Sinosauropteryx: The First Feathered Dragon
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 ก.ค. 2024
- On this episode of Extinction Files, we will be covering the dinosaur that forever changed the paleontological landscape, the dinosaur that linked both birds and dinosaurs into the same family tree!
Twitter account that you should follow:
/ epoch_now
Collaborator Media:
The Primal Earth:
@ThePrimalEarth
SpinoDragon:
@SpinoDragonProductions
/ spinodragon145
TheDinosaurHunter:
@thedinosaurhunter3515
/ reallifedh2020
The Imperpetuate Sabertooth:
@theimperpetuatesabertooth8123
Mephilas Seijin101:
@MephilasSeijin101
RangoGamer:
@rangogamer1386
/ rangogamer14
LegitEliminator:
@LegitEliminator
/ @legiteliminator
MikeMc9797:
@MikeMc9797
/ mikemc9797453
0:00 Introduction
1:44 Discovery
6:01 Size
7:20 Family
8:58 Ecology & Environment
13:26 Pop Culture
15:03 Extinction & Conclusion
16:28 Outro
MUSIC USED
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"Poco Allegretto" - Jaap van Zweden, Netherlands Philharmonic Orchestra, & Brahms
"Wano Theme (Drums of Liberation)" - Carameii
"Chu Shang: Song of the Chu Kingdom" - Hubei Chime Bells Orchestra
"Sinosauropteryx Single Release" - Frontier (Jurassic World Evolution 2 OST)
"Sinosauropteryx Multiple Release" - Frontier (Jurassic World Evolution 2 OST)
"What Does Anybody Know About Anything" - Chris Zabriskie
"Ambershire" - Danosongs
"Opening Theme" - When Dinosaurs Ruled OST
"Ouverture" - Samuel Safa (A New Prehistory OST)
"Welcome to Jurassic World" - Michael Giacchino, John Williams (Jurassic World OST)
"Chinese Dragon" - "Derek Fiechter, Brandon Fiechter"
Sources
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Description:
Ji, Q.; Ji, S. (1996). "On the discovery of the earliest bird fossil in China (Sinosauropteryx gen. nov.) and the origin of birds" (PDF). Chinese Geology. 10 (233): 30-33.
Compsognathids are polyphyletic:
www.researchgate.net/profile/...
13 foot specimen:
pbs.twimg.com/media/E-syJ99X0...
Coloration:
Zhang, Fucheng; Kearns, Stuart L.; Orr, Patrick J.; Benton, Michael J.; Zhou, Zhonghe; Johnson, Diane; Xu, Xing; Wang, Xiaolin (January 27, 2010). "Fossilized melanosomes and the color of Cretaceous dinosaurs and birds" (PDF). Nature. 463 (7284): 1075-1078. Bibcode:2010Natur.463.1075Z. doi:10.1038/nature08740. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 20107440. S2CID 205219587.
Smithwick, Fiann M.; Nicholls, Robert; Cuthill, Innes C.; Vinther, Jakob (November 2017). "Countershading and Stripes in the Theropod Dinosaur Sinosauropteryx Reveal Heterogeneous Habitats in the Early Cretaceous Jehol Biota". Current Biology. 27 (21): 3337-3343.e2. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2017.09.032. hdl:1983/8ee95b15-5793-42ad-8e57-da6524635349. PMID 29107548.
Diet:
Chen, P.; Dong, Z.; Zhen, S. (1998). "An exceptionally well-preserved theropod dinosaur from the Yixian Formation of China" (PDF). Nature. 391 (8): 147-152. Bibcode:1998Natur.391..147C. doi:10.1038/34356. S2CID 4430927.
Hurum, J.H.; Luo, Z.-X.; Kielan-Jaworowska, Z. (2006). "Were mammals originally venomous?". Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 51 (1): 1-11.
Orbital Forcing:
Wu, Huaichun; Zhang, Shihong; Jiang, Ganqing; Yang, Tianshui; Guo, Junhua; Li, Haiyan (2013). "Astrochronology for the Early Cretaceous Jehol Biota in Northeastern China". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 385: 221-228. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2013.05.017
Yixian Sedimentary Rock:
Zhou, Z (2006). "Evolutionary radiation of the Jehol Biota: chronological and ecological perspectives" - วิทยาศาสตร์และเทคโนโลยี
This video is great! And thank you so much for not using AI narration, it’s absolutely the worst!
Thank you!
Every video will have different member of Epoch Now team doing the narration. So, thank you so much for kind words!
@@LegitEliminator oh that sounds good!
FOSSIL FIGHTERS MENTIONED LETS GOOOO!!! Also I loved this video, amazing job. I love learning about feathered dinosaurs because it adds a link between dinosaurs and modern birds. Similarities which you can see when comparing the two. And Sinosauropteryx is the first fossil providing irrefutable proof of this. I love it!
Fossil fighters is the 🐐!
And thank you, we’re glad you enjoyed it! And also, if you can, make sure to share the video so more people can watch it!!
Great work on this video everyone ! I’m glad to have contributed to it!
Very interesting vid, as always. Man I need to catch up on the channel before June…..
good idea! June will be an exciting month!
This has been the most revolutionary video to have ever revolutionized during the great revolution of Epoch Now, a channel all about the revolutionary finds of revolutionary creatures during this channel's great revolution!
Make a vídeo about toxodon and macrauchenia
BIRDS in impact font
Nice job spino
Don't forget to check out our new Epoch Now website, where you can learn some fun facts about each of our videos, stay up to date with the latest paleontology news, and much more!
www.epochnow.net/home
I’ve only come upon your channel just now, might I request a video on liaoningosaurus? As that formation was mentioned in this video.
On an unrelated note, I thoroughly enjoyed this video, I love sinosauropteryx!
Edit: following commentary, you say most dinosaurs are feathered, by that I assume you mean non avian ones and almost every group that isn’t a theropod ditched feathers immediately and predators are never the most common animal.
But to end on a good note, the Chinese music was a nice touch, reminds me of a kung fu panda chase sequence or something.
While it is true that feathers are mostly present in theropod celorosaurs, the existence of Kulindadromeus means we cannot rule out feathers on all dinosaurs!
And thank you for your kind words! We really appreciate it!
@@Epoch_Now no what I mean is the skin impressions we’ve found on a lot of hadrosaurs, bunch of ceratopsians, and I think zuul. Also there were those baby diplodocus a few years back who showed scale variation like modern iguanas.
To me it seems like theropods small iguanodontians, maybe primitive early ceratopsians, and maybe basal sauropodomorphs.
I could be wrong but most herbivorous/non theropod dinosaurs were sadly not fluffy, as happy as a fuzzy Pachyrhinosaurus makes me, it doesn’t seem plausible.
I'm curious about this unpublished 3.5 meter (potential) compsognathid you speak of. I've Googled Shandong compsognathid but found nothing. Where did you read about this?
Unfortunately, the only information we have of this specimen is from the image seen in the video, which is also linked in the description. All we know from this image is the fossil, its size, where it's being displayed (Shandong Tianyu Museum of Nature), and that the Guinness World Records recognizes it as the largest Sinosauropteryx specimen, as also seen in the picture.
3.8 meters long? is there a photograph of that fossil?
Yes, it’s included in our list of sources
@@Epoch_Now Thanks cause I got to see this for myself
Make a vídeo about australopithecus and arthropleura and dimetrodon and the dodo
Dodo coming soon www.epochnow.net/projects/extinction-files/dodo
Why don’t you think of a suggestion making a TH-cam Videos all about Dakosaurus, the “Biter Lizard”, an Extinct Prehistoric Metriorhyncid (the Marine Crocodile) the “Godzilla” of the Jurassic and the Cretaceous Seas on on the Epoch Now coming up next?!⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐👍👍👍👍👍
Why don’t you think of a suggestion making a TH-cam Videos all about Dakosaurus, the “Biter Lizard”, an Extinct Prehistoric Metriorhyncid (the Marine Crocodile) of the Jurassic and the Cretaceous Seas on on the Epoch Now coming up next?!⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐👍👍👍👍👍
@@HassanMohamed-rm1cb you Said that two times