they don't forget. they whine about it all the time when "invasive species" show up that mirror their extinct counterparts. if anything, i would say Florida is pretty much the same, minus the megafauna like elephants and rhinos and such.
Thank you so much for this video. There are so many videos and documentaries about the prehistory of other states, but not too much about prehistoric Florida. I wish your video was longer! I really enjoyed it!!
Hey there, Anthöny. I was actually just wondering, if given the chance, would you perhaps do at least some videos about prehistoric ecosystems about the late Cretaceous of eastern North America? I've heard that there are quite a lot of fossil remains from the late Cretaceous of North America which were found mostly in the states of Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Georgia and New Jersey. Dinosaur remains were also found in these following states, which may suggest that the landmass, Appalachia (eastern North America), was home to a wide variety of dinosaurs and other Cretaceous fauna during that time period. Marine reptiles such as Trinacromerum, Polycotylus, Dolichorhynchops, Archelon, Protostega, Toxochelys, Eonatator, Platecarpus, Globidens, Ectenosaurus, Tylosaurus, Plioplatecarpus, Clidastes, Prognathodon and Mosasaurus, alongside with other inhabitants of the Western Interior Seaway, including the alligatoroid Deinosuchus schwimmeri, Pteranodon longiceps, and Ichthyornis have also been found in these following states, which also lived alongside the dinosaurs during that time period. This time, I certainly hope that Deinosuchus, Globidens, Plioplatecarpus, and possibly most dinosaurs from eastern North America make their appearance once the next video is ready. Following paleo-ecosystems: 1. Demopolis Chalk Formation (Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee) 2. Ripley Formation (Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Missouri and Georgia) 3. Blufftown Formation (Alabama and Georgia) Woodbury Formation (New Jersey) 4. Hornerstown/Navesink Formation (New Jersey) 5. Prairie Bluff Chalk Formation (Mississippi) Greetings from New Rochelle, New York state. 🇺🇲🇲🇽🗽🪸🪼🦪🐚🦑🐙🦐🦞🦀🦈🐟🐠🐡🐸🐢🦎🐍🐉🐊🦖🦕🦤🦆🦩🐧🦦🦭🐬🐋
Great video. I don't know if this counts, but there's a prehistoric bear that used to live in parts of Florida, Tremactos Flordianus or Florida Cave 🐻. It should be mentioned in this list.
What about Smilodon? At least there are some fossil remains from this saber-toothed cat found in Florida, alongside many other Pleistocene megafauna. 🐯🦁🦤🦣
Don’t forget the Pliocene and Pleistocene. Florida was also home to sabertooths and scimitar cats including Xenosmilus, Titanus, Mixotoxodon, mastodons, glyptodonts, short-faced bears, large peccaries, lions, ground sloths and more!
Hey there, Anthöny. I was actually just wondering, if given the chance, would you like to try out a prehistoric ecosystem involving the Pleistocene of Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula? I'd really love the idea of how Mexico really looked like during the Pleistocene, alongside with the megafauna of the Yucatan Peninsula. If you have any suggestions for the upcoming prehistoric ecosystem for the Lost Ecosystems of the Phanerozoic series I've requested, please let me know and we'll keep in touch. Anyway, greetings from Phoenix, Arizona. By the way, ¡Viva México, amigo mío! 🇲🇽🤠🌵🐍🦅🏞🦕🦖🦤🦣
As a 35-year resident of Florida, as well as being very familiar with its wild life, I find this video extremely interesting. Good job. Of course anything to take my mind off our state's political arena.🤮
Realmente é muito interessante e didático esses vídeos do seu canal, apresentam cada país e sua biodiversidade e habitats ❤
This was AWESOME. So much out there on the Cretaceous and Pleistocene and so little on the other time periods.
Cool.
People forget how wild America used to be back at that time period.
they don't forget. they whine about it all the time when "invasive species" show up that mirror their extinct counterparts.
if anything, i would say Florida is pretty much the same, minus the megafauna like elephants and rhinos and such.
Thank you so much for this video. There are so many videos and documentaries about the prehistory of other states, but not too much about prehistoric Florida. I wish your video was longer! I really enjoyed it!!
Wow, Florida was as crazy back then as it was today
Oh hell yeah, now we're talking about my state.
Hello fellow Floridian!
@@johngavin1175 hello there buddy. :)
@@3452te Alrighty, what part you from? I'm native to Lakeland.
@@johngavin1175 Dade county. :)
I know right!!
Hey there, Anthöny. I was actually just wondering, if given the chance, would you perhaps do at least some videos about prehistoric ecosystems about the late Cretaceous of eastern North America?
I've heard that there are quite a lot of fossil remains from the late Cretaceous of North America which were found mostly in the states of Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Georgia and New Jersey. Dinosaur remains were also found in these following states, which may suggest that the landmass, Appalachia (eastern North America), was home to a wide variety of dinosaurs and other Cretaceous fauna during that time period.
Marine reptiles such as Trinacromerum, Polycotylus, Dolichorhynchops, Archelon, Protostega, Toxochelys, Eonatator, Platecarpus, Globidens, Ectenosaurus, Tylosaurus, Plioplatecarpus, Clidastes, Prognathodon and Mosasaurus, alongside with other inhabitants of the Western Interior Seaway, including the alligatoroid Deinosuchus schwimmeri, Pteranodon longiceps, and Ichthyornis have also been found in these following states, which also lived alongside the dinosaurs during that time period. This time, I certainly hope that Deinosuchus, Globidens, Plioplatecarpus, and possibly most dinosaurs from eastern North America make their appearance once the next video is ready.
Following paleo-ecosystems:
1. Demopolis Chalk Formation (Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee)
2. Ripley Formation (Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Missouri and Georgia)
3. Blufftown Formation (Alabama and Georgia)
Woodbury Formation (New Jersey)
4. Hornerstown/Navesink Formation (New Jersey)
5. Prairie Bluff Chalk Formation (Mississippi)
Greetings from New Rochelle, New York state. 🇺🇲🇲🇽🗽🪸🪼🦪🐚🦑🐙🦐🦞🦀🦈🐟🐠🐡🐸🐢🦎🐍🐉🐊🦖🦕🦤🦆🦩🐧🦦🦭🐬🐋
Great video. I don't know if this counts, but there's a prehistoric bear that used to live in parts of Florida, Tremactos Flordianus or Florida Cave 🐻. It should be mentioned in this list.
Bears appeared later 😎
@@Anthönypain What time period is this for Florida?
What about Smilodon? At least there are some fossil remains from this saber-toothed cat found in Florida, alongside many other Pleistocene megafauna. 🐯🦁🦤🦣
Don’t forget the Pliocene and Pleistocene. Florida was also home to sabertooths and scimitar cats including Xenosmilus, Titanus, Mixotoxodon, mastodons, glyptodonts, short-faced bears, large peccaries, lions, ground sloths and more!
Hey there, Anthöny. I was actually just wondering, if given the chance, would you like to try out a prehistoric ecosystem involving the Pleistocene of Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula?
I'd really love the idea of how Mexico really looked like during the Pleistocene, alongside with the megafauna of the Yucatan Peninsula.
If you have any suggestions for the upcoming prehistoric ecosystem for the Lost Ecosystems of the Phanerozoic series I've requested, please let me know and we'll keep in touch.
Anyway, greetings from Phoenix, Arizona.
By the way, ¡Viva México, amigo mío! 🇲🇽🤠🌵🐍🦅🏞🦕🦖🦤🦣
Oh my
nice
Raaaah🔊🦅 Alachua mentioned, wth is a bad county.
You forgot xenosmilus
As a 35-year resident of Florida, as well as being very familiar with its wild life, I find this video extremely interesting. Good job.
Of course anything to take my mind off our state's political arena.🤮
I second that. Our state is going to hell pretty quick.
if you don't like FL's politics then go back to whatever toilet you crawled out of. we like freedom here.
I hope you got permission from digital duck before using footage from Forgotten Bloodlines.
It’s not like that’s ever going to be released lol
Bootlicker
@@alexortega5833 Wow pessimistic much?
You know what funny boas still are around even to this day in Florida
'Promo SM'