The mammoth and elephant shows that for coats, one must consider the environment and size. Large animals will have less covering, unless they live in cold areas.
"Feathers have always been associated with birds, but they have also been associated with dinosaurs." So basically just "Feathers have always been synonymous with dinosaurs, but they have also been associated with dinosaurs."
Thank you! I watch alot of natural history content and I have always felt that the topic of feathers on dinosaurs was glossed over by most channels. Thank you for such a detailed video.
I have to praise Robert Bakker when this subject comes up. His book,The Dinosaur Heresies was published in the late 1970s,and was met with a lot of resistance. Years after being one of the first to suggest that birds are dinosaurs and that some dinos were warm blooded,that treasure trove of feathered dinosaurs from China was discovered,and that clinched it. There was a time when it wasn't taken for granted,and would have been met with derision by most paleontologists.
I agree about The Dinosaur Heresies. Robert Bakker worked hard to get his pioneering ideas out there while many in the scientific community were against him. Time is a very effective filter, and warm-blooded, feathered, bird-related dinosaur have held up.
9:51 So there's a slight issue with this. It's not that these dinosaurs come from different localities that was the cause for feather loss - it's that feathers was a basal condition for Tyrannosauroids. T. rex and it's closest relatives we're derived animals that had also increased to greater body sizes and lived in hot climates where such covering was unnecessary. This would've affected other animals like Tarbosaurus and Alioramini tyrants. Yutyrannus and it's ilk we're still basal animals of relatively smaller size, with Yutyrannus still having feathers due to its climate.
I don't know much about dinosaurs. But the feathered look makes much more sense than the scales for raptors. Shap of their legs and hand with a feather make complete sense given their close relationship with modern birds. But the classic cinematic look with scales looked like a strange monitor lizard standing on two feet. Thank you for your exelent video.
Ooooo placing Sciurumimus as a non-coelurosaur is gonna turn some heads. Granted, either way, they'd have to debunk the apparent quill knobs but-maybe-nots on Concavenator, which I'm surprised didn't come up.
Sciurumimus has been a dubious coelurosaur since 2019, and a 2020 study keeps it as a non-coelurosaur. But I was mainly going off Benton's work on feathers that agreed with the placement. Concavenator's 'quill knobs' are thoroughly inconclusive. I would have to spend a while explaining that, and news could come out making it irrelevant. I would go into it in a Concavenator profile, but did not feel justified for an overview.
Oh, and BTW, I have dinosaur eggs on my counter! And I get more dinosaur eggs every single day. I used to get multiple different species of dinosaur eggs, too, as well as multiple different colors, from white, to sky blue, to pale green, to deeper blue, to tan, to olive green, to speckled brown, to a deep, chocolate brown. Sadly, I had to scale down how many dinosaurs I have, when my soulmate and helpmate chose to abandon me out of the blue, with no warning, after 38½ years of marriage. It's hard to care for that many dinosaurs, so some had to be rehomed. One more thing he destroyed when he left me.
I have dinosaur eggs on my counter, and get more dinosaur eggs every single day. I used to get multiple different species of dinosaur eggs, too, as well as multiple different colors, from white, to sky blue, to pale green, to deeper blue, to tan, to olive green, to speckled brown, to a deep, chocolate brown. Sadly, I had to scale down how many dinosaurs I have, when my soulmate and helpmate chose to abandon me out of the blue, with no warning, after 38½ years of marriage. It's hard to care for that many dinosaurs, so some had to be rehomed. One more thing he destroyed when he left me.
My favorite feathered dinosaurs are the Archaeopteryx, the Microraptor, Yutyrannus, Deinonychus, Utahraptor, Deinocheirus, Therizinosaurus, Dakotaraptor, Sinosauropteryx and Oviraptorids!
Great video and great explanation! I reccomend to look up Ubirajara jubatus, who had some awesome feathers and is thankfully being brought back to its home in Brazil after it was illegally taken to gGermany in 1995!
Thank you for bringing this to my attention. I did not know about this dinosaur and it is fascinating. I am glad that it is going back to its place of origin as these great fossils are national treasures.
While I am not a pterosaur expert, it seems that tupandactylus had fuzz like many other pterosaurs rather than pennaceous feathers, which were confined to theropods as far as my research went. Concavenator might have had feathers on it arms, or just tendon marks. The jury is still out on that, and I did not feel right placing it anywhere when it is so undecided. I would talk about it in a Concavenator profile, though.
@@palaeo_channel pterosaurs are known to have various types of feathers just like the ones seen in birds, exemples are monofilaments, bristles, filoplumes and a inbetween of down feather and these mentioned. however a new fossil of tupandactylus imperator was found with really good preservation, specially integument, it not only has the tegument preserved by itself, but also melanosomes, showing that they were covered in brown and had orange in the tip of its crest. these feathers are not filoplumes or bristles, but countour pennaceous feather which are exactly like these of emus, albeit a bit smaller. such developed feathers were never found on pterosaurs before, and thus this new finding is quite revolutionary. about concavenator muscle attachment theory, there isnt much to say, it was proposed because the person found it weird about their position to be like that, so they proposed it, however they werent aware that various birds have them like that (exemple moorhens. it doesnt hold much ground nor does it have much into it, it doesnt even fit the description of any known attachment point or anything really, but theres still a chance its not quill knobs if some novel shait apears, but i wouldnt put much hope into it.
@@miguelpedraentomology6080 Pterosaurs seem to be something that you know about more than I do. A lot of my video is based on 2019 data, and some things are going to be out of date, particularly the pterosaur information which I do not keep up with as much. Regarding the Concavenator issue, I am going with a 2022 paper by 11 palaeontologists that say that there is a possibility of feathers on the arms, but that there are other hypotheses for the evidence present: docentes.fct.unl.pt/sites/default/files/omateus/files/hendrickxetal.2021.morphologyanddistributionofscales.pdf
This was Fking amazing !!!! Like u say ,its going so fast , and this is the things that we have come up with. I can´t imagen the diversity that they maight have had
Glad you liked it, but in a 2022 study, Concavenator’s feather status is still dubious. It had scales, but whether the marks on its arms are from feathers or ligaments is undecided. I didn’t want to take up so much time on something that could change so quickly. I would talk about it in a Concavenator video, though.
Sinosauropterix has preserved melanosomes responsible for colour. If they are the same as modern ones, we can tell the colour by their shape. I mention Sinosauropterix colouration in my Deinonichus video, or you can do an image search to see the probable colouration.
@@palaeo_channel there have been some research on dinosaur eyes-- T. Rex with things like the scleral ossicles and shape of orbit. Plus, birds, amphibians, and fish eyes have a lot of structures that no longer have mammalian analogues. A rainbow would look very different to a dinosaur
My Banty Cochins have foot feathers. My Light Brahmas have foot feathers. I've had other chicken breeds that have foot feathers, too. 🙂 I love my fluffybutt featherbabies with foot feathers! 😍
In a 2022 study, Concavenator’s feather status is still dubious. It had scales, but whether the marks on its arms are from feathers or ligaments is undecided. I didn’t want to take up so much time on something that could change so quickly. I would talk about it in a Concavenator video, though.
@@palaeo_channel what study is that? You also said scansoriopterygids were an example of flight in dinosaurs, but scansoriopterygids couldn't fly, they could only glide or parachute.
@@BuckROCKGROIN I never said that scansoriopterygids were an example of powered flight, but gliding through the air with an aerofoil is a form of air travel. The study can be found here: docentes.fct.unl.pt/sites/default/files/omateus/files/hendrickxetal.2021.morphologyanddistributionofscales.pdf
That is an issue of ongoing debate. It was proposed in 2003. I went by the current consensus (including putting it as a dromeosaurid). As I said in the video, this is subject to change with new findings.
Technically, birds are both feathered /avian dinosaurs, as well as descendants of prehistoric, feathered-theropod dinosaurs because they evolved from those groups.
Listen. We all know that birds are just avian dinosaurs. Nobody wants to constantly specify "non-avian dinosaurs" every time they bring up what most people colloquially just call "dinosaurs".
Look for a girlfriend with tall hair, pluck on string of hair. Hold the end of that hair, the other hand slowly pull with the other hand. turn the other side and repeat the same. You will notice their sharp projections grown on one side, so those birds have the some thing only that it evolved to where it is. while our hair remain straight basically. BUT down to microscopic level they are the some and nothing fancy.
One feathered dinosaur was. It turned out it was made of two feathered dinosaurs stuck together, so when the falsehood was revealed, it was almost like a two for one.
I hate it when these videos discussing dinosaur features, instead of directly talking about the dinosaur's features, spend half the video talking about the ancient so and so who first had the idea about the dinosaur. I literally couldn't care less about the history or the location of paleontology, I clicked on this video to learn about how dinosaurs used feathers. Still, good video once it got going.
Yeah.... and apparently the very first cell had the immense intellect to realize it needed to first grow a brain before it could think what else it was missing for its distant ancestor to fulfill.
It's way more complex than that. Evolution never considers an end, only ways to improve and prepare for unexpecteds. Think of it more like a never ending puzzle piece. Constantly adding more complex and effective ways by trying to complete the picture while the best traits are added and useless ones are either taken out and placed elsewhere or expanded upon.
Yeah, and apparently your understanding has not yet evolved because what you said shows a complete fundamental misunderstanding of evolution. Even Ken Ham wouldn’t say such a silly thing.
@@sugargirl1883 Building from this, it doesn't consider anything, not even small steps. Life randomly mutates upon reproduction simply because no life is perfect. If one of these mutations happens to help, or even just not harm the life form, that one will survive to reproduce again, passing on its traits. Layer these random mutations and not so random survivals on top of one another for millions of years, and you'll end up with an entirely different species.
The mammoth and elephant shows that for coats, one must consider the environment and size. Large animals will have less covering, unless they live in cold areas.
Exactly my point.
This is one of the most comprehensive and well organized explanations of feathers on dinosaurs that I’ve seen, thank you so much for this
"Feathers have always been associated with birds, but they have also been associated with dinosaurs." So basically just "Feathers have always been synonymous with dinosaurs, but they have also been associated with dinosaurs."
I personally would have gone with "Feathers have always been associated with both avian and non-avian dinosaurs."
@@ominous-omnipresent-they dinosaurs non the less
@@Latenivenatrix_Mcmasterae Of course, they are; that's precisely why I mentioned it.
@@ominous-omnipresent-they same
Feathers have always been associated with flight
I really hope you make more of these videos. This is some of the best paleontology content on TH-cam.
Thank you! I watch alot of natural history content and I have always felt that the topic of feathers on dinosaurs was glossed over by most channels. Thank you for such a detailed video.
Stunning and beautiful work.
Most of this I knew, but this collation made sense of my jumble of knowledge.
I have to praise Robert Bakker when this subject comes up. His book,The Dinosaur Heresies was published in the late 1970s,and was met with a lot of resistance. Years after being one of the first to suggest that birds are dinosaurs and that some dinos were warm blooded,that treasure trove of feathered dinosaurs from China was discovered,and that clinched it. There was a time when it wasn't taken for granted,and would have been met with derision by most paleontologists.
I agree about The Dinosaur Heresies. Robert Bakker worked hard to get his pioneering ideas out there while many in the scientific community were against him.
Time is a very effective filter, and warm-blooded, feathered, bird-related dinosaur have held up.
An exceptional effort and really worth watching again and again
Fascinating, and the animations you used are great!
9:51 So there's a slight issue with this. It's not that these dinosaurs come from different localities that was the cause for feather loss - it's that feathers was a basal condition for Tyrannosauroids. T. rex and it's closest relatives we're derived animals that had also increased to greater body sizes and lived in hot climates where such covering was unnecessary. This would've affected other animals like Tarbosaurus and Alioramini tyrants. Yutyrannus and it's ilk we're still basal animals of relatively smaller size, with Yutyrannus still having feathers due to its climate.
This channel deserves more views
Wow! This was an incredible overview! Will definitely use this in my biology class!
Go for it
I don't know much about dinosaurs. But the feathered look makes much more sense than the scales for raptors. Shap of their legs and hand with a feather make complete sense given their close relationship with modern birds. But the classic cinematic look with scales looked like a strange monitor lizard standing on two feet. Thank you for your exelent video.
Ooooo placing Sciurumimus as a non-coelurosaur is gonna turn some heads. Granted, either way, they'd have to debunk the apparent quill knobs but-maybe-nots on Concavenator, which I'm surprised didn't come up.
Sciurumimus has been a dubious coelurosaur since 2019, and a 2020 study keeps it as a non-coelurosaur. But I was mainly going off Benton's work on feathers that agreed with the placement.
Concavenator's 'quill knobs' are thoroughly inconclusive. I would have to spend a while explaining that, and news could come out making it irrelevant. I would go into it in a Concavenator profile, but did not feel justified for an overview.
@@palaeo_channel yeah i saw everyone bring up concavenator when i went scrolling through the comments, sorry for adding to the pile there
Well put together and understandable documentation - enjoyed it a lot!
Really good video. No speculative bs. Just straight "do we know yes or no?"
Sounds like a minced oath "Oh dinosaur feathers!"
Why the reupload?
I had to make an edit for the video to be monetised. The BBC did not like the original ending.
@@palaeo_channel Ah makes sense
@@palaeo_channel may I ask what was in the original ending? What couldn’t BBC have liked, since you still use BBC footage in your video right now?
@@timbertelink1306 The original ending with the Snow Geese was unedited. A little bit of cropping and audio tinkering seems to have solved it. 🤞
@@palaeo_channel haha alright, glad that fixed it.
Oh, and BTW, I have dinosaur eggs on my counter! And I get more dinosaur eggs every single day. I used to get multiple different species of dinosaur eggs, too, as well as multiple different colors, from white, to sky blue, to pale green, to deeper blue, to tan, to olive green, to speckled brown, to a deep, chocolate brown.
Sadly, I had to scale down how many dinosaurs I have, when my soulmate and helpmate chose to abandon me out of the blue, with no warning, after 38½ years of marriage. It's hard to care for that many dinosaurs, so some had to be rehomed. One more thing he destroyed when he left me.
Vish, é uma pena. Sinto muito!
I'm so sorry for what happened. Fuck them, and keep on grindin.
Thank you very much for this highly detailed and fascinating video.
Superb video. Many of us have dinosaur eggs in our refrigerator. Not a well known fact.
I have dinosaur eggs on my counter, and get more dinosaur eggs every single day. I used to get multiple different species of dinosaur eggs, too, as well as multiple different colors, from white, to sky blue, to pale green, to deeper blue, to tan, to olive green, to speckled brown, to a deep, chocolate brown.
Sadly, I had to scale down how many dinosaurs I have, when my soulmate and helpmate chose to abandon me out of the blue, with no warning, after 38½ years of marriage. It's hard to care for that many dinosaurs, so some had to be rehomed. One more thing he destroyed when he left me.
I don't, I gotta go to the supermarket this weekend lmaoo
I have furry dinosaurs. :D
(oh yea, the fact that silkie feathers can look this way is... kinda interesting, ngl)
Excellent job, special thanks for the cladistic analysis!
My favorite feathered dinosaurs are the Archaeopteryx, the Microraptor, Yutyrannus, Deinonychus, Utahraptor, Deinocheirus, Therizinosaurus, Dakotaraptor, Sinosauropteryx and Oviraptorids!
"Bones have always been associated with quadrupeds, but they've also been associated with vertebrates for a very long time."
Wow!!! Stunning video. Will be watching a few more times.
finally youtube algorithm did the right thing for me!
Enjoyed video verymuch
Great video and great explanation! I reccomend to look up Ubirajara jubatus, who had some awesome feathers and is thankfully being brought back to its home in Brazil after it was illegally taken to gGermany in 1995!
Thank you for bringing this to my attention. I did not know about this dinosaur and it is fascinating.
I am glad that it is going back to its place of origin as these great fossils are national treasures.
Fantastic presentation!
More videos like this plz!
Favorite channel at work. Thank you.
Thank you. This is more information than I cam process.
Interesting. I would have liked to have heard about the enantiomers birds!
While very interesting, they did not mark a change in the development of feathers.
wish you mentioned tupandactylus emu like pennaceous feathers and concavenator wings.
While I am not a pterosaur expert, it seems that tupandactylus had fuzz like many other pterosaurs rather than pennaceous feathers, which were confined to theropods as far as my research went.
Concavenator might have had feathers on it arms, or just tendon marks. The jury is still out on that, and I did not feel right placing it anywhere when it is so undecided. I would talk about it in a Concavenator profile, though.
@@palaeo_channel pterosaurs are known to have various types of feathers just like the ones seen in birds, exemples are monofilaments, bristles, filoplumes and a inbetween of down feather and these mentioned. however a new fossil of tupandactylus imperator was found with really good preservation, specially integument, it not only has the tegument preserved by itself, but also melanosomes, showing that they were covered in brown and had orange in the tip of its crest. these feathers are not filoplumes or bristles, but countour pennaceous feather which are exactly like these of emus, albeit a bit smaller. such developed feathers were never found on pterosaurs before, and thus this new finding is quite revolutionary.
about concavenator muscle attachment theory, there isnt much to say, it was proposed because the person found it weird about their position to be like that, so they proposed it, however they werent aware that various birds have them like that (exemple moorhens. it doesnt hold much ground nor does it have much into it, it doesnt even fit the description of any known attachment point or anything really, but theres still a chance its not quill knobs if some novel shait apears, but i wouldnt put much hope into it.
@@miguelpedraentomology6080 Pterosaurs seem to be something that you know about more than I do. A lot of my video is based on 2019 data, and some things are going to be out of date, particularly the pterosaur information which I do not keep up with as much.
Regarding the Concavenator issue, I am going with a 2022 paper by 11 palaeontologists that say that there is a possibility of feathers on the arms, but that there are other hypotheses for the evidence present:
docentes.fct.unl.pt/sites/default/files/omateus/files/hendrickxetal.2021.morphologyanddistributionofscales.pdf
What is the source of the cgi clips?
I use a lot of sources for various cgi bits, but you can find them all in the credits.
Thanks for that. I just love speculating about life on earth, and having some science makes it even better.
It sure does, Janet.
Bruh feathers on non avian dinos is not speculation
Magnifique, merci !!👍
Amazing
This was Fking amazing !!!! Like u say ,its going so fast , and this is the things that we have come up with. I can´t imagen the diversity that they maight have had
Could you make a video on dilophosaurus as your next video
Not my next, but I am planning on doing it as it is such a strange and interesting dinosaur.
Are there any other kind?
5:18 Hey thats not an up to date accurate Phylogeny tree
9:17 Concavenator: Am I a joke to you?
Good video otherwise
Glad you liked it, but in a 2022 study, Concavenator’s feather status is still dubious. It had scales, but whether the marks on its arms are from feathers or ligaments is undecided.
I didn’t want to take up so much time on something that could change so quickly. I would talk about it in a Concavenator video, though.
@@palaeo_channel Ah ok, good to know. I still hope that more monofilaments will be found on basal dinosaurs.
Cmon fluffy Plateosaurus!
Do we know the colour pattern of any dinosaur feathered or not carnivore or herbivore
Sinosauropterix has preserved melanosomes responsible for colour. If they are the same as modern ones, we can tell the colour by their shape.
I mention Sinosauropterix colouration in my Deinonichus video, or you can do an image search to see the probable colouration.
@@palaeo_channel microraptor was also confirmed to look like a raven/crow basically. Iridescent black feathers all over!
interesting and informative
Could you do a video on eyes
If you look at my other videos, that is not really my wheelhouse. My expertise is on dinosaurs.
@@palaeo_channel there have been some research on dinosaur eyes-- T. Rex with things like the scleral ossicles and shape of orbit. Plus, birds, amphibians, and fish eyes have a lot of structures that no longer have mammalian analogues. A rainbow would look very different to a dinosaur
Awesome Video! Really interesting topic
Evidence shows that microraptor had some form of powered flight.
My Banty Cochins have foot feathers. My Light Brahmas have foot feathers. I've had other chicken breeds that have foot feathers, too. 🙂 I love my fluffybutt featherbabies with foot feathers! 😍
Concavenator was a Carcharodontosaurid with feathers.
In a 2022 study, Concavenator’s feather status is still dubious. It had scales, but whether the marks on its arms are from feathers or ligaments is undecided.
I didn’t want to take up so much time on something that could change so quickly. I would talk about it in a Concavenator video, though.
@@palaeo_channel what study is that? You also said scansoriopterygids were an example of flight in dinosaurs, but scansoriopterygids couldn't fly, they could only glide or parachute.
@@BuckROCKGROIN I never said that scansoriopterygids were an example of powered flight, but gliding through the air with an aerofoil is a form of air travel.
The study can be found here: docentes.fct.unl.pt/sites/default/files/omateus/files/hendrickxetal.2021.morphologyanddistributionofscales.pdf
Excellent!
Not to nitpick here but microraptor was actually capeble of powerd flight
That is an issue of ongoing debate. It was proposed in 2003. I went by the current consensus (including putting it as a dromeosaurid). As I said in the video, this is subject to change with new findings.
alr sry just thought I mention it lol
Fantastic!
So cool!
Almost certainly some dinosaurs had feathers and others did not.
Actually, the most bird like dinosaurs were birds
You are right. I misspoke. I should have said "the most bird-like non-avian dinosaurs".
@@palaeo_channel Consider: "The most avian non-avian dinosaurs..."
Thank you for this Very interesting. Are Therizinosaurs jabberwocks?
Birds ARE dinosaurs. They aren't their descendants, they are dinosaurs
Technically, birds are both feathered /avian dinosaurs, as well as descendants of prehistoric, feathered-theropod dinosaurs because they evolved from those groups.
Listen.
We all know that birds are just avian dinosaurs.
Nobody wants to constantly specify "non-avian dinosaurs" every time they bring up what most people colloquially just call "dinosaurs".
Good vid
Look for a girlfriend with tall hair, pluck on string of hair. Hold the end of that hair, the other hand slowly pull with the other hand. turn the other side and repeat the same. You will notice their sharp projections grown on one side, so those birds have the some thing only that it evolved to where it is. while our hair remain straight basically. BUT down to microscopic level they are the some and nothing fancy.
Cool story. Will you cover unicorn horns next video? I enjoy the lore!
Ive always imagined the T-Rex as a big Anchiornithid! Just a big fluffy killing machine.
Wasn’t this birder dinosaur a hoax?
One feathered dinosaur was. It turned out it was made of two feathered dinosaurs stuck together, so when the falsehood was revealed, it was almost like a two for one.
Well done! slow clap!
⚗️🫀⚗️
I hate it when these videos discussing dinosaur features, instead of directly talking about the dinosaur's features, spend half the video talking about the ancient so and so who first had the idea about the dinosaur. I literally couldn't care less about the history or the location of paleontology, I clicked on this video to learn about how dinosaurs used feathers. Still, good video once it got going.
This video spent less than 2 minutes talking about that
This video spent 90% of its runtime talking about dinosaur feathers, idk what you’re talking about.
Tell us you don't understand what an introduction is without directly admitting that
Talk about BS. Next they'll say octopus are from outer space.....
Oh, wait..... 🤣🤣🤣
now if only your claims werent baseless assumptions
What a weird strawman
Imagine coming for the first time only to make a pointless argument💀
I am an dinosaur expert and i know dinosaur dont have feathers
bro wtf.
Yeah.... and apparently the very first cell had the immense intellect to realize it needed to first grow a brain before it could think what else it was missing for its distant ancestor to fulfill.
Are you a creationist
It's way more complex than that. Evolution never considers an end, only ways to improve and prepare for unexpecteds. Think of it more like a never ending puzzle piece. Constantly adding more complex and effective ways by trying to complete the picture while the best traits are added and useless ones are either taken out and placed elsewhere or expanded upon.
Yeah, and apparently your understanding has not yet evolved because what you said shows a complete fundamental misunderstanding of evolution. Even Ken Ham wouldn’t say such a silly thing.
@@laserfan17 Indeed. What he said sounds more like something from inmate 06452017
@@sugargirl1883 Building from this, it doesn't consider anything, not even small steps. Life randomly mutates upon reproduction simply because no life is perfect. If one of these mutations happens to help, or even just not harm the life form, that one will survive to reproduce again, passing on its traits. Layer these random mutations and not so random survivals on top of one another for millions of years, and you'll end up with an entirely different species.