TRIASSIC PERIOD. Animals size comparison and data. Paleoart
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 29 พ.ย. 2024
- Triassic Period:
(250-201 Millon years ago)
Life at this time was slowly recovering from the worst mass extinction the Earth ever experienced. All the continents were united in one supercontinent called Pangea. It was a time of climatic contrasts and very diverse and extrange animals. Dinosaurs also started evolving throughout this period.
Prints, Mugs, Tshirts and more here:
www.redbubble....
my instagram: @mariolanzarensis
FEATURED TAXA: Scleromochlus, Longisquama, Sharovipteryx, Eudimorphodon, Drepanosaurus, Caviramus, Lystrosaurus, Diademodon, Coelophysis, Arizonasaurus, Tawa, Silosaurus, Schringasaurus, Proterosuchus, Lotosaurus, Herrerasaurus, Postosuchus, Erhytrosuchus, Tanystropheus, Desmatosuchus, Melanorosaurus, Smilosuchus, Lisowicia, Plateosaurus, Sillosuchus
Music By Swelling:
freemusicarchi...
Many of these reconstructions are to some degree based on the descriptions and skeletal drawings by Scott Hartman, Mark Witton, Ashley Patch and Ivanbel
If you enjoy this content, please don´t forget to give this video a LIKE,That simple gesture helps the channel grow. Thanks a lot!
You can leave your suggestions for furure videos in the comments too
This is soo cool. Can you do a Alisoauridie or tyrannosaur bid next? :3
One of ancient Brazilian creatures like vespersaurus, spectrovenador, erythrovenador, xenorhinotherium, glyptodon, teyujagua, keresdrakon, etc.
Note: I'm from Brazil, so I ordered this
Homet good idea!
Milton too
@@region54dm thanks and Milton that would be cool.
Ah yes, the Triassic, when things that looked like dinosaurs were actually crocodile relatives and the thing that looks like a crocodile is not actually a crocodile.
dont forgot the mammal relatives that look like a reptile
@@Gyomax9744 giant stem mammals that look like triceratops
The Triassic period is where things were just on crack
Yes and the time before things went to sh#t
It only goes down hill from here
Triassic is what Cambrian was
The devs are still in experimental phase for the new patch and new update. The Jurassic Update will finally clear anything alien
The Triassic is such an interesting period. After The Great Dying the evolution was all over the place and produced so many amazing alien looking animals. The art in the video definitely gives them justice
Smaller niches was all over the place but for larger animals archosaurs were taking over. I'd say the low oxygen atmosphere played a part, archosaurs have a unilateral respiratory system which is more efficient than any other group of animals including mammals.
@@trvth1s I don't think it was the low oxygen level. Mammal respiratory systems are pretty good too (even if worse) so I don't think it would have interfered that much with competition.
@@shockal7269 I've read that birds respiratory system is 2.5x more efficient than mammals. This is why birds can fly across low oxygen Himalayan alps while bats can not.
From the triassic to the cretaceous oxygen levels ranged from 10%-15%. Today we're at 21%
@@trvth1s But there are tons of mammals adapted for life in the Himalayan alps too. Bats are obviously not one of them. But there are animals like Yaks that can grow to massive sizes yet seem unfazed by the low oxygen.
@@shockal7269 walking doesn't require as much vascular activity as flying. Birds stamina is better than any bat ever was or ever will be. Their lungs are unilateral plus they have airsacs, it is what it is
The triassic together with the permian period are the most bizarre and amazing geological eras
More mass extinctions (hence the weird variety of ancient reptiles and stem mammals).
Ngl, the Cretaceous was pretty wild too. I guess that's what stability allows. Actually thinking about...... the present is also pretty insane.
@@flightlesslord2688 Our species/civ is highly crazy to start with and also how comparatively small megafauna generally are (aside from whales that we know of).
@@TedShatner10 oh the megafauna isn't surprising at all, just 40 000-10 000 years ago we caused a bit of a megafaunal mass extinction ourselves. There used to be elephant-sized animals on every continent and some were even twice as big as modern elephants, but they're gone. the only time period that had something larger was the mesozoic
It is a lot more informative to see where they were when Pangea was still together than in where the continents are now. Great video!
I can see why the animals in this era were bizarre. The Permian extinction was, obviously, recent when these animals first appeared, so life was struggling to get back up.
Another thing I want to point out: the Dinosaurs didn't dominate the whole Triassic period. They started rising during the late Triassic period.
Triassic period is arguably the most overlooked and underrated of the Dinosaur era, as some dinosaurs and creatures of that time deserve more recognition.
it is overlooked because dinosaurs didn't rule this era
You are right.
You’re a very talented paleoartist!
Thanks!!😁
@@MarioLanzas. Pls make neogene period size comparison
Never heard of most of them, triassic is such a cool period!!
It is.
I've heard of most of them, there was only 2 I haven't heard of
There was a few missing such as Ischigualastia, Chiniquodon and Sanjuansaurus.
they haven't appeared in popular media that much so they're only really known to paleontology fans
Ah, the triassic weirdos. Some of my favourite ancient animals
The Triassic Period proves Earth can bounce back from anything
Exactly
Life is tree you can't stop it from growing
Life is river on which you can't build a dam
Jurrasic park 1993
But it takes millions of years
Yes. So it will also happen after human extinction.
I’ve created an alien planet, named meander. It’s a super-earth 1.6x larger than earth and has an atmosphere of hydrogen sulphide, nitrogen, water vapor, and carbon dioxide. It is currently going through a similar situation to Triassic earth, as it too had just gone through a massive extinction event thought to be caused by a massive astroid impact. Only the hardiest scavengers survived, and 20 million years later, have gone through a diversification explosion and have evolved into strange life forms. One notable survivor was the meanderian cucumber; a sea cucumber-like creature that’s actually a colony of hundreds of different individuals, each having their own duties. Their main predators have all gone extinct, so they have diversified into many new niches that they’ve never inhabited before.
I’m making one to.
And it’s in a system with another sun
Bro what? 💀
The Triassic is probably in my opinion my favorite and most fascinating time period.
Keep up your awesome work.
Your videos and art never disappoint. This is probably by favourite period because of how lizard looking and unique they all look. You always have outstanding work, you really inspire me with my own art. Keep it up, loving your art 👍
Thank you so much!
Yessssssssssss
I absalutley love it!!!!
And I love how the background isn't just scenery it actual has stuff going on in the back ground
The Triassic video was one of my favorite videos by you
And now it some how got even better
Thank you!
Just like Scott Hartman is my go-to for skeletal reconstructions, you are my top reference for realistic but artsy original size comparisons. Brilliant! Keep making them and we'll keep coming to see them!
I'm honored! Thank you! :)
Beautiful art, beautiful video, beautiful, dramatic music. I love every bit of it. The Triassic truly was a wondrous period.
The triassic the awkward high school age of life on earth
Have I told you how much I adore your work? Like, that's some very good paleoart. I really like the color schemes.
Thank you very much!! :)
The Triassic is often not given much attention, because it hadn't many big and impressive dinosaurs, but it had very interesting (and bizarre 😳) animals too
I thought I knew about prehistory until I saw the first two creatures!
I miss this video. Glad you put it back up better than ever.
Wow! These creatures were actually more bizarre than dinosaurs.😅
Bro, esto es literalmente arte. Por favor, nunca dejes de hacer estos increibles videos.
Cool! I love triassic dinosaurs!
Oi ALO!!!!
@@Leticiaflsilva oi...
Erhytrosuchus didn’t skip head day👀
We should strive to be like this man
😔👊💪
"Where do you workout?"
Erhytrosuchus: "In a library 🧠"
Fr like why is bros head so damn big
2:15 Yeah, this one's just a large therapod head that someone glued to a lizard.
This one just genuinely makes me laugh
Sheeeeeeesh!
Nice work bro! Please don't stop!!!👍
Awesome i did not know about sillosuchus. Looks like a theropod but it's not even a dinosaur.
They were also herbbivores with no teeth...like a toothless. Like an early sauropodamorpha with no teeth!
Interesting isn't it? There're whole clades into Paracrocodylomorpha that contain several bipedal, dinosaur-looking species, i.e. _Ornithosuchus_ , _Postosuchus_ and _Effigia_ , but these were more related to modern-day crocodiles and cladistics indicate that these three lineages I mentioned developed bipedalism independently.
@@SnipermanElite Don't forget poposaurus.
Good work, can't wait for video about Permian period.
El Triásico. Probablemente mí periodo geológico favorito y no voy a decir por qué, creo que tan solo este video habla por si solo.
Verdade, é um período com uma diversidade de répteis e dinossauro com aparência bem primitiva e interessante. Se eu não gostasse tanto do período carbonífera e dos insetos gigantes, talvez o período triássico séria o meu favorito também.
Esa fue la era que vio nacer a los dinosaurios y donde abudaban otros tipos de reptiles parecidos a los dinosaurios como los ancestros de los cocodrilos y los sinapsidos los cuales fueron ancestros de los mamíferos, luego sabemos quienes comenzaron a reinar de ahí en adelante osea los dinosaurios.
1:38 - Somebody please Explain what evolution smoked when constructing this entity ?!?!
Lol
Freaking ProtoCarnoMagyOldIguanodonSaurus.
That explains the smoke
LSD
Looks like a cursed carno lol
The art looks so good
It’s amazing when you think of the fact that there were entire ecosystems born and dying before we even existed. Time wise, we’re just a speck on the world timeline graph.
Que cantidad de reptiles tan extraños había en el Triasico en el momento en el que aparecían los primeros dinosaurios. De haber estado en esa época, me habría resultado mas, un poco alienigeno ver esa fauna. Excelente presentación, colega. Saludos.
Ok but we gotta talk about Erhytrosuchus and that absurdly disproportionate head
Can you do a size comparison of prehistoric land mammals or carcharodontosaurids?
that postosuchus looks SO GOOD. it looks like the WWD one but accurate
Me he quedado totalmente fascinado con este video, creía que el tríasico no era tan interesante cómo los 2 otros periodos que dan forma al mesozoico, felicidades por el video, es de muy buena calidad.
para mi el triasico y permico son las epocas con formas de vida mas rara y fascinntes en la tierra
Fasolasuchus would have been a nice addition, but this was probably the best size comparison yet!! Keep up the great work!!
¡Este era uno de mis videos favoritos del canal anterior! ¡Ahora verlo reeditado te quedó aún más fenomenal! El efecto del polvo y eo vapor de los géiseres estuvo 💯💯💯💯
Gracias!
I really like your channel, because you let me know more about dinosaurs and in the dinosaur design it's beautiful.
El periodi triasic es una de las eras más infravaloradas, la verdad es interesante ver en lo que se convirtieron estos animales muchos años después
The fact that this video now has 252k views, and that the end-Permian mass exitinction happened 252 million years ago is.... fitting tbh.
yoo i remember proterosuchus from walking with monsters
Me too
Ayyy I also remember Coelophysis a lot too
@Kofi Ellis whaaat? It's a classic!
@Kofi Ellis you can find the full version on youtube
@Kofi Ellis no its free
*Welcome To New Blood*
*this is how dreams are made from*
Ah yes the Triassic period home to the most Goofy ahh creatures in history
You did it again! You made me discover new creatures.
You thought it was Dinosauria, but it was me, *Paracrocodylomorpha!*
- triassic in a nutshell
Just found this channel and I so appreciate that you take the time to make these visual representations of life as it was throughout the Earths history.
This is so cool, can you please do hadrosaur size comparison?
Siempre es un placer ver el trabajo paleoartístico de Mario Lanzas
I like how crocodilimorph and crocodiliformes ruled the earth and more diverse in Triassic than dinosaur and mammal like reptile
You a smart paleoartist! What you do next?
Description: *Life at this time was slowly recovering from the worst mass extinction the Earth ever experienced.*
Late Cretaceous:
Welcome to Triassic Park
I think Triassic animals, along with the Permian, had the most bizarre creatures.
1:37 El shringasaurus parece un híbrido entre un carnotaurus y un dragón de komodo. Se ve gracioso 😆
Daspacito
Damn that's a freaking cool diademodon, hope to see more cynodontids from you
👍👍👍 you king of dinosaur
👑😉
Jeez. The further back in time you go, the weirder things look.
no smok (wawelski) 😞
ah well, great vid as per usual mate
Uh, i'd to check more info about diademodon on Google. I never heard of him.
The animals in this period have a sort of uncanny valley vibe about them they look like animals I recognize but at the same time they don’t like anything I recognize
Awesome work dude! Can you make a cretaceous period animal size chart? That would be a banger! Keep up the excellent work man!
of course! I'm making videos on every period :)
Gran trabajo, como siempre¡
Gracias!!
2:41 Riding that Dinosaur would be fun ❤️🤗
Interesantes criaturas las del Triásico, me recuerdan a las del Pérmico pero conviviendo con los primeros Dinosaurios.
1:45 Nostalgia ❤️
This is a really great comparison and I have a video idea for Christmas. You could do a Godzilla or The isle size comparison(The isle is a cool dinosaur game). Anyways these are great comparisons, keep up the great work. :D
Godzilla could be fun to make at some point
Poposaurs are so under appreciated I love those crocodiles.
Life on Earth after the Great Dying:
'HOLY SHIT WTF!?!?!? OMFG!? QUICK, BALANCE, WE NEEED BALANCE!! OCCUPY THE NICHES!!!........ Good enough.'
Mario lanzas, Where is gojirasaurus?
Gojirasaurus the king of monster (dinosaurs) live in triassic period to, can you drawing the gojirasaurus? 😙
If your from Arizona U.S.A you know about half of them. Because of the Petrified Forest National Park
Nice work. I wonder why early dinosaurs are always depicted as super skinny. Whales, hippos, and many animals have tiny skeletons, but lots of bulk. But still, love that art
Mammals store more fat than reptiles and birds
@@leonardogrande6144 i know but reptiles have more muscle mass, and muscle supsringingly weighs more than fat
@@stegotyranno4206 but still dinosaurs are built to be way ligther. Their bodies inside are full of air sacks and hollow bones. Mamals need more body mass in general. Dinosaurs are more close to birds than crocodiles. You don't find heavy or fat birds really, especially without their feathers
@@leonardogrande6144 first of all, this has nothing to do with bulk. Once again, whales and even penguins have tiny, lightweight skeletons, but they both are fat blubbery beasts. Secondly, the majority of non avian dinosaurs, while more RELATED to birds, are BUILT like crocodiles and relatives. They both had scales, they both had teeth, they both had osteoderms, they both had similar brain configurations(but crocodiles are more intelligent than most dinosaurs). Its like looking at a chimpanzee. Its built like a gorilla but is more related to a human
@@stegotyranno4206 crocodiles more inteligent than dinosaurs? Where did you get that idea from? Just looking at the living dinosaurs.. a crow is way smarter than a crocodile. Btw, penguins and whales bones are heavier precisely because they are marine animals. They also have more fat storage for that reason. The relations and comparisons you are pointing out here make no sense.
I hope we see your PaloArt for the Permian. I think it would be interesting
One of my favourites! I'm looking forward to start working on that one
The Triassic really must have been a dramatic time, to produce such weird body proportions and several bipedal species.
How about fasolasuchus?
I was really disappointed when it didn't appear :(
First dinosaurs arrive at the triassic, so hellos to dinos and goodbyes to the permian period!
The music fits so well
if you every decide to add more animals here are a few to reference
Gojirasaurus: largest therapod dinosaur in Triassic
Fasolasuchus: Largest Terrestrial carnivore of the Triassic, belonging to Rauisuchia
Lessemsaurus: a small early sauropods from the privative family of Lessemsauridae
Mastodonsaurus: a giant amphibian predator
Buenas tardes, felicidades por su contenido. Tienes el video Prehistoric animals compilation 2018 from the permian to the ice?
Gracias!
pues precisamente estoyreeditando ese video de nuevo ahora, para publicar una versión más actualizada con modelos de este año
Gracias por responder.. mi hijo seguía tus vídeos y aprende mucho con ellos. Sabrás cuando tendrías listo la publicación de ese video?
@@oskralejandr0 No sé exactamente cuando, pero antes de que acabe este mes seguro😁
@@MarioLanzas. 🙏
Amazing and informative video!
I'm not sure if you've already done this, but do you think you could do a stone age animal comparison? I've always been quite interested in stone age animals for some reason.
They are like I mean why are they like all so "Horizontal"
Fun fact: a very very close relative to herreresaurus was recently discovered (thats why it wasnt in the vid bc this vid is 3 years old) called Gnathovorax, cant remember if its bigger or slightly smaller.
Herrerasaurus is one of my favourite prehistoric animals. To think it existed 165 million years before t-rex and triceratops blows my mind
Wow erythrosuchus has such a large head. I thought it was smaller
My favourite period of the Mesozoic. It's so underappreciated because it lacked the impressively large dinosaurs that would evolve millions of years later. After the Great Dying the earth was so radically changed and life. Got. Weird. It's fascinating to imagine these animals walking around an almost empty earth as the predecessors of the dinosaurs
1:22 this dino mean Laugh in Indonesia😂
Tawa is Laugh
Could you do a Paleozoic animals size comparison?
Nicee.Idol,pls make a video with tyrannosaur familiy tree
Great video! I'm very interested in the Triassic period, and I'm planning to make a game about it, so this video is very useful. It's just that the sizes of Coelophysis, Diademodon and Tawa isn't really accurate...? At least not what I've seen, maybe you used some more accurate sites? Anyways keep up the work! I really want a part 2 of this!
Incredible!!!! Wonderful!!!!
Good video although don't appreciate the representation of Plateosaurus with feathers ( as far as I know although I may be wrong dinosaurs with feathers were only found in the Jurassic/Cretaceous period ) it's also amazing how the Synapsids decreased quantitatively/qualitatively while the Diapsids bloomed
Properly formed feathers maybe, but their precursors (quills, protofeathers) evolved way earlier. Now it's considered that this kind of integument was common in early archosaurs, since Pterosaurs also ave them. It's possible that common ancestors of Dinosaurs and Pterosaurs presented this feature, which would mean that early dinosaurs would most likely have some kind of quills/protofeather-ish covering
@@MarioLanzas. I'm not up to date ( I've read about this in times past and the impression I have is that " they've been changing " ) so I'm not criticizing you but just inquiring : Did the first archosaurs have this type of " proto-feather " covering ? Wouldn't it be just the Ornithodira ? Because the Pseudosuchia did not have ( even the current ones do not have ) feathers in addition to the Pterosaurs possessing feathers is still an open discussion ( there are studies that argue that they do and others that argue that they don't )
@@joelara4637 well, I wouldn't say Ornithodira, but all endothermic Avemetatarsalians, or all endothermic archosaurs probably had other more primitive filaments than Protofeathers, Feathers and Pycnofibers, not least because Pseudosuchia were ectotherms, maybe basal archosaurs like Smok were already endothermic and had filaments, but this is not in the fossil record, so this is already being very speculative.
One group you forgot were temnospondlyi
WoW so cool. Can you do therizinosaurs.
Thank you so much for the feathers on the coelofysis
instantly sub
I am astonish at your talent, this gives me nostalgic vibes
🙌🏻Mario Lanzas🙌🏻
that is some true talent
Thank you so much!
@@MarioLanzas. no thank you
Ah yes the Triassic, when a crocodile’s head was 3ft long