylosaurus 'A deal he cant refuse'
The number one is no Sue… it’s Scottie currently at Royal Saskatchewan Museum in Regina
Imagine a bird flying around with sharp teeth.
me: Thinks of a goose
Hahaha
I liked the narrators voice. It is so much more pleasing to the ear than the usual mono toned bores that do this type of work.
Thanks so much for the change.
What an Extrotrainary video of the history of the world. Thank you for your amazing effort to bring happiness to so many people.
Not for nothing, I get wanting the views and stuff, but the Borealopelta was not carnivore. It is really cool, but the complete fossil should speak for itself without photoshopping carnivore teeth on to it.
Did u really add a jaw with teeth to the ankylosaur for clickbait
Y u p.
@@AltairBlue why did I think you were raptor Jesus
@@brodoodtv8343 idk lol
No why did you photoshop Borealopelta? My beloved Nodosaur was an herbivore, and did not have sharp teeth. He ate ferns and burnt plants, not other dinos.
The idea of people claiming fossils because they happen to be on ''their'' land is puzzling to me. NOT YOURS. IT SHOULD BE PRESERVED FOR EVERYONE.
You forgot to mention that since the blood in the mosquito was 46 million years old then we can be absolutely sure it did not come from a dinosaur.
Add Cosesaurus to your list. It's a pre-pterosaur without wings, like Sharovipteryx, currently in the Barcelona Geological Museum. It's so well preserved a jellyfish is stuck to its foot.
Wait so I can own part of a dinosaur for $6000 but guys paid $250,000 to go underwater in a tictac with a Logitech remote controlling it crazy world
It's amazing when one considers what environmental conditions have to align to create a fossil.
So if I dig for fossils on the coast where I live I'm technically breaking the law? So much for finders keepers
Imagine a wet single grain of sand with the tiniest amount of oil stuck to it and you basically have the Athabasca oil sands in Canada. No drilling for crude whatsoever.
Saw #10 in person. It's really amazing condition. Thought dinosaur wasn't real. But so much fossils found where I live now.
Wasn't that hadrosaur a miosaur which is just one of many hadrosaur types like Lambedosaur and parasaurolophus?
13:42 Thank God they outlined the skeleton, otherwise no one would be able to see it...
What about the mummy of a girl found in Argentina? I know it’s not a fossil, but it’s amazing.
Birds with sharp teeth,,, like geese you mean? 😂
The dont technically have true teeth. True teeth are made of dentin. Geese have cartilage spikes in their mouth known as tomium. They still hurt though from what I hear!
@@gwenstarnes1177 I know that, they act like teeth but have no enamel.
I've seen the scars they can leave! Lol
Referring to the first dinosaur ever discovered- the iquanodon was found before the megalosaurus but it was misidentified. The iguanodon was found in 1822 and the megalosaurus 2 years later was named the first ever dinosaur in science
Narrarator: Hi everyone it's Katrina.
*HURRICANE KATRINAAAAA* ,
*MORE LIKE HURRICANE TORTILLA*
The nodosaur is called Borealopelta.
Turns out they HAVE found intact Dino cells in semi fossilized dino bones. Dinos are only around 10-12k years old and died out early on in earths history.
No they haven't.
What was found by Mary Schweitzer were remnants of organic structures preserved in materials less prone to degradation and more likely to survive over long periods of time. They found what looked like blood vessels made from preserved cross-linked proteins and other structures that looked like blood cells made from heme, the iron.
If you actually read the papers you would see that they never discovered 'intact dino cells' nor were the fossils 'semi fossilized'. They were literally removed from sandstone and the 'structures' had to be freed from the mineralized fossils with acid soaking.
@@thehowlingjoker Yes they did find red blood cells. Saw the video of it.
@@amaizingworld880 No they didn't, they found heme. Just because you saw a video doesn't mean you understood what you saw or that what you saw was real.
They have never found blood cells in dinosaur fossils.
@@thehowlingjoker I have a medical and geology backgrounds, dont assume.
@@thehowlingjoker There are loads of Professional scientists whom agree with me. There is no concesus on this either way. Only theroies with holes. Some more plausable than others. Bashing my knowledge with assumptions helps no one.
WTF????? How do you go from millions of years ago to locked up??????
Your videos are always great
Dinos. always a fascinating subject cause of the age, and size of such terrifying creatures! (This mummy notice the eyes r very large!)
I doubt they're that old.
@@fellow4482Radiometric dating shows they are.
"Most likely not"
2023: Mammoth Meatball
This is sensationalism. Not education.
In what way?
Just imagine what humans can involve in the future
Aside from Myanmar (Burmese) and its dialects, the hundred or so languages of Myanmar include Shan (Tai, spoken by 3.2 million), Karen languages (spoken by 2.6 million), Kachin (spoken by 900,000), various Chin languages (spoken by 780,000), and Mon (Mon-Khmer, spoken by 750,000).
Lot of Karen spoken in America also.
Congrats getting 3 million subs hope you get 4 million subs before 2020 ends
Plant eater with carnivore teeth? Total lie. Click bait
There's dinosaur fossils in Australia that are covered in Opal! They look amazing
Pretty sure the Nodasaur fossil in the first image did not have recurved serrated teeth.... being a plant eater and all. That is akin to clickbait.
I'm questioning this video on the numerous errors 😂
Yeah me too🙄
First thing is the teeth on a plant eater🤣
Btw the Nodosaur now has a name, Borealopelta.
Amazingly persevered after 5,000 years.
Another pathetic young earth creationist
Frozen mammoths deserve a mention
Literally me when I first saw the thumbnail: "Godzilla?!"
I didn’t know about the Montana fighting dinosaurs. I thought you were going to mention the one from Mongolia, the velociraptor and the Protoceratops.
WHOA WHOA WHOA THE SUE ONE IS REAL I THOUGHT ITS A STORY BECAUSE I HAD A HOMEWORK TO READ STUFF AND I GOT THE SUE STORY
One thing to take away from this.....Money is more important than history and education (Greed)
These animals are not millions of years old, only thousands.
Imagine a bird flying around with sharp teeth??? You mean like all of the species like seagulls,crows,cormorants,sea otters etc etc etc (!?!?!)
Hurricanes be like 0:00
Lol. Sue the dinosaur: the discoverers were sued.
The Borealopelta seen right at the start of no. 10 has the original lower jaw shut. Someone has added a second lower jaw below the original so that the jaws appear open. They then added Tyrannosaurus teeth to both lower jaws ! Why would anyone do that? It's unscientific and look silly.
The black Hills thing seems heartbreaking. Imagine you paid someone to dig on their land for fossils and after taking your money
Money they smell so much more money and renege and try to take the entire thing.
I mean this is assuming they told the landowners they intended to take the fossils which I would think for a $5000 fee they would.
Lucy is in the shield Museum in Gastonia North Carolina
i think all animals move fast even worms when scared
@ 4:17...Why show an image of a brachiosaurus when you were talking about a Diplodocus ?
I like fossils.
I love your videos I'm always looking forward to a new video keep up the good work (:
The movie lucy has nothing to do with this lmaoo
That herbivore had sharp teeth...
7:15 how can they find everything but the head 🤣 It is just one of the biggest Bones. Must have been a badass Predator to ripp of his head...
Excelente video. Gracias por educar. Adelante👌
I saw the Nodosaur a few weeks ago.