When you're large enough to choke down your nearest mammalian and shark competitors for largest macro predator of all time... and you're skeletally immature.
Yeah.. about that.. I don’t buy any of that crap. The histological features they base this on (lack of an EFS, high cortical vascularity) are also found in other clearly adult ichthyosaurs. I mean they might have continuous growth, but I think these animals were at least close to asymptotic growth. Growth records are never stored in ichthyosaur histology instead they have constant bone remodelling and high vascularity as adaptation to diving.
What about linguistically immature? Who gives a fuck guys,it's immaterial currently one way or the other and only time will tell.IF this proves to be ineffectual,then just wait longer continuing to study about it.
Oh to see it! Thinks:🤔;would the higher amounts of Oxygen then in the atmosphere mean we wouldn't be able to stay conscious for long or would be be almost super powered??
Rather the opposite: Plesiosaurs and Pliosaurus became so large because the giant Ichthyosaurs had died out, enabling other groups to fill their niches.
While the Jurassic is generally known as 'the age of giants' due to being the sauropod golden age, the Triassic should not be underestimated. Something unique for the Triassic is that both the largest terrestrial and largest marine animals seemed to be hypercarnivores, as it is usually plant eaters (or well on land, it was the land crocs until the emergency of Prosauropods).
Aaah FINALLY a nonAI video with some legitimately authentic tone! Very apparent you care, as a self proclaimed overenthusiastic nerd 😅 Love it, subbed 😊
@@TheAnticlinton so? Minimum weight estimates have been wrong many times before even with more complete remains, all we have for this animal are very fragmentary remains, it’d be crazy to assume that just with that we can definitively say with confidence the size of this animal.
Its awesome to think that icthyosaurs first evolved in early triassic period and within that period, they reached such huge sizes. They are soo fascinating
Size is often driven by sexual evolution considering in pretty well all higher order animals males fight for mating rights, and limited by food supply and in mammals, temperature as well, the colder, the bigger, there is less food available in cold climates, that means the population is lower, bigger bodies retain temperature better due to the mass/surface area ratio, meaning bigger animals are more efficient at burning calories. I've always found that quite fascinating.
@@maple22moose44the larger aust specimen was subadult still in its fastest stage of growth and has a minimum estimated length of 35 metres and mass of 220 tonnes.
Fish-lizard? It would be more akin to a dolphin-lizard. Neither have gills, both breathe air, they are both built like marine torpedoes (the ones of similar size, not the giant sea blimps), both bear live young (which is very unusual for a reptile), both evolved from land animals that returned to the ocean, both have a beaked head with similar style teeth, and both probably held the same ecological niche.
@Liethen If a correct description would want to be forwarded, then yes. It certainly wouldn't be the first time that something in science was renamed. Especially genus/species. I guess I'm just a stickler for accuracy that way.
@@sussekind9717 then we would be calling them by the name they were almost given. And that would be terrible since “pachypodes” doesn’t sound nearly as cool. And do you really want to live in a world that doesn’t run on rule of cool? I think not.
It is still so strange that as a family they died out, i think we need to understand more on why. you can understand the specialist ones but the general ones too is odd, if anything they seemed far better adapted to the water than other species
I feel kind of bad for the person who found that fossil, set it down on a rock then presumably forgot it. I wonder if they'll see this. Turned out well though. Also I had to laugh at the use of the water level music from Donkey Kong Country. I love how that song has become legendary
Right!? It only took em around 5 million years or so to grow to gargantuan proportions. To put that into perspective, it took whales around 10-15 million years to grow to gargantuan sizes.
Gigantism and hormonal problems aren't just modern day problems. Finding a giant doesnt mean they had whole species of giants. In the last two hundred years we have examples of domestic humans getting up to nine feet tall and living til thirty or so.
You can usually tell an abnormal individual with gigantism apart from non-gigantism sufferers by the bones themselves. Gigantism leaves its trace in the skeleton. Many pathologies.
It seems strange that all ichythosaurs would have went extinct. They were clearly built for speed and open water, a true aquatic reptile never needing to come to land as they were live birthers.
I wonder how it would work out, if we started applying the Dunkleosteus metric to size rank all vertebrates. Also I never noticed before how ichthyosaur faces are _kawaii_ from the front? 😂 Tiny mouf and giant eyes. They’re like 🥹 Now I can’t unsee it. UwU
Very informative!!! Just wanna give you a tip.... your human size comparison around 11.45, the human just shrank and disappeared?.... if the figure was white, or black, it could be noticeable enough for a "size comparison " I am color blind, the human just disappears.... but otherwise this was a great video!!!
I have tetrachromy so it’s good to be reminded to run graphics through various accessibility filters! My husband: “Those two blue bars are the same.” Me: “Nu uh. That’s blue-green, that’s blue-violet.” My husband: “Okay but on Earth 1.0, they’re the same.” Best wishes! :)
Reminds me of how I once speculated that considering how we have no fossils from the open ocean, and just shallow seas, I wondered if Ichthyosaurs got extra big in the deeper parts, and lived longer into the Mesozoic then we currently think, I also wondered if some of these bigger ones were from beachings like how whales sometimes do. (though the whales that do end up beached aren't normally the biggest kinds, or the biggest of their species, like even though sperm whale males can get 70 feet long most of them that get beached are 40 feet or less, thuogh we have found some massive whales beached before.)
Why don’t you get to think and make a suggestion creating another RUclips Videos Shows that’s all about the Extinct Prehistoric Amphicyons (Bear Dogs) on the next Edge Science coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
I have some footage of aust beach if you want it. Vividen asked me to take it but I still have the rights to it so I can share it with anyone if you want it.
The narrow snout is usually an adaptation to catch fast, schooling critters. The narrowness allows the predator to dart forward while minimally disturbing the school, then sideswipe for the catch. The longer the jaw is, the faster the tip moves. Check out videos of gharials! It’s really cool how they catch fish!
- how would these things have breathed; were they more or less efficient than baleen whales? - were there krill or other similar prey to feed on? - if they were forced to actively hunt then did they have something like sonar or shark-like super smell or electrical sensitivity, since blindly charging with such massive bodies would waste too much energy? - if they were more similar to orcas and sperm whales rather than baleen whales, wouldn't it be more efficient to have a sleeker, more muscular body and possibly an oversized head like the later mosasaurs?
Is it really accurate to call them "reptiles"? Were they warm blooded. Most, if not all current day marine reptiles live in tropical or subtropical oceans and seas, or they migrate to where the water would be cold during the summer when it is warmer. I'm having a hard time imagining this creature to be an extothermic reptile unless the world's oceans were much warmer than they are today, or their range would have been severely restricted to warm tropical waters. Being that huge would require a huge intake of food that would have to be abundantly avallable. Marine mammals today have either thick fur or a combination of thick fur and blubber in order to stay warm in cold oceanic waters.
You may be operating under a very old or very rudimentary definition of reptile. Cold or warm bloodedness aren't great terms because it's more about metabolism. Being a reptile (part of the sauropsid order) has to do with genetic heritage, rather than any individual or groups of traits. There are far more than a handful of traits that define members of the sauropsida. The leatherback sea turtle, for example, is a gigantotherm. It's so large that it generates internal "heat" or a high metabolism without actually having to have a real high metabolism. Birds are archosaurian reptilss, after all. Crocs have four chambered hearts and can walk with their limbs under their bodies for a time.
@@EDGEscience so what is the foundational definition of a reptile? I don't think I'm operating under an old definition per se, I think rather the definition seemly abruptly changed without any real explanation. Now it sounds like just about every veterbrate is being called a "reptile".
I don't know off the top of my head because it's a long list of traits used in phylogenetics analyses. You can find them yourself vai research. That being said, your definition sounds like "basic bio" from very old textbooks - cold blooded, limbs to the sides, scales, etc. When all of these are very general traits that can be seen outside of Sauropsida (the valid term for reptile, which is a colloquialism atp). For example, armadillos have keratin scutes, naked mole rats have such a slow metabolism as to be essentially cold blooded, chimps walk with their hindlimbs out to the side. Meanwhile many traits you see in "warm blooded" animals can be seen in various Sauropsid groups. Feathers, high metabolisms, scales, intelligence in birds. Intermediate hips, four chambered hearts, intemligence in crocs. So, what determines whether something belongs to a group has everything to do with ancestry and very little to do with specific traits or abilities. Tetrapods split into amniotes, which split into "amphibians", sauropsids (lizards, snakes, turtles, archosaurs), and synapsids (mammals and kin). Convergent evolution has allowed various groups to evolve traits seen in other groups but they remain linked to the group they diverged from.
It has always occurred to me as odd that life on average in the present is tiny compared to pretty well all of life's history, very tiny. The only time historically when life has been small is after a catechism. Throughout history the world has been warmer, meaning more food is available offering the fuel to create these massive creatures. We are still in quite a cool period historically where the tundra is low. Yet the worlds largest animal supposedly exists now, it has never made sense to me
When you're large enough to choke down your nearest mammalian and shark competitors for largest macro predator of all time... and you're skeletally immature.
Yeah.. about that.. I don’t buy any of that crap. The histological features they base this on (lack of an EFS, high cortical vascularity) are also found in other clearly adult ichthyosaurs. I mean they might have continuous growth, but I think these animals were at least close to asymptotic growth. Growth records are never stored in ichthyosaur histology instead they have constant bone remodelling and high vascularity as adaptation to diving.
@@Paralititan I share your opinion
@@diegoestradahernandez2728 I don't.
What about linguistically immature?
Who gives a fuck guys,it's immaterial currently one way or the other and only time will tell.IF this proves to be ineffectual,then just wait longer continuing to study about it.
@@Paralititanyou don't have to buy it. but i think it's the norm to take the word of a scientist over a stranger on youtube
In ancient days, the seas were full of dragons...
Dragons of the air, land and sea! 🦖🐉
@@ravagerlizard9800 Underground too! (mole lizards and similar)
Oh to see it!
Thinks:🤔;would the higher amounts of Oxygen then in the atmosphere mean we wouldn't be able to stay conscious for long or would be be almost super powered??
Presently my ass is filled with ass.
So basically ichthyosaurs in the Triassic were blue whale sized but the Jurassic ichthyosaurs got smaller because of plesiosaurs and pliosaurs
Then went extinct and Mosasaurus take their place.
@@ExtremeMadnessX yes
Not only that in Jurassic era they were marine crocodilian called plesiosuchus family
Or we just haven’t found them yet
Rather the opposite: Plesiosaurs and Pliosaurus became so large because the giant Ichthyosaurs had died out, enabling other groups to fill their niches.
While the Jurassic is generally known as 'the age of giants' due to being the sauropod golden age, the Triassic should not be underestimated. Something unique for the Triassic is that both the largest terrestrial and largest marine animals seemed to be hypercarnivores, as it is usually plant eaters (or well on land, it was the land crocs until the emergency of Prosauropods).
Aaah FINALLY a nonAI video with some legitimately authentic tone! Very apparent you care, as a self proclaimed overenthusiastic nerd 😅
Love it, subbed 😊
Babe wake up a new whale sized animal just got officially named.
I love how non-Brits can never pronounce Gloucestershire.
Glow-stir-shire, right?
@@Valerio_the_wandering_sprite Gloss-tur-shur
Love how non-Americans can't pronounce Ashwaubenon.
@@IsaiahYoung-mu1zh I'd wager most Americans can't either 🤣
@@IsaiahYoung-mu1zh As a non-American, that word is not hard.
god i kinda wish marine reptiles like this still existed
they would probably eat you since they're dumb and shit
Do marine turtle and sea snakes not count? They deserve recognition
But then humans would have fished them to extinction.
That would be one a hell of a fight on a rod and reel.
They would get outcompeted by cetaceans
I feel like the size of this animal is going to decrease a lot as more remains are found and more study is done on it, but it should still be massive
Minimum weight estimate is still larger than the 2nd largest macropredators to ever exist, livyatan and the sperm whale,.
@@TheAnticlinton so? Minimum weight estimates have been wrong many times before even with more complete remains, all we have for this animal are very fragmentary remains, it’d be crazy to assume that just with that we can definitively say with confidence the size of this animal.
Could just be a fluke. Gigantism is a radical change that can happen to any individual organism and same happens to dwarves
That's what usually happens, yea
Bro just casually listing off the channels I watch lol 3:27
Its awesome to think that icthyosaurs first evolved in early triassic period and within that period, they reached such huge sizes. They are soo fascinating
Size is often driven by sexual evolution considering in pretty well all higher order animals males fight for mating rights, and limited by food supply and in mammals, temperature as well, the colder, the bigger, there is less food available in cold climates, that means the population is lower, bigger bodies retain temperature better due to the mass/surface area ratio, meaning bigger animals are more efficient at burning calories. I've always found that quite fascinating.
They probably evolved in the Permian period Kear 2023
Ayy that’s the lilstock monster
It is the Lilstock Monster and Blue Anchor Monster, aka. _Ichthyotitan severnensis_
And potentially also Aust Colossus, which would make it a contender for the largest animal to ever live, and still have more growing to do
@@maple22moose44the larger aust specimen was subadult still in its fastest stage of growth and has a minimum estimated length of 35 metres and mass of 220 tonnes.
Sea Blimps ... I always liked the term Air Whales for um, air blimps
Fish-lizard? It would be more akin to a dolphin-lizard.
Neither have gills, both breathe air, they are both built like marine torpedoes (the ones of similar size, not the giant sea blimps), both bear live young (which is very unusual for a reptile), both evolved from land animals that returned to the ocean, both have a beaked head with similar style teeth, and both probably held the same ecological niche.
ichthyosaur literally means fish lizard
@Liethen
English or Greek, it's not a correct description. Although, back when it was named, they still thought whales were fish.
@@sussekind9717 dinosaurs are not lizards, nor are they sonic vibrations caused by atmospheric electrical discharges. Should they be renamed?
@Liethen
If a correct description would want to be forwarded, then yes.
It certainly wouldn't be the first time that something in science was renamed. Especially
genus/species.
I guess I'm just a stickler for accuracy that way.
@@sussekind9717 then we would be calling them by the name they were almost given. And that would be terrible since “pachypodes” doesn’t sound nearly as cool. And do you really want to live in a world that doesn’t run on rule of cool? I think not.
You’re seriously amazing. Subscribed as hell, and I’m signing to your Patreon. Informative, entertaining and colorful.
Aquatic ambience is such a beautiful song thank you for using it
It is still so strange that as a family they died out, i think we need to understand more on why. you can understand the specialist ones but the general ones too is odd, if anything they seemed far better adapted to the water than other species
5:58 gloster-shire
Glostershire sauce
Glossy sir
I am passionately following the updates on the huge Ichtiosaur fossils.
14:58 “let me do it for you… kermie”
I feel kind of bad for the person who found that fossil, set it down on a rock then presumably forgot it. I wonder if they'll see this. Turned out well though.
Also I had to laugh at the use of the water level music from Donkey Kong Country. I love how that song has become legendary
Great footage, solid information, and a human narrator? Subscribed.
honestly i would have been surprised if there were no giant icthyosaurs considering how quickly they took over and diversified in the ocean
Right!?
It only took em around 5 million years or so to grow to gargantuan proportions.
To put that into perspective, it took whales around 10-15 million years to grow to gargantuan sizes.
I love how happy and fun your new episodes sound. I hope that reflects how you are feeling about your work and life in general!
At this rate every year we will get competitor for blue whale as largest animal ever.
They have the strangest body shape.
Good ol´ barrel body. A certified palaeontology classic.
Nobody knows for sure what body shape they have, its entirely an inference.
Remember dunkleosteus and be cautious when scaling up an extinct animal from partial remains.
Thank you for offering up other channels that I need to check out because those are always good!
Gigantism and hormonal problems aren't just modern day problems. Finding a giant doesnt mean they had whole species of giants. In the last two hundred years we have examples of domestic humans getting up to nine feet tall and living til thirty or so.
You can usually tell an abnormal individual with gigantism apart from non-gigantism sufferers by the bones themselves. Gigantism leaves its trace in the skeleton. Many pathologies.
It seems strange that all ichythosaurs would have went extinct. They were clearly built for speed and open water, a true aquatic reptile never needing to come to land as they were live birthers.
So nice that the Lilstock specimen now has a name!
I love that you use the Most Extreme character model for the size comparison. XD Complete with the narration change.
Loved your delivery, and knowledge...subbing....
Many thanks for this video.
Thank you very much for providing this fascinating video!
I wonder how it would work out, if we started applying the Dunkleosteus metric to size rank all vertebrates.
Also I never noticed before how ichthyosaur faces are _kawaii_ from the front? 😂 Tiny mouf and giant eyes. They’re like 🥹 Now I can’t unsee it. UwU
1:13 The next time I run into someone I don't like, I'm gonna call them a "filter-feeding weirdo."
the current whales we have are the largest animals to have ever lived
Very informative!!! Just wanna give you a tip.... your human size comparison around 11.45, the human just shrank and disappeared?.... if the figure was white, or black, it could be noticeable enough for a "size comparison " I am color blind, the human just disappears.... but otherwise this was a great video!!!
I have tetrachromy so it’s good to be reminded to run graphics through various accessibility filters!
My husband: “Those two blue bars are the same.”
Me: “Nu uh. That’s blue-green, that’s blue-violet.”
My husband: “Okay but on Earth 1.0, they’re the same.”
Best wishes! :)
6:17 and thecodontosaurus, that one hadrosaur, that one nodasaur, etc.
I love to EDGE to edge science!
Gloucestershire
Pronounced GLOSS TA SHIRE
And SHIRE is pronounced
SHEAR
not SHY AH
I swear you changed the title and it didn't used to say "Contender", it simply said "largest sea animal ever"
Gobble up the Pac man, Ichthyosaurs and here comes the ghost...Power pills 🌠
For anyone wondering, it's pronounced "Gloss-ter-sher". No one knows why.
*largest animal on Earth to ever have existed.
Reminds me of how I once speculated that considering how we have no fossils from the open ocean, and just shallow seas, I wondered if Ichthyosaurs got extra big in the deeper parts, and lived longer into the Mesozoic then we currently think, I also wondered if some of these bigger ones were from beachings like how whales sometimes do.
(though the whales that do end up beached aren't normally the biggest kinds, or the biggest of their species, like even though sperm whale males can get 70 feet long most of them that get beached are 40 feet or less, thuogh we have found some massive whales beached before.)
I imagen though a lot of other people have had the same thought
Super cool! 🤟😎
Love the music at the end😂 memories
Why don’t you get to think and make a suggestion creating another RUclips Videos Shows that’s all about the Extinct Prehistoric Amphicyons (Bear Dogs) on the next Edge Science coming up next?!⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️👍👍👍👍👍
I want a squishy boi! ....can you buy a good quality ichthyasaur?? Not my favorite, but they seem cute, but deadly.
I have some footage of aust beach if you want it. Vividen asked me to take it but I still have the rights to it so I can share it with anyone if you want it.
Calling them "whale lizards" is a very inaccurate description.
I think that's the point
But appropriate for your mother! HEYYYY OHHHHHHH!
Itchyosaurs are basically cetaceans
Cetacean sized yes
If you really think about it… isn’t it the other way around?
But reptilian
Well, basically, one is a mammal, and one is a reptile.
@@SlothOfTheSea true
Cat meme song begins around 3:30
Accidentally top of the list. Not even subscribed. I going to subscribe now. Sorry.
Megalodon fan's will 😢 now
Megaladon is a chump. Come at me!
always funny to see youtubers i watch mention other youtubers i watch
If they are designated as dinosaurs then, they cannot be called fish since they're amphibians.
So its bigger than the blue whale? also why do they have narrow snouts do they also eat plankton?
The narrow snout is usually an adaptation to catch fast, schooling critters.
The narrowness allows the predator to dart forward while minimally disturbing the school, then sideswipe for the catch.
The longer the jaw is, the faster the tip moves.
Check out videos of gharials! It’s really cool how they catch fish!
Wrong blue whales are still bigger
imagine if we had an Ichtyotitan replace the Mosa in JW
They swam like sharks but came up for air like whales.
Mom I want that one!
Biggest animal to ever live is the Blue Whale
I thought Shasrasaurus was bigger than Shonisaurus
Shonisaurus 16 meters long
Shastasaurus 21 meters long
I think they may have been related to Pterosaurs. One branch went to the air, one to the sea.
Is that Blue "An-Chor" then??
Ngl arch linux discord mods might also be contenders for the largest animal ever title
- how would these things have breathed; were they more or less efficient than baleen whales?
- were there krill or other similar prey to feed on?
- if they were forced to actively hunt then did they have something like sonar or shark-like super smell or electrical sensitivity, since blindly charging with such massive bodies would waste too much energy?
- if they were more similar to orcas and sperm whales rather than baleen whales, wouldn't it be more efficient to have a sleeker, more muscular body and possibly an oversized head like the later mosasaurs?
I EDGE TO SCIENCE ALL THE TIME
My sence of humor is broken lol
For in those days, there were giants in the Earth.
They must have been warm blooded
Apparently, they were deep sea predators
Just heard this article on NPR today. Interesting stuff.
Is it really accurate to call them "reptiles"? Were they warm blooded. Most, if not all current day marine reptiles live in tropical or subtropical oceans and seas, or they migrate to where the water would be cold during the summer when it is warmer. I'm having a hard time imagining this creature to be an extothermic reptile unless the world's oceans were much warmer than they are today, or their range would have been severely restricted to warm tropical waters. Being that huge would require a huge intake of food that would have to be abundantly avallable. Marine mammals today have either thick fur or a combination of thick fur and blubber in order to stay warm in cold oceanic waters.
This would've been an endothermic or gigantothermic reptile, just like the dinosaurs.
@@EDGEscience They have apparently changed the definition of what a reptile is then.
You may be operating under a very old or very rudimentary definition of reptile. Cold or warm bloodedness aren't great terms because it's more about metabolism. Being a reptile (part of the sauropsid order) has to do with genetic heritage, rather than any individual or groups of traits. There are far more than a handful of traits that define members of the sauropsida. The leatherback sea turtle, for example, is a gigantotherm. It's so large that it generates internal "heat" or a high metabolism without actually having to have a real high metabolism. Birds are archosaurian reptilss, after all. Crocs have four chambered hearts and can walk with their limbs under their bodies for a time.
@@EDGEscience so what is the foundational definition of a reptile? I don't think I'm operating under an old definition per se, I think rather the definition seemly abruptly changed without any real explanation. Now it sounds like just about every veterbrate is being called a "reptile".
I don't know off the top of my head because it's a long list of traits used in phylogenetics analyses. You can find them yourself vai research. That being said, your definition sounds like "basic bio" from very old textbooks - cold blooded, limbs to the sides, scales, etc. When all of these are very general traits that can be seen outside of Sauropsida (the valid term for reptile, which is a colloquialism atp). For example, armadillos have keratin scutes, naked mole rats have such a slow metabolism as to be essentially cold blooded, chimps walk with their hindlimbs out to the side. Meanwhile many traits you see in "warm blooded" animals can be seen in various Sauropsid groups. Feathers, high metabolisms, scales, intelligence in birds. Intermediate hips, four chambered hearts, intemligence in crocs. So, what determines whether something belongs to a group has everything to do with ancestry and very little to do with specific traits or abilities. Tetrapods split into amniotes, which split into "amphibians", sauropsids (lizards, snakes, turtles, archosaurs), and synapsids (mammals and kin). Convergent evolution has allowed various groups to evolve traits seen in other groups but they remain linked to the group they diverged from.
so every year we are going to have an animal bigger than a blue whale ?
they evoluted from space men??
How about you think Hector Ichthyosaur? This titan may can be even bigger
*Let the Sunshine In...*
I thought Tylosaurus was in the 50=60 ft range.
Isn't that big enough for you?
I love this video but some of the music reminds me of a SFW Ankha dancing video lol.
Did the histology say anything about them being endotherms?
Ah a fellow gutsick gibbon fan 🎉
Thoroughly modern apes!
YOMAMASAURUS
It's rumored to have its own orbit due to its size.
2:41 nighmare fuel
Ok little boy
It's pronounced "Gloster" .. so it'd be "glostershire"
holy shit JIMMY and DEAN in the SAME PAPER?? literally was in a documentary with them. Go check out Why Dinosaurs everyone.
Do I hear ECCHO the dolphin? 🎶🥰
It has always occurred to me as odd that life on average in the present is tiny compared to pretty well all of life's history, very tiny. The only time historically when life has been small is after a catechism. Throughout history the world has been warmer, meaning more food is available offering the fuel to create these massive creatures. We are still in quite a cool period historically where the tundra is low. Yet the worlds largest animal supposedly exists now, it has never made sense to me
Makes perfect sense. We killed all the big things.
@@EDGEscienceI think he means like dinosaurs etc - the super-large creatures that were here long before humans
I love dolphin lizard!
Funny. Good science! Entertaining.
Thank God you've kept the AI-crumminess at bay.
Flizard sounds better.
fascinating
3:25 Ryan Reynolds
Need more bump in the night. I haven't seen that much from you.
Unfortunate name for a channel
Entirely intentional
Does anyone know which is the largest ichthyosaur of jurassic and cretaceous?
There was no ichthyosaur in cretaceous, they were extinct by then
Gloucestershire is pronounced GLOSS-TER-SHEER 👍🦖
They were tuna