The Rocky Road for Triassic Mammals

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  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024
  • It always amazes me how close mammals came to being completely extinct during the Triassic Period. This video I explore the fossil record of mammals during this chaotic period in Earth's history, and how are lineage nearly expired 252 to 200 million years ago. The chance of our own success was anything but guaranteed.
    Check out my first video here: • Episode 1 Bestiapilosu...
    Here are the two books I recommend:
    www.amazon.com...
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    Check out my Patreon Page here:
    / benjaminburger

Комментарии • 39

  • @andrewsarchus4238
    @andrewsarchus4238 Год назад +8

    Another compelling and important video - thx! Personally I don’t think that intelligent life could only have evolved from mammals. Dinosaurs (eg Struthiomimids) with binocular vision, expanding brains and hands with opposing “thumbs” had all the ingredients needed for the runaway evolution of intelligence that - for poorly understood reasons - happens in humans.

  • @edwardlulofs444
    @edwardlulofs444 Год назад +6

    Thanks. I really liked your video. I haven't had a chance to learn about life in the Triassic since I was a child. Then I went off into the physical sciences. Now I have the time to learn all the news that I missed in the last 60 years. The books look interesting too. I have a book about how life returned after the ice age. I have read it many times - it is that interesting to me.

  • @martinfernandez882
    @martinfernandez882 Год назад +7

    So glad you're uploading frequently again Dr. Burger! We really missed your in depth paleo content here on the Tube. I love to think about the ancient Mesozoic conifer forests, to imagine these little guys going about living alongside little pterosaurs and proto birds.

  • @thedarkmasterthedarkmaster
    @thedarkmasterthedarkmaster Год назад +5

    To think the Dycynodonts almost were the dominant groups in the Mesozoic, I wonder what would have happened if they had been

    • @eybaza6018
      @eybaza6018 10 месяцев назад +1

      If not for the Great Dying I bet Dicynodonts would continue to do just as well if not better over time,perhaps surviving into the modern day.

  • @tahabayrak478
    @tahabayrak478 Год назад +1

    Hi teacher! You are very kind and nice teacher to listen! I love your way of teaching us something about dinosaurs and please continue to make videos ! We love you!

  • @nickzaytz5712
    @nickzaytz5712 Год назад +2

    Great, fantastic video! Love it!

  • @benjaminclegg7109
    @benjaminclegg7109 Год назад +8

    my problem with the Drake equation is the jump from "probability of life" to "probability of intelligence". There are a LOT of big steps in between there, whose probabilities are not known, and likely very small. (Apart from some astronomical ones overlooked, like: fraction of planetary systems with large planets in stable orbits to allow billions of years of stable planetary orbits of smaller terrestrial planets in habitable zone (apparently the presence of a Saturn-like planet in ours was crucial to prevent Jupiter from drifting nearer to the sun and disrupting the orbits of the 5 terrestrial planets), presence of a large moon to stabilize climate through stabilizing axial tilt, fraction of rocky planets that are not pure ocean worlds - very hard to have a radio-technology-capable civilization develop on a water world, etc)

    • @edwardlulofs444
      @edwardlulofs444 Год назад +1

      I agree completely with how speculative the Drake equation is. I am sure that Drake took a lot of negative feedback for this equation. But the equation exists now. "... three stages in scientific discovery: first, people deny that it is true; then, they deny that it is important; finally they credit the wrong person." Alexander von Humboldt

    • @mathewritchie
      @mathewritchie Год назад +1

      The abundance of phosphorus.

    • @edwardlulofs444
      @edwardlulofs444 Год назад +2

      @@mathewritchie It could be. I think that multicellular life could not exist without collagen which was rare before there was oxygen in the atmosphere.
      It's interesting how one thing can trigger another thing which then results in something essential needed for a new form of life.

    • @benjaminclegg7109
      @benjaminclegg7109 Год назад +2

      Right. I have nothing against the concept of the drake equation, just that it did not include a lot of both astronomical/geological steps with their own probability, and the jump from “origin of life” to “intelligence capable of being detected with radio signals” has so many steps with small probabilities included that I agree with Benjamin - if one glosses over those steps without evaluating each one, one has to assume that the number is ridiculously small as a starting point

    • @benjaminclegg7109
      @benjaminclegg7109 Год назад +1

      Here is a fun one towards the end of the sequence: “ready massive energy supply that can be accessed via low tech means to facilitate origin of electrical devices: i.e.: most likely fossil fuels, requiring a long period with high rates of organic deposition.. . There is a converse to this: Say we do wipe ourselves out in the end but after we depleted fossil fuels on this planet - would that prevent a future intelligent species on this planet from radio-technology-capable (astronomically detectable) advancements beyond what was doable in antiquity through 17th century for as long as it would take to build up massive coal and oil deposits?

  • @mogenscamre3762
    @mogenscamre3762 Год назад +3

    Thank you. I really enjoy your uploads

  • @RudolphRanchMaster
    @RudolphRanchMaster Год назад +5

    I really appreciate the time and effort you take to share this wonderful and interesting knowledge with us. Thanks again.

  • @mikesnyder1788
    @mikesnyder1788 Год назад

    Very fine program, Dr. Burger! This is one of my favorite eras in our planet's ancient past. Many thanks again!

    • @mikesnyder1788
      @mikesnyder1788 Год назад

      So much excellent information here and, four months later, I am watching once more. Thanks again, Dr. Burger

  • @cdineaglecollapsecenter4672
    @cdineaglecollapsecenter4672 Год назад +2

    Great video!

  • @charlesjmouse
    @charlesjmouse Год назад +6

    Thank you for yet another excellent and thoughtful video.
    To pick up on the other end with regard to 'high intelligence' and it's likely extreme rarity a few drastically oversimplified thoughts:
    I would suggest us humans are barely capable of 'high intelligence' at all and everything we have achieved so far is the result of barely sufficient ability and numbers until the last 2-300 years or so.
    If one considers any 'ability' within a population usually follows a normal distribution one might argue the vast majority of us are really only capable of being functional within our environment and society - novelty and innovation being restricted to a tiny proportion at the 'high' end of said distribution.
    Now consider the Neanderthals, seemingly our closest peers. There is seemingly nothing to choose between them and us but in spite of having a good 100k year head start their technology for want of a better word 'stagnated', why? Given what we know I would expect the normal distributions of 'abilities' for Neanderthals had something like a 95% overlap with ours, so close in fact that I would expect any random Neanderthal brought up in modern society would do just fine. The tiny difference that made all the difference was maybe our slightly 'higher' distribution along with greater overall numbers affording us just enough extra 'innovators' that we not only came up with newer technologies but they were able to stick over time... even so if you look at the last 300k of H. Sapiens 'progress' it's obvious it was very touch-and-go for most of our existence - innovation and 'progress' have really only exploded as our numbers have.
    In short 'we' may be the only known 'high intelligence' in the universe, and yet I would argue we barely made it to our 'lofty' position and even today only a tiny proportion of us just about qualify. Yes, I err on the 'Rare Earth' side of the Fermi Paradox debate while also recognising 'we' hardly qualify.
    I hope that was interesting to some. Please recognise I took some dreadful leaps of oversimplification for brevity, no need to pick all too obvious holes.
    PS
    Dr Burger,
    Thank you so very much for you thought-provoking and highly interesting videos. Speaking as an interested amateur I find your point about the possible alternate phylogeny of Monotremes and Multituberculates most intriguing - I've tried to look in to the subject of 'protomammals' on numerous occasions and always found it confusing, not being able to line up in my head what the texts say with what photos seemed to present.
    More than likely just my stupidity but at first glance this 'alternate' narrative seems to make more sense to me.
    Thank you again.

  • @mommyjo01
    @mommyjo01 Год назад +1

    Great video! I'm enjoying your Planet Earth class. Learning a lot of really cool things. You are an awesome teacher!!

  • @cdineaglecollapsecenter4672
    @cdineaglecollapsecenter4672 Год назад +4

    We're the only highly technical civilization, not the only intelligence.

  • @Aengus42
    @Aengus42 Год назад +5

    I think the crossing of our trachea and oesophagus was a damned risky move! That could've done for us many times over! I blame the Mudkips!

  • @Lydian7lc
    @Lydian7lc Год назад

    Love the videos dude plz keep em coming

  • @aukrest
    @aukrest Год назад

    Very informative!

  • @Titus-as-the-Roman
    @Titus-as-the-Roman 10 месяцев назад

    I'm thinking about that One creature back in the Cambrian that survived, and it's descendants succeeded in surviving, eventually leading to us. Talk about a Hard Road to travel.

  • @miquelescribanoivars5049
    @miquelescribanoivars5049 15 дней назад

    27:51 Those teeth are uncanily similar at first glance to the teeth of some Murinae rodents.
    BTW, there is still a chance mammalian types earbones evolved more than once, apparently early Monotremata still had a Postdentary channel and therefore may had evolved independently from Therians, there's a chance this happened in again in the Haramiyidans if Multituberculates descended from them.

  • @1joshjosh1
    @1joshjosh1 Год назад

    Dr. B B kicks a**.

  • @ayaanali7379
    @ayaanali7379 Год назад +1

    Can you tell about indian dinosaurs like the Rajasaurus

  • @mickobrien3156
    @mickobrien3156 Год назад

    Does every geologist wear an Indiana Jones hat?
    Baseball caps are too.... pedestrian?

  • @Titus-as-the-Roman
    @Titus-as-the-Roman 10 месяцев назад +1

    nice expose', "The Meek Shall Inherit the Earth" couldn't be more true. The Triassic was just Weird, evolution gone rampant, I guess eventual Humans, the Weirdest of the Bunch, from this conflagration should have been expected.

  • @rursus8354
    @rursus8354 Год назад +3

    No, we're not the only intelligent species in the known universe, we're the only known intelligent species in universe.

  • @hsdinoman2267
    @hsdinoman2267 Год назад

    that herrerasaurus meme was kinda annoying

  • @DanielHensley-lj7pr
    @DanielHensley-lj7pr 6 месяцев назад

    Not reptiles at all .

  • @VicariousReality7
    @VicariousReality7 3 месяца назад

    Ridiculous useless equation

  • @livelyvortex2961
    @livelyvortex2961 Год назад +2

    I love this so much! Huge fan, new to your work and binging your content. I like that you feature Ray Trolls art. I thought I was going into Paleontology back in 1992 but did not. I love and appreciate your expertise and thank you for great videos!
    '

  • @lonniemiller757
    @lonniemiller757 5 месяцев назад

    I never made it past the 8th grade. I appreciate this. I have been able to teach my self to write well enough, that I can be understood. I have improved my vocabulary and. I would just never be able to understand what you were saying 38 years ago.

  • @jhonviel7381
    @jhonviel7381 Год назад

    rip dinos, if only the knew the pleasures of alcohol they wouldnt have summoned that meteor.