Could Giant Mammals Survive the Triassic Period?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024

Комментарии • 383

  • @TheVividen
    @TheVividen  Год назад +65

    Big Archosaur is watching. Protect your data and get AtlasVPN 85% off using this link! get.atlasvpn.com/Vividen

    • @Tesod_
      @Tesod_ Год назад +2

      Good video my friend. By the way, could you solve my doubt about which was the largest Prosauropodiform or Sauropodiform on record from the Triassic Period. Either the early, middle or late.

    • @hcollins9941
      @hcollins9941 Год назад +1

      @TheVividen
      I would love your reaction / take on Max Hawthornes most recent study on Megalodon!
      It show some good evidence & insight on the lifestyle of this fish!
      It’s a video here on RUclips.
      He’s done research on Llesiosaur / Pliosaur locomotion & the evolution of Plesiosaur necks.

    • @kilianteni7884
      @kilianteni7884 Год назад

      Do Megasauropod level members get informations on your new macropredator that surpasses Aust colossus?

    • @flightlesslord2688
      @flightlesslord2688 Год назад

      I feel like modern archosaurs tho are smart enough to get past a VPN

    • @WaddyMuters
      @WaddyMuters Год назад

      Your analysis is poor.
      These animals are used to 22% oxygen levels and would have to adapt to 12% oxygen levels a 50% cut (around Everest base camp level oxygen) over night.
      And as mammals have a pretty inefficient cardiovascular system anyway it’s reasonable to assume that all the very large mammals wouldn’t make it more then maybe a few weeks. Definitely not reproducing.
      Maybe the smaller ones could? But even smilodon would probably have been useless at 12% oxygen levels, a tired, out of breath cat that has a hard time walking in a straight line basically.

  • @tyrannotherium7873
    @tyrannotherium7873 Год назад +363

    It’s interesting that Smilodon may have hunted caiman, despite that they lived in more open habitat areas

    • @beastmaster0934
      @beastmaster0934 Год назад +48

      I mean, those areas probably had plenty of bodies of water for caiman to reside in.

    • @tyrannotherium7873
      @tyrannotherium7873 Год назад +9

      @@beastmaster0934 I think they were a common fossil probably in South America

    • @tyrannotherium7873
      @tyrannotherium7873 Год назад +10

      @@66Traveler99 purussaurus do not lived in the Pleistocene

    • @tyrannotherium7873
      @tyrannotherium7873 Год назад +3

      @@66Traveler99 no I am not

    • @Southpaw88
      @Southpaw88 Год назад

      caiman stay being big cats bitches

  • @justjoshua5759
    @justjoshua5759 Год назад +231

    Also I had a feeling the Daedon would take it. Like pigs are super adaptable in most ecosystems and give humans trouble even today. The diverse nature of their size, intelligence and adaptability only compliments them.
    And other than the Miocene and when we get to the big boy dinosaur domination eras of Jurassic and Cretaceous. I really don’t see another animal being as successful as essentially a super pig loool

    • @TheVividen
      @TheVividen  Год назад +41

      That's honestly accurate

    • @adriani9432
      @adriani9432 Год назад +31

      Daeodon wasn't terribly intelligent as far as mammals go, but it certainly outsmarts any animal from the Triassic, with the possible exception of small theropod dinosaurs.

    • @justjoshua5759
      @justjoshua5759 Год назад +11

      @@adriani9432 when looking at most of earths prehistory I honestly think until we get to into the proper and more recent history of the cenzoic they’re pretty damn smart for most life on earth.
      Crocodilians. Dinosaurs. And even some birds having an orange sized brain is pretty impressive for them and they tend to be the most common species that could pose a threat in this regard.
      Again taking. The LONG view of it. Not in more specific eras

    • @DzinkyDzink
      @DzinkyDzink Год назад +6

      I wonder what proven habitat conquerors would fare?
      Pigs, dogs, coyotes, cats and bears would probably take over and then radiate to take up new niches.
      Hell, throw in a Bullfrog and see what happens 😂

    • @jamesaron1967
      @jamesaron1967 Год назад +11

      @@DzinkyDzink I think the smaller successful mammal families such as rodents (herbivores) and mustelids (carnivores) would devastate the Triassic ecosystem, providing climate (temps) and atmosphere (O2 content) wouldn't be a significant hindrance. They'd likely quickly evolve and take over niches never previously occupied.

  • @edgeofsanity9111
    @edgeofsanity9111 Год назад +132

    It'd be interesting to have the tables turned: Triassic animals into the Cenozoic era

    • @henrykkeszenowicz4664
      @henrykkeszenowicz4664 Год назад +16

      Many wouldn't make it, but there was Barinasuchus, a Cenozoic crocodylomorph which was basically a re-evolved version of Triassic apex predators. It would provide direct competition for the Rauisuchians.

    • @edgeofsanity9111
      @edgeofsanity9111 Год назад +2

      @@henrykkeszenowicz4664 fair, but you can't tell who'd be better off in the competition tho

    • @edgeofsanity9111
      @edgeofsanity9111 6 месяцев назад

      @lovitree9853 true, but it's still an interesting idea

    • @SherlandShrouht-esse
      @SherlandShrouht-esse 5 месяцев назад +4

      *Someone* would be having megalodon omelettes

  • @anticksss
    @anticksss Год назад +74

    Wonder how some Devonian armored fish and sharks would fare in Mesozoic waters, that could be another cool video. Also any video about carboniferous insects would be rad!

    • @thenamesianna
      @thenamesianna 11 месяцев назад +7

      Or maybe in modern-day seas.
      It would be interesting to see a Dunkleosteuses competing with tiger sharks and white sharks imo.

  • @TheGBZard
    @TheGBZard Год назад +102

    I think Mammals would do better in the permian/triassic than jurassic/cretaceos since their competion were similarly sized to cenozoic creatures

    • @DzinkyDzink
      @DzinkyDzink Год назад +31

      That's the catch, modern mammals may prove so effecient that they would wreck existing ecosystems and reform those around themselves.
      You don't need a 7 tonn T-Rex to hunt Wildebeast when all the Trikes went extinct.

    • @TheGBZard
      @TheGBZard Год назад +8

      @@DzinkyDzink Perhaps but big mammals have much slower reproductive rate than dinos

    • @DzinkyDzink
      @DzinkyDzink Год назад +17

      @@TheGBZard then send in the rabbits!

    • @TheGBZard
      @TheGBZard Год назад +9

      Ah yes of course, can’t forget the dogs, cats, rats, and wild boars

    • @spinosaurusstriker
      @spinosaurusstriker Год назад +11

      ​@@DzinkyDzinkbro there is no way you think any predatory mammal of thag era can take even a medium size trike.

  • @memesandtreasure4272
    @memesandtreasure4272 Год назад +199

    So, mammals seem like they’re doing well.
    Does make me worried about how much of a menace the Cretaceous will be though, lol.
    Especially with T. rex around.
    Good video. 10/10. Can’t wait to see what comes next.

    • @widodoakrom3938
      @widodoakrom3938 Год назад +5

      Up

    • @dwaynejohnson1302
      @dwaynejohnson1302 Год назад +37

      Not just t.rex, we can also mention an angry trike (which would be a nightmare even for an adult rex) But im pretty sure that mammals like the paleoloxodon or the Daedon can enjoy the enviroment

    • @the_blue_jay_raptor
      @the_blue_jay_raptor Год назад +45

      Smilodon: Casually walking through the forest
      A random Edmontosaurus: *So you have chosen death*

    • @adriani9432
      @adriani9432 Год назад +12

      I'd imagine Deinonychus will wreak absolute havoc if it was introduced into modern day North America.

    • @govardhanposina17
      @govardhanposina17 Год назад +10

      ​@@adriani9432would they? We now know that pack hunting wasn't incredibly likely though, so the role they'd assume would be a small, solitary carnivore, I'm assuming competing against animals like Raccoons and Possums

  • @rudidavidson8422
    @rudidavidson8422 Год назад +58

    The Triassic to us: A world when dinosaurs first appeared
    The Triassic to Daeodon: An all you can eat buffet

  • @teslax2377
    @teslax2377 Год назад +20

    This is an interesting concept
    In palaeo fans communities there are two completly and extreme postures, the ones who think cenozoic mammals are completely crushed and swept away by any Mezosoic "reptilian" creature because the Mezosoic was the age of the "big, angry killing machines" with superior features and on the other hand the ones who think that mammals are able to outcompete, overcame, over...all, the dinosaurs because mammals are "smarter" and "more active", those persons think that a wolf pack is able to take down medium to big sauropods.

  • @TheBloodWyrmCaraxes
    @TheBloodWyrmCaraxes Год назад +41

    In my unprofessional opinion mammals would do best in the triassic. The jurassic and cretaceous will be harder simply due to the size of the dinosaurs.

    • @juicy8019
      @juicy8019 7 месяцев назад

      Yh i agree jura/creta is out of the question, i personally think its not even close but thats up for debate

    • @juicy8019
      @juicy8019 7 месяцев назад

      The prey in triassic was similar size aswell so yh

  • @GenghisDon1970
    @GenghisDon1970 Год назад +29

    a fun project. I think you underestimate the heat effect in nearly all cases; personally I'd drop nearly all a number, especially as unfamiliar food &/or pathogens could always turn out to be disastrous, but I'm still pleased to watch your takes

    • @victory8928
      @victory8928 Год назад +16

      Diseases also go both ways but yeah the vegetation will be a big hindrance for all herbivores

    • @annodomini2012
      @annodomini2012 11 месяцев назад +1

      I think the temperature delta is high enough to make large land mammal survival extremely unlikely

  • @justjoshua5759
    @justjoshua5759 Год назад +44

    Awesome! Can’t wait to see more. Great breakdown vividen the Triassic is always underrated as a geographical playground for the evergoing fight which is ecological dominance.

    • @TheVividen
      @TheVividen  Год назад +7

      It's an amazing time period!

    • @floseatyard8063
      @floseatyard8063 9 месяцев назад +1

      fr triassic is underrated as fuck, there should be 2 games, one with cretaceous and jurassic land animals for dino lovers, and one that's a realistic triassic landscape

  • @corneliusmcmuffin3256
    @corneliusmcmuffin3256 Год назад +16

    Honestly, what about orcas? I dare say that you could drop 1000 orcas in any ocean throughout earth’s history which has enough food to sustain them, and orcas would absolutely dominate, or at the very least be a serious contender for top predator. A decent sized pod of orcas would be a match for any large marine predator that has ever lived.

    • @corneliusmcmuffin3256
      @corneliusmcmuffin3256 Год назад +6

      The only animals that get a 10 in basically any era you drop them in are Orcas, Titanosaurs (such as Argentinasaurus), and Humans. Orcas with their team strategies on top of already being formidable hunters, titanosaurs being enormous very powerful land animals which were still in a time where the largest land predators to ever walk the earth existed, and humans, being the most intelligent and adaptable species on the planet. Even if you dropped 1000 Neanderthals instead of 1000 modern humans, they would easily survive and thrive, being an active threat to every other species on the planet.

    • @dave9332
      @dave9332 11 месяцев назад

      Orca kill megalodon so yes orca can survive and orca is a big predator too and they hunt in pack with intelegence orca can be a treat to any Big predator in ocean

    • @Ledinosour673
      @Ledinosour673 11 месяцев назад

      @@corneliusmcmuffin3256 yeah, orcas dominate, the only time periods where they woud have something to fear would be the neogene (megalodon and livyatan) and late triassic (himalayasaurus, shonisaurus, aust collosus potentially being a macropredator and so much fricking more, like, it's actually insane how Panthalassa was absolutely crowded with giant apex predators)
      but yeah, everything else is fine, in the jurassic liopleurodon and other large pliosaurs stand no chance against a full pod of orcas, a mosasaur is barelly bigger than a bull orca and would be easy work, in the paleogene basilosaurus woudn't be that much of a threat, and even the largest buzzsaw sharks of the paleozoic would stand absolutely ZERO chance against a full pod of orcas

    • @tysonwastaken
      @tysonwastaken 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@corneliusmcmuffin3256rats, ants, house cats (highly inteligient, generalist) and cockroaches probably will live too

    • @westonmorgan1337
      @westonmorgan1337 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@lovitree9853 probably not

  • @lightman3581
    @lightman3581 Год назад +10

    Amazing video! The research you put into these videos is absolutely amazing, you are among some of the best paleontological channels on this app and i say that with 101% certainty 😊. Your amazing bro 😄

    • @TheVividen
      @TheVividen  Год назад +3

      Wow, thank you! I'm happy you appreciate it!

    • @christianvaixco196
      @christianvaixco196 Год назад +1

      @@TheVividen
      😧bro... seriously, haha ​​make a video to deny the fallacies and hoaxes of several videos here on RUclips about the differences between the T rex and the elephant palaexodon, because they put wrong numbers about the largest T rex, they put very speculative measurements with little evidence about the elephant, hahah and in the thumbnail they put the T rex as absolutely small... Hhaahhah this F#Ck is misleading.
      👍I used Google Translator.

  • @nono9543
    @nono9543 Год назад +12

    Underrated Period

    • @TheVividen
      @TheVividen  Год назад +8

      True! The Triassic is wild!

    • @christianvaixco196
      @christianvaixco196 Год назад +1

      @@TheVividen
      😧bro... seriously, haha ​​make a video to deny the fallacies and hoaxes of several videos here on RUclips about the differences between the T rex and the elephant palaexodon, because they put wrong numbers about the largest T rex, they put very speculative measurements with little evidence about the elephant, hahah and in the thumbnail they put the T rex as absolutely small... Hhaahhah this F#Ck is misleading.
      👍I used Google Translator.

    • @TheVividen
      @TheVividen  Год назад +2

      ​@@christianvaixco196At some point I plan on making a Thrive or Eaten Alive episode where it's examining various probiscidean species and how they would fare in Hell Creek. Palaeoloxodon would be a part of that

  • @josh-themighty9967
    @josh-themighty9967 Год назад +10

    Thank you so much for making this into a series! What a wonderful episode this was to kick things off :) I thought the Paraceratherium would probably do very well due to it's large size in the Triassic as you mentioned
    Surprised you included Megaloceros as I didn't expect it's inclusion but that was a welcome surprise definitely think it'd be a challenge with the heat but it's speed would be very useful.
    Glad the Smilodon was doing fairly well along with the Columbian mammoth although their long gestation and growth time for the babies as you mentioned would be a serious problem for the latter.
    The Daeodon doing so well was cool and I half wonder how all these introduced mammals would do interacting with one another in the Triassic Smilodon vs Daeodon!?
    I can't wait to see the Jurassic and Cretaceous episodes next :D I hope the Arctodus might make an appearance if possible but if not no worries would still love to see how the current roster would fare in later time periods especially the Smilodon, Paraceratherium and Columbian mammoth!

  • @purplehaze2358
    @purplehaze2358 Год назад +98

    I was honestly expecting this to be about specifically modern mammals surviving in the Triassic.

    • @samuelrowsell2343
      @samuelrowsell2343 Год назад +26

      Not much megafauna left we killed it all

    • @iangalloway8917
      @iangalloway8917 11 месяцев назад +22

      Most of them would have been modern if they weren’t so tasty.

    • @ConquestadorExplore
      @ConquestadorExplore 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@iangalloway8917cuz he so fat

    • @Itsmekeurus
      @Itsmekeurus 11 месяцев назад +3

      Yeah, we killed them all sadly.

    • @rogaldorn2312
      @rogaldorn2312 11 месяцев назад +3

      We didn't kill all of them. We were a factor but the end of the glaciation killed off much of megafauna

  • @soudino2723
    @soudino2723 Год назад +12

    this is by far one of the best videos you have done so far, its pretty accurate and not biased ( as in saying mammals would be decimated by anything from the Mesozoic)
    do you think amphicyon giganteus, Megalania, Gigantopithecus, cave bears and the marsupial lion would do well during the Triassic?

  • @silentspartan913
    @silentspartan913 Год назад +6

    Idea for next vid
    Thrive or Eaten Alive: The Early Jurassic (Dinosaurs vs Mammals)

  • @Historyandlegends789
    @Historyandlegends789 Год назад +23

    I think the mammals will be less adapted to land as the Jurassic and Cretaceous arrive but in the seas they will thrive big time.

    • @xanshen9011
      @xanshen9011 Год назад +8

      They had to deal with giant pliosaurs and mosasaurs along with sharks

    • @kilianteni7884
      @kilianteni7884 Год назад +14

      @@xanshen9011 Mammals already dominate sharks and pliosaurs/mosasaurs are far smaller than the largest aquatic mammalian carnivores (Livyatan Sperm whale Perucetus) and Basilosaurus is a about the size of the biggest mosasaurids).

    • @amrita_s8094
      @amrita_s8094 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@xanshen9011whales and orcas would destroy them

    • @MrKingkz
      @MrKingkz 10 месяцев назад

      @@amrita_s8094 orcas would do a lot of damage big smart and hunt in packs they would even bully bigger animals

    • @culifabrizio1479
      @culifabrizio1479 9 месяцев назад

      @@kilianteni7884lol megalodon is bigger

  • @creamdeluxe8740
    @creamdeluxe8740 Год назад +9

    great video dude, very excited for the jurassic and cretaceous episodes. will it be the same cenzoic animals for these as well?

    • @TheVividen
      @TheVividen  Год назад +6

      I'm glad you liked it! I'm planning on taking the same ten animals for the subsequent episodes, yes, but I'm also thinking of doing spinoffs (like taking animals like Palaeoloxodon from Asia and putting it into Hell Creek)

  • @Epithelialtissue5
    @Epithelialtissue5 Год назад +5

    Amazing video! The information was so we'll put together and was so enjoyable. I loved this video and I hope u make more of these in the future.

  • @pompneigh4329
    @pompneigh4329 Год назад +12

    One mammal I know would dominate the prehistoric sea is a family of orcas. Those things have a nice balance of intellect, size, and strength--being far smarter than any prehistoric sea creature that we know of.

    • @Dr.Ian-Plect
      @Dr.Ian-Plect Год назад +1

      One attribute could render them unable to establish a niche; superior size.

    • @SD-wj9bv
      @SD-wj9bv Год назад +1

      Well of course it’s easy to exercise that when your one of the largest creatures to live on earth with the only animals that are bigger then u are whales

    • @nero9506
      @nero9506 6 месяцев назад +2

      ​@Dr.Ian-Plect Orcas, unlike Ichthyosaurs, hunt and move in pods, and despite their considerably smaller size they are way faster and more agile. Orcas have been reported to hunt humpback whales and even blue whales, so preying on animals as big as Shonisaurus wouldn't be completely unlikely. Their superior speed, stamina, numbers and intelligence could overwhelm a single specimen of those Ichthyosaurs. The biggest problem for orcas would be the much warmer waters of the Triassic, since these animals seem to prefer colder environments.

  • @GODEYE270115
    @GODEYE270115 Год назад +30

    The Triassic was a free for all since Dinos didn’t have a stronghold yet. Bigger mammals would definitely fair better
    The Jurassic and Cretaceous on the other hand…..

    • @DzinkyDzink
      @DzinkyDzink Год назад +9

      It's a shame racoons ate all your T-Rex eggs..

    • @stephenballard3759
      @stephenballard3759 Год назад +4

      Yeah. That's exactly the animal to fuck up an entire ecosystem.

    • @spinosaurusstriker
      @spinosaurusstriker Год назад +8

      ​@@DzinkyDzinkmy dude talks like same sized mammals didn't exist at that time, t rex would do just fine.

  • @cretaceouscrusader661
    @cretaceouscrusader661 Год назад +33

    For real, we all know that Michael Jackson has the Spinosaurus Holotype though.

  • @gambitaku6179
    @gambitaku6179 Год назад +1

    I am so glad to have found this channel. Truly a hidden gem. I absolutely loved the vid. Omw to binge everything. Your content is very informative and fun. This video has the potential to be the start of a great series. God bless you man. 🎉

  • @dravensanders6157
    @dravensanders6157 Год назад +8

    That Drip Goku caught me off-guard, not gonna lie. 😂

  • @baryonyxjohnwalkeri3599
    @baryonyxjohnwalkeri3599 Год назад +1

    i hope kelenken, arctotherium, megistotherium, thylacoleo, homotherium,
    panthera atrox,palaeoloxodon, elasmotherium will be featured in the next episode. or maybe some of them great video as always can’t wait for the next episode of this topic.

  • @DzinkyDzink
    @DzinkyDzink Год назад +20

    I would argue that predatory whales would have an enourmous advantage over reptilian predators based on the endurance.
    Long chase is the name of the game in the deep waters and mammalian endurance exceeds reptilian by miles(literally).
    Also the inteligence factor plays a huge role for predators with all modrlern mammals showing an upward trend in its growth.

    • @SD-wj9bv
      @SD-wj9bv Год назад +1

      And how would u know that? Most marine reptiles were warm blooded at least in Jurassic-creatures

  • @jamesaron1967
    @jamesaron1967 Год назад +1

    Absolutely great episode on a very immersive topic. You need a wide background in paleozoology and paleobotany to dare attempt something of this scope and do it justice, which you have. That's why I like your channel, you work on topics few others tackle. Can't imagine the amount of research you did for this series and can't wait for the next installment!

    • @TheVividen
      @TheVividen  Год назад

      Thank you! That's very gratifying to hear. I worked on the research for this episode for a long time, and I'm excited to eventually produce the rest of the series!

  • @aliakbarsafdari4084
    @aliakbarsafdari4084 Год назад +1

    Wow, this was fascinating.
    Do one with extant mammals next, please!

  • @kestrelynn
    @kestrelynn Год назад

    This was a great video! Lots of potential for spin-offs too with other animals in different times, cant wait for more!

  • @godzillakingofthemonsters5812
    @godzillakingofthemonsters5812 Год назад +9

    What would the hunting strategy be for the "smaller" ichthyosaurs on Perucetus? As far as their predatory prowess goes most of the evidence still suggests they targeted animals smaller than themselves and while not exactly well defended the conical teeth and thin snouts would probably have a hard time digging into a giant, round, fatty beast. And in terms of physical strength both sets of giants could do massive damage if they ever struck each other, though you're right the reptiles have an advantage due to their speed. A whack from the tail of a 90 ton sausage though would probably break some thing or multiple things in the reptiles.
    Also question: is each mammal also competing with each other or are they isolated scenarios? Spawning Livyatan on Perucetus for example drops the numbers even further but may also decrease ichthyosaur population since the sperm whale would be eating them too.

    • @widodoakrom3938
      @widodoakrom3938 Год назад +1

      Icthiosaurus will slice them but by bit doesn't kill them directly

    • @adriani9432
      @adriani9432 Год назад

      These are isolated scenarios.

  • @lvl5dino749
    @lvl5dino749 Год назад

    I've always liked videos like these. I hope you will do it with other groups of animals and time periods.

  • @TheDragon-v7d
    @TheDragon-v7d 11 месяцев назад

    I appreciate the effort of this video, there are massive holes in many of the depictions and behaviors of how much of these organisms would thrive.

  • @BrookD.Artist
    @BrookD.Artist 8 месяцев назад

    awsome video! one of my favorite topics but people usually do modern mammals. Im glad you're branching out!

  • @qwellen7521
    @qwellen7521 Год назад +1

    Love this idea. Can't wait for you to mix and match other eras. Late Cretaceous animals in the Pliocene? or vice versa.

  • @lightman3581
    @lightman3581 Год назад +4

    When do you think your video about the biggest predator of all time will come out? It gives me the same vibes as Endgame did but in prehistory version.
    Oh and can you make a video speculating about how Megaraptorans could hunt? It’s one of the most underrated groups of theropods and they are very unique since they hunt with their hands which is something not seen in other groups of theropods expect maybe Spinosaurids.

    • @TheVividen
      @TheVividen  Год назад +2

      We're hoping for February/March, but that's very tentative. It takes a while to hear back from researchers since there's so much going on! A megaraptoran video would be fun as well. I've been meaning to make one for a while and just need to find a time to put it in the queue!

  • @11Legorex
    @11Legorex 11 месяцев назад

    I can’t stop rewatching this vid for some reason. Love me some Triassic lore and spec evo stuff so this is great.

  • @MastodonMann
    @MastodonMann Год назад +4

    I’d like to see what Paleozoic creatures would do good in the Cenozoic

  • @11Legorex
    @11Legorex 11 месяцев назад

    I love this video, please do more animals in the Triassic please

  • @TheMegamyGamer
    @TheMegamyGamer Год назад +1

    YOU FIND A FORMULA THERE!
    DO
    MORE
    OF
    THIS!!!

  • @manzac112
    @manzac112 Год назад +2

    I think the interesting thing about these large mammals is some of them were not used to dealing with predators around their size or were bigger than usual.

  • @vortukassingh999
    @vortukassingh999 Год назад

    Cant wait for the jurassic one, great video!

  • @justbecause3187
    @justbecause3187 11 месяцев назад +3

    I was struggling to understand why anyone would say that a mammal like Hyaenodon Gigas was more closely related to "Penguins"(a bird) than it was to another mammal like a Hyaena. I had to go back and put on closed captions to see that you actually said "Pangolins" and not "Penguins" to realize that what I was hearing wasn't completely mad.

  • @twomato8902
    @twomato8902 Год назад +1

    You gotta do more vids like these

    • @TheVividen
      @TheVividen  Год назад +1

      I'm planning on doing at least two more episodes for the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods!

  • @Littlekoji-df1cf
    @Littlekoji-df1cf Год назад

    I love this. Would love more videos like this.

  • @jarielgonzalez7319
    @jarielgonzalez7319 Год назад

    I like this type of video great job I can see all the hard work that went into this

  • @tyrannotherium7873
    @tyrannotherium7873 Год назад +2

    I feel like that Deodon would also survive in the Cretaceous Period maybe like it would probably kind of disguise itself like it’s my name its own business, and it would snatch a young triceratops.

  • @TheVividen
    @TheVividen  8 месяцев назад +1

    Part 2 coming soon!

  • @fantasyskeep
    @fantasyskeep Год назад

    This was super entertaining, if you haven't already, I'd love to see the reverse of this.

  • @lordflashheart4265
    @lordflashheart4265 10 месяцев назад

    Brilliant presentation! I'd love to see you put Thylacoleo in the mix in a future episode.

  • @stephenballard3759
    @stephenballard3759 Год назад +1

    This was fun, thanks.

  • @matthewdukes3207
    @matthewdukes3207 11 месяцев назад +1

    An extra point of consideration for Livyatan- they had sonar which is one of the most broken abilities that only mammals seem to get.

  • @Aquarimax
    @Aquarimax Год назад +5

    92 minutes until the Premiere!

  • @TheLordHighNoob
    @TheLordHighNoob 11 месяцев назад +1

    This is presently one of my all time favourite videos. Oh, RUclips Algorithm, raise up this grand content which subverts traditional Dinosaur V Mammal precepts! Praise be the Vividen!

    • @TheVividen
      @TheVividen  11 месяцев назад

      I'm looking forward to eventually continuing the series!

  • @shughes108
    @shughes108 8 месяцев назад

    So glad you did this

  • @ledernierutopiste
    @ledernierutopiste 11 месяцев назад

    It was cool of you to rbing himalayasaurus into the discussion and compare it to Livyatan !!! The 3rd most dangerous macroraptorial predator in history against the 2nd !

  • @based_dragon_0110
    @based_dragon_0110 Год назад

    make more of these for other periods

  • @Dinoboy06888
    @Dinoboy06888 8 месяцев назад +1

    Please make a Jurassic and Cretaceous video

  • @andrewshear2927
    @andrewshear2927 Год назад +1

    Intriguing video.

  • @raemont1328
    @raemont1328 Год назад

    This is a really Cool Idea!

  • @jessejarmon2100
    @jessejarmon2100 Год назад +4

    Ya'know, this could be used to make a pretty cool spec-evo series. Though maybe add at least one or a few more cenozoic animals to the list, like Barinasuchus should DEFINITELY be one of them, maybe some other south american carnivores like sparassodonts and terror birds, perhaps even purusaurus. Could also be interesting to add marsupial predators like Thylacoleo, or perhaps New Zealand's famous giant eagle?
    Edit: if you're adding terror birds, then I HIGHLY recommend adding Kelenken to the list. Also, the giant shark megalodon.
    Edit #2: I have one more suggestion to make, add Basilosaurus to the list.

  • @egillskallagrimson5879
    @egillskallagrimson5879 Год назад

    This is fun, will see one of Mesozoic creatures in the Cenozoic? I would like to see how disruptive large predatorial Theropods would have been in the Cenozoic eras.

  • @bruh949
    @bruh949 24 дня назад +1

    Id recon Fasolasuchus could take on Megatherium, its no joke. Powerful bite, strong armour and huge size being 10 metres long, powerful claws too and decent intelligence. I think Fasolasuchus could handle the sloth if it could very likely take prosauropods.

  • @OneCharmingQuark
    @OneCharmingQuark Год назад +1

    I want to see earlier human ancestors like Australopithecus Afarensis vs the Late Cretaceous.

  • @brycesmith9878
    @brycesmith9878 Год назад

    Damn this is a great video! In the Triassic mammals seem to be doing very well! However, I have a feeling from here on out that is a trend thats going to fall off a very large cliff once we hit the Jurassic...

  • @Deebaby9
    @Deebaby9 7 месяцев назад +1

    How did you do the weird life on earth thing

  • @RedexTwo
    @RedexTwo Год назад

    "OHHH SHE SIZZLIN!" got me lol that's funny

  • @SamSays101
    @SamSays101 Год назад

    Awesome content

  • @homerkt
    @homerkt Год назад

    Great concept

  • @justinhess2747
    @justinhess2747 Год назад +1

    5:10 would like you all to suffer with me from the thought of a hairless Smilodon.

  • @bigmoe9856
    @bigmoe9856 Год назад +1

    10:15 Bruh it sounded like you said *Penguins* instead of Pangolins.

  • @Dinoboy06888
    @Dinoboy06888 3 месяца назад +1

    Please make could Cenozoic megafauna survive in the creatasous and please add the large marsupial from Australia

  • @ego4551
    @ego4551 Год назад +3

    One thing you forgot to consider is the atmosphere composition. While it wouldn't kill them outright like people tend to think it ours would giant Dinosaurs, it would at least be a hinderance during most of the triassic. The early and mid triassic oxygen low and generally high CO2 levels could give the large mammals a headache, literally and figuratively. They would be out of breath more quickly, lessening their primary advantages.

  • @jose.lfurtado6245
    @jose.lfurtado6245 5 месяцев назад

    Video Idea: Could Early Cenozoic Mammals Survive the Mesozoic? The Jurassic Period

  • @randomvideos8477
    @randomvideos8477 2 месяца назад

    Animals like Lystrosaurus are Synapsids so they are more related to the mammals, even they layed eggs and hadn't fur. Synapsids and Sauropsids (Squamates, turtles, crocodils and dinos/birds) still split in the perm.
    So there were many relatives of mammals in the Triarassic, also some with the size of a hippo.

  • @ArmandoEnfectana-bp6jo
    @ArmandoEnfectana-bp6jo 5 месяцев назад

    Smilodon vs Triassic crocs: Bite they're long necks.

  • @insectilluminatigetshrekt5574
    @insectilluminatigetshrekt5574 Год назад +1

    You showed and mentioned lobsters for perucetus when lobsters didn't exist until the cretaceous

  • @Iron_potato40k
    @Iron_potato40k 10 месяцев назад

    Could you do this but with tyrannosaurus in the triassic, jurassic, and cenezoic.

  • @floatingf8783
    @floatingf8783 11 месяцев назад +2

    Skip ad 2:40

    • @mandrakeblake-tw1uv
      @mandrakeblake-tw1uv 8 дней назад

      Thank the Lord that he doesn't put sponsors in between the videos.

  • @Famousfire97
    @Famousfire97 Год назад

    now i really wanna know how bears would do and specifically short faced bears and other large brown bear species. i would imagine that not many animals during that time would be able to do much against a short faced bear, but maybe to the smaller brown bears.

  • @highdeer1770
    @highdeer1770 10 месяцев назад

    The Goku meme had me crying 7:29

  • @kilianteni7884
    @kilianteni7884 Год назад +1

    @TheVividen Do Megasauropod level members get informations on your new macropredator that surpasses Aust colossus?

    • @TheVividen
      @TheVividen  Год назад

      They'll get to see the video 24 hours early when it comes out next year!

    • @kilianteni7884
      @kilianteni7884 Год назад

      @@TheVividen And what if a Megasauropod members wants it this year as species profile video?

    • @kilianteni7884
      @kilianteni7884 Год назад

      @@TheVividen Does the new macropredator surpass the higher estimates of aust 256t ?

    • @TheVividen
      @TheVividen  Год назад

      ​@@kilianteni7884I suppose that'll be happening anyway haha. It's not ready yet, however--we're going for a release in March or later hopefully

    • @TheVividen
      @TheVividen  Год назад

      ​@@kilianteni7884I wouldn't say that this particular specen is as big as the Aust Colossus, but it was designed for killing massive prey!

  • @barsnacker
    @barsnacker 11 месяцев назад

    Oh god not the zombie sauropod at the beginning 😢

  • @DzinkyDzink
    @DzinkyDzink Год назад

    Twas my line that if you transport a viable population of house cats back into Jurassic times, in 5 million years you'd have a whole genus ranging from 150g insect eating kitties to pack hunting 500kg "lions" with everything inbetween and absolutely no carnivorous theropods left.

  • @RWDOWNPOUR
    @RWDOWNPOUR 11 месяцев назад

    Do jurrasic next

  • @primalfiregodzilla5052
    @primalfiregodzilla5052 Год назад

    Oh, this is really good facts are usually hear Livyatin whale pronounced like Liviathan

  • @rileyernst9086
    @rileyernst9086 7 месяцев назад

    Meglaceros's habitat stretched a long way. It didn't live in a lot of different habitats.

  • @FreakyKashimoSimp
    @FreakyKashimoSimp Год назад

    Great video!

  • @RayMoore-rw2tt
    @RayMoore-rw2tt 7 месяцев назад

    Video ideas 1. what Triassic animals could survive the Cenozoic era 2. Could the megalodon have survived the Mesozoic era 3. Could the gigantopithecus have survived the Mesozoic era

  • @truvc
    @truvc 11 месяцев назад

    I suspect many of the large mammals would gravitate towards water which they could use as a heat sink to prevent overheating

  • @rexmagi4606
    @rexmagi4606 8 месяцев назад

    A giant hairless sloth would be nightmare fuel.

  • @7lllll
    @7lllll 11 месяцев назад

    viability of mammals during the mesozoic is great, but why start with such an obscure set of mammals and such an obscure time period?

  • @flightlesslord2688
    @flightlesslord2688 Год назад

    Imagine this as a TV show lol
    I would have added Titanis, or Argentavis. That could be interesting.

  • @FarCry5Man
    @FarCry5Man 4 месяца назад +1

    All animals mentioned lived in the same time so technically the animals surviving into the ice age would have survived if all of this was realistic and not evolutionary.

  • @ElmachoCD
    @ElmachoCD Месяц назад

    i think throwing them in the triassic is an act of mercy 💀

  • @justaguyontheinternet3893
    @justaguyontheinternet3893 4 месяца назад

    Smilodons could become larger in order to be too big & aggressive to be prayed upon. If it keeps it’s pack hunting tactics it might seriously become a worldwide apex predator like the Orca, but if it doesn’t, it would probably just become a unique apex predator.

  • @andrewhunter6536
    @andrewhunter6536 10 месяцев назад

    Jurassic and Cretaceous videos also planned?

    • @TheVividen
      @TheVividen  10 месяцев назад +1

      The Jurassic episode is in the works!

  • @darkphotonstudio
    @darkphotonstudio Год назад +3

    I know this is concentrating mainly on prehistoric megafauna, but if you move a few thousand years into the modern era, I have a feeling domestic cats would do well in just about any period. They're smart, adaptable and deadly for anything their size, or smaller. Sometimes even larger prey. Considering how devestating they are in pretty much any new environment they are dropped in, it seems like they'd be a real menace.

    • @DzinkyDzink
      @DzinkyDzink Год назад +2

      Or coyotes or dogs or even pigs.

    • @SD-wj9bv
      @SD-wj9bv Год назад

      The only reason cats do so well is because humans pushed out a lot of the threats cats would have to worry about. Example monitor lizards prey on cats all the time now image have a whole landscape fill with them. Most animals that people think that would be super adaptable are really fortunate that humans have just either cause the residential top predator extinction are low density populations.

    • @SD-wj9bv
      @SD-wj9bv Год назад

      @@DzinkyDzinknot a chance

    • @darkphotonstudio
      @darkphotonstudio Год назад

      @@SD-wj9bv Possibly, that's a good point. I don't know if I'm convinced, but it's certainly something to consider.

    • @SD-wj9bv
      @SD-wj9bv Год назад

      @@darkphotonstudio ruclips.net/video/ZaOY0mb_P9s/видео.htmlsi=HK2MjIsNOuue4oCG