Once you learn about the earliest reptilian ancestors that split into lepidosaurs and archosaurs and start mentally zooming out, you can see this incredible, coherent, single story playing out over hundreds of millions of years of archosaurs exploding into thousands and thousands of varieties, filling every possible ecological niche, evolutionary adaptation running wild over 200,000,000 years until suddenly a single group that evolved as early as the Jurassic manages to survive the K-T extinction while all others are wiped out, that surviving group going on to again explode in variety and adaptation over the next tens of millions of years. I love me some dinosaurs.
Isisaurus, a sauropod from India. “And all are females.” And they’re many miles from their rich forest feeding grounds and the deserts where they breed.
Man what are these Isisaurus doing off the paths on the Fagradalsfjall 2021 lavas? I hope Search and Rescue guided them back to safety. And how did they travel 320km to the tuffring (not caldera) Hverfjall in a span of a couple of seconds? :D
This is a very good fairy tale. once the babies are born, being so small, there necks not so hight, how do they get back through the poisenes gas on there way to the green green grassy knoll on the other side?
What terrible spelling, if only you had access to a powerful device that would let you search for the spelling of poisonous & height, and know the difference between their & there, to stop you writing like an inbreed.
Let alone the fact that volcanic activity is so irregular and short in evolutionary timespan that these animals wouldn't have been able to develop these behavioural adaptations before the volcanoes in their area would either become too active or too inactive again, making this huge waste of effort pointless. Unless these dinosaur mommas were travelling possibly even thousands of kilometres in search of a new caldera that has cooled down just enough, and has regular temperatures suitable for incubating, every time the previous one has become too inactive within couple of hundreds of years, maybe couple thousand years if they are lucky. What a load of nonsense. Inactive calderas themselves might have provided a nice nesting ground but any kind of remaining volcanic activity would have been unnecessary and likely detrimental. It's the forced BS like this I saw on clips and trailers that I got hugely disappointed with in this series and the reason why I didn't buy a subscription to watch it.
@@lochness5524 there no direct descendants of dinosaurs left as the most recent ones died off in cretaceous period astroid impact and geological evidence means nothing
@@calvinsuu1949birds are literally avian dinosaurs, and geological evidence is quite useful. just because you don't want to even try to understand the evidence and the processes involved in all of this doesn't make it not true. try to learn something.
It's amazing how these animals adapted to using the volcanic landscape to their advantage by using the caldera as a nursery
Late cretaceous India was very dangerous because of the volcanoes.
Well, that’s because it was still an island at the time. Hope that was clear.
@@anthonybusch4407 very big island (like Australia is an "island"). And that was not the cause of the volcanism.
Damn, I really love the Isisaurus from this series, and the most badass creature of the series.
How so, is it badass?
@@anthonybusch4407 Those creatures migrate in the middle of deadly volcanoes, not once but once a year, how is that not badass?
@@dinoscarex4550, Oh! Oh, Okay. Yeah, that is rather badass.
The variety of dinosaurs that existed over the ages is just completely astounding.
Once you learn about the earliest reptilian ancestors that split into lepidosaurs and archosaurs and start mentally zooming out, you can see this incredible, coherent, single story playing out over hundreds of millions of years of archosaurs exploding into thousands and thousands of varieties, filling every possible ecological niche, evolutionary adaptation running wild over 200,000,000 years until suddenly a single group that evolved as early as the Jurassic manages to survive the K-T extinction while all others are wiped out, that surviving group going on to again explode in variety and adaptation over the next tens of millions of years. I love me some dinosaurs.
Isisaurus, a sauropod from India.
“And all are females.” And they’re many miles from their rich forest feeding grounds and the deserts where they breed.
R.I.P to the cameraman ( bro burned into lava )
Um… I’m pretty sure that the cameraman is still alive. 🤨
@@anthonybusch4407 Um... I'm pretty sure that was a joke.
Seems Isisaurus and Rajasaurus just show up in prehistoric planet after the anime Dinosaur king
Man what are these Isisaurus doing off the paths on the Fagradalsfjall 2021 lavas? I hope Search and Rescue guided them back to safety. And how did they travel 320km to the tuffring (not caldera) Hverfjall in a span of a couple of seconds? :D
😊🤗
This is a very good fairy tale. once the babies are born, being so small, there necks not so hight, how do they get back through the poisenes gas on there way to the green green grassy knoll on the other side?
Strong wind currents blow the toxic gases away so that way it’s safer for them
Watch the whole thing, you Slungoid
What terrible spelling, if only you had access to a powerful device that would let you search for the spelling of poisonous & height, and know the difference between their & there, to stop you writing like an inbreed.
THATS WHAT IVE BEEN ASKING
Let alone the fact that volcanic activity is so irregular and short in evolutionary timespan that these animals wouldn't have been able to develop these behavioural adaptations before the volcanoes in their area would either become too active or too inactive again, making this huge waste of effort pointless. Unless these dinosaur mommas were travelling possibly even thousands of kilometres in search of a new caldera that has cooled down just enough, and has regular temperatures suitable for incubating, every time the previous one has become too inactive within couple of hundreds of years, maybe couple thousand years if they are lucky. What a load of nonsense.
Inactive calderas themselves might have provided a nice nesting ground but any kind of remaining volcanic activity would have been unnecessary and likely detrimental.
It's the forced BS like this I saw on clips and trailers that I got hugely disappointed with in this series and the reason why I didn't buy a subscription to watch it.
Fake assumptions and total bs
Speculative reasoning based on geologic evidence and modern day species
@@lochness5524 seems like this guy is just rage baiting to me. Not much point arguing with him lol
I'm sorry that scientific inference as a concept is confusing to you and over your head but there's no reason for it to make you so angry and bitter 💙
@@lochness5524 there no direct descendants of dinosaurs left as the most recent ones died off in cretaceous period astroid impact and geological evidence means nothing
@@calvinsuu1949birds are literally avian dinosaurs, and geological evidence is quite useful. just because you don't want to even try to understand the evidence and the processes involved in all of this doesn't make it not true. try to learn something.