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Andrew Murray
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 2 มี.ค. 2012
Dippy Update
This video is an update on Dippy the Diplodocus, which I mentioned in my Diplodocus dinosaur profile.
I recently visited the Natural History Museum in London and managed to see the mount that I talk about above.
If you are still a fan of Dippy and wish to see him, you can find out how here: dippyincoventry.co.uk
I recently visited the Natural History Museum in London and managed to see the mount that I talk about above.
If you are still a fan of Dippy and wish to see him, you can find out how here: dippyincoventry.co.uk
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The Morrison Formation
มุมมอง 3.4K2 หลายเดือนก่อน
The Morrison Formation preserves an amazing ecosystem that sustained an unusual and incredible environment of adversity with some of the largest land animals that ever walked the planet. Normal in Late Jurassic North America was huge, and while sauropods would reach larger sizes, their dominance and diversity would never again reach this height. You can sign up to my Patreon here patreon.com/an...
Dinosaur Profile: Camarasaurus
มุมมอง 9Kปีที่แล้ว
Camarasaurus was a workhorse of the Morrison Formation: filling open niches, affecting the landscape, and providing food for predators. Often overlooked, but a real keystone dinosaur. My patreon: www.patreon.com/andrew_murray Neck animations europepmc.org/article/PMC/3812995 Camarasaurus growth rate www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3686781/pdf/pone.0067012.pdf Body temp. sites.coloradocolle...
Dinosaur Feathers
มุมมอง 31K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Feathers have always been synonymous with birds, but they have also been associated with dinosaurs for a very long time. Recently, as more feathered dinosaurs are being found, the facts on which dinosaurs were scaly, which were feathered, and to what extent, is becoming clearer. Support me on Pateon at: www.patreon.com/andrew_murray Feathers are a fascinating field of study in palaeontology rig...
Dinosaur Profile: Coelophysis
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By the Late Triassic, the dinosaurs had achieved a foothold in the oases of the Pangaean desert, but they needed a pioneer to blaze a trail across the world. A dinosaur profile on Coelophysis. My patreon: www.patreon.com/andrew_murray Species tier patrons will: have access to early releases of my videos and your name in the end credits Genus tier patrons will also: get access to the history sec...
Discovery of Dinosaurs
มุมมอง 1.3K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Dinosaur bones have always been a part of our history, even before they were named. The early 19th century story of their description and naming has twists and turns around science, theories, and egos. Let’s see how this all began.
Dinosaur Profile: Iguanodon
มุมมอง 15K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Iguanodon helped birth the study of dinosaurs. It has been with us for nearly 200 years and, while not always on the cutting edge, has been a barometer of how our view of dinosaurs has changed. These are the dinosaurs that we have known about for the longest, and yet they are still able to surprise us. The story of Iguanodon is far from over. Abe Books links (US / UK): www.abebooks.com/servlet/...
Dinosaur Air Sacs
มุมมอง 5K2 ปีที่แล้ว
While I am still working on my latest Dinosaur Profile video, I thought I'd put this together to act as a reference for every time I talk about dinosaur air sacs.
Dinosaur Profile: Brachiosaurus
มุมมอง 32K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Once called the largest known, Brachiosaurs has since been eclipsed as our knowledge of dinosaurs has expanded, but Brachiosaurus remains a true giant. It challenged the notions of dinosaurs when it was discovered, and still provokes passions in palaeontologists and the public today. The Dinosaur Collection book is available here: books.apple.com/gb/book/the-dinosaur-collection/id1509516708?mt=...
Dinosaur Profile: Deinonychus
มุมมอง 55K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Not many dinosaurs spark a scientific revolution, but this one did, ushering in the dinosaur renaissance. There are numerous raptors, this is a dinosaur profile on Deinonychus. The Dinosaur Collection book is available here: books.apple.com/gb/book/the-dinosaur-collection/id1509516708?mt=11&app=itunes Many times in this video I have used examples of paleo art by Emily Willoughby. If you like pa...
Channel Video
มุมมอง 1.6K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Welcome to my Palaeo Channel. Here I specialise in profiles of different dinosaurs, going in depth about their history and the research. Ready to dive in?
Dinosaur Profile: Ankylosaurus
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Predating Armoured knights, ironclads, and tanks by 66 million years, this dinosaur took personal protection to the next level. A dinosaur profile on Ankylosaurus. The Dinosaur Collection book is available here: books.apple.com/gb/book/the-dinosaur-collection/id1509516708?mt=11&app=itunes Here are some of the resourced I refer to if you are interested. Ken Carpenter reviews Ankylosaurus: www.re...
Dinosaur Profile: Diplodocus
มุมมอง 22K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Many sauropod dinosaurs grew big, this went long. A Dinosaur Profile on Diplodocus. To find out where Dippy is: www.nhm.ac.uk/take-part/dippy-on-tour.html The Dinosaur Collection book is available here: books.apple.com/gb/book/the-dinosaur-collection/id1509516708?mt=11&app=itunes Here are some of the resourced I refer to if you are interested. Ken Carpenter on how dinosaurs got big: www.dinosau...
Dinosaur Profile: Allosaurus
มุมมอง 58K4 ปีที่แล้ว
A dinosaur profile on the most successful predator of the Late Jurassic: Allosaurus. The Dinosaur Collection book is available here: books.apple.com/gb/book/the-dinosaur-collection/id1509516708?mt=11&app=itunes Study of Allosaurus skull strength and slash and tear technique: www.researchgate.net/publication/232771083_Cranial_form_and_function_in_a_larger_theropod_dinosaur Study and summary of t...
Mesozoic Era
มุมมอง 13K4 ปีที่แล้ว
This video explores the Mesozoic Era, the Age of the Dinosaurs, and the geological techniques that define it. The dinosaurs gained dominance through two mass extinctions and were brought down by a third. Those three are explored, the possible causes discussed, and the changes through almost 200 million years talked about as well. If you would like to check out the International Commission on St...
Only just found this channel. It's legit excellent.
These are actually great vids. Don't know why views and subs don't have an extra zero after them.
I had no idea that dippy had camara arms 😂
More videos, pleeeaaaseee
I love dinosaur eggs for tea.
Great account!
Thanks! Should have called this video “the bronze dinasour”
I love my dinosaurs flavoured sour
Even people who aren't into dinosaurs as much as everyone else they've seen Dippy before in the original star wars on Tatooine.
I was wondering if a lighter yet weather resistant alternative material for Fern can be suggested. Bronze is indeed very heavy.
Yeah but bronze is both classic and classy.
look cool
Hell yeah!
That's amazing! Not only is Dippy on tour, but it gave rise to Fern. I am sadly in Canada so can't see this wonderful sculpture, but I hope those that can can enjoy it.
The amount of solutions that were used drawing inspiration from sauropod biology makes me happy. As does the monkey puzzle, wollemi pine and ferns around the beast.
Heh I have all those plants as I'm making my own prehistoric garden. ^^ BTW It's nice to know not only I spotted the Wollemi pine.
I have 2 Wollemis plus probably the only 2 California redwoods in tropical north Australia(they are thriving happily) in 40cm pots.
Very nice idea to surround Fern with Mesozoic-esque plants. 🙂
I did not see the Effigia reveal coming! Nor that it was a pseudosuchian, what?!
all this info is basically why camarasaurus is my most favorite dinosaur, very nice video
nicknaming the bones of "brösmeli" got me laughing really hard. Because it translates to small crumbles in swiss german. 7:38
Just discovered your videos. They are excellent!
Yeah but those losers cant chew and breathe at the same time. Checkmate birds.
While birds and other dinosaurs only had simple hinge jaws, most just swallowed their food to stew in their gut without chewing at all. Hadrosaurs, though, had a weird workaround to ‘chew’ their food that you can find out about in my Iguanodon video.
Stegosaurus’s plates make much more sense as defensive armour now considering allosaurus used the “hatchet” technique to attack prey. Imagine one of those plates breaking through the roof of your mouth… ouch.
While I think that Allosaurus used “slash and tear” attacks rather than a specific hatchet manoeuvre, I do think that stegosaur spines were defensive, like Kentrosaurus and Decentrurus. However, the placement and structure of specifically Stegosaurus’ plates indicate display to me while the thagomizers on the tail were effective weapons. I talk about this in my Stegosaurus video.
Excellent video. Very indepth, the way I like it.
Correction: The Dino mummy "Leonardo" is actually a Brachylophosaurus not an Edmontosaurus.
Well spotted. I do issue a correction after the credits in my next video.
Almost every single species of modern bird today is born with at least one tooth
Another fantastic synthesis of wide and varied sources of information. Very professional and most impressive! The accompanying graphics and animation are so apt and seamlessly integrated into the concise narrative, making these extremely rich and dense presentations of the material. Truly a go to source of information on any given topic. Highly commendable!
Unbelievable! The most comprehensive, engaging, and professional overview of a dinosaur I have seen yet on TH-cam. I can't wait to dig in to your other material. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
My favorite dino ❤
good video, i enjoyed it a lot
Looks like the Apatosaurus specimen number might have shrunk with Brontosaurus back.
You can see the 2022 numbers in my video on the Morrison Formation.
@@palaeo_channel Ah, thank you.
I would like to point out one small mistake. New studies have calculated that allosaurus had a bite force of 6000 to 9000 newtons just wanted to point that out no hate at all
I am thinking of revisiting Allosaurus’ bite in a future short, so I would be grateful if you could send me a link to one of those studies.
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3391458
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3391458/
This is the study www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3391458/
I can’t put a link, but here’s the name of the study ,Estimating maximum bite performance in Tyrannosaurus rex using multi-body dynamics and then after that, click the first blue link
Love your work
Allosaurus & Stegosaurus: Pass on our legacy… Tyrannosaurus & Ankylosaurus: I will padre
I'm not saying anything here about iguanadon thumbs, just that the first coconuts were supposed to have evolved 85 million years ago, leading to a 20 million year overlap.
Not sure what your point is, but Iguanodon disappeared 122 million years ago. My research also indicates that while palm trees evolved around 80 mya, coconuts only appeard after the K-Pg mass extinction event 66 mya.
Don't have a clue on how massive the Amazon or the Congo is bro, this videos is shit!
Ok Andrew, We need to make about the Profile of the Hell Creek and Lance Formation Dinosaurs like Tyrannosaurus, Triceratops, and Edmontosaurus. But also about the Profile of the South American, North American, Asian, European and the African Dinosaurs too such as Spinosaurus, Deinocheirus, Argentinosaurus, Carnotaurus, Velociraptor, Maiasaura, and Oviraptor.
Keep your hair on. I will be talking about Hell Creek, Lance, and a few other Late Cretaceous North America formations in my next video on Triceratops. The response to this video has been so positive, I am thinking about doing more in the future.
So now the Brachiosaurus is outweighed by the Camarasaurus? Wow.
Even when the same method is used, a Camarasaurus the size of C. supremus outweighs Brachiosaurus. The former was just bulkier.
He has returned.
Can you please do a video on Baryonyx thank you
I am planning to get to it. If you can’t wait, I do talk about Baryonyx and other baryonycines in the UK in my Iguanodon video.
Fantastic, it’s obvious that so much work went into this! I second the other comments asking for more ‘formation-centric’ vids, seeing the maps and ecology change over time makes it easy to imagine the place in your mind’s eye. Please, please keep up the good work
thank you so much for this. I kept watching all these other videos on different species and the mention of clades and me not knowing them drove me nuts! finally reaching your video
Your videos are great
Welcome back
That raptor about the size of Utah raptor makes walking with dinosaurs a bit accurate
You can also see how accurate the hunting in that episode is by watching my video on Deinonychus.
Dude your chart game is so strong, phenomenal video
Highly appreciated - thanks a lot for creating & sharing!
So glad I finally have time to watch this
Excellent video. tyvm
Dang this was really good! Thanks!