Hi everyone in the comment section! Just to echo what Kallie said at the beginning of the episode: our first-ever sticker is available now. Designed by the brilliant paleoartist Franz Anthony! Check it out: store.dftba.com/collections/eons/products/eons-sticker-decal
PBS Eons I low genus designations are somewhat arbitrary. But why do we put Homo where we do? Shouldn’t it logically go with the first species with a similar brain size and habits such as Heidelbergensis and Neanderthals?
I like that you have a shop but i'd really like a poster that looks more like your timeline scale where the eons - eras are all lined up on the left side. A poster styled like that with some neat facts and images from the show for each period would quickly find a home adorning my office where i design literal rockets!! (Also if you did them as a series of posters with more details i'd TOTALLY buy the set!) Love the show, I cannot wait to for each new episode!!
Steven Baumann I thought they did.... i.e. Homo Neanderthalis and Homo Heidelbergensis? Unless I'm misunderstanding your question, in which case I don't have the answer. Lol
Unless 'fish' is a non-scientific word and permissibly paraphyletic. Because since turtles likely branch off of the diapsid line before synapsids and turtles are colloquially called reptiles then all Mammals and Birds would also be reptiles. Unless the turtle body plan is convergent over both modern anapsids with diapsid ancestors and a previous naturally anapsid line of turtles in which case reptiles could be monophyletic if they include birds but then the word turtle would become polyphyletic and I've gone cross-eyed O.o
I think humans have always tried to do so to the best of our abilities; in 200 years, a lot of things about current scientific theories will probably be seen as ridiculous.
Zoom in very closely and you'll see we're all just the same. All made of the same cells, just arranged in different ways to better suit our specific needs.
Well, technically speaking we are all related. It's a fact that gets thrown out almost always but stop and think about it like seriously, it's so freaking cool
I went to a religious school for K-12, so evolution was never covered in science classes. This twelve-minute video taught me more than an entire year of sophomore-level biology. Thanks :)
Not bashing but how are such schools even allowed? Doesn't that kinda defeat the purpose of schooling? That's like if I open up a school and decided to simply not teach mathematics.
Same here I thot growing up that dinosaur were just myths that I saw in movies I never knew that the were fossil out there. I really believed that we were kicked from heaven 😅. Till I find this channel and it open my eyes. I wish I saw it when I was younger I will love to have become an pedologist. I think that how you spell it sorry eng is self learned.
@@xroyalbloodx idek. I won’t get into it super heavy cause it’s not relevant but there’s no reason why religion and education should mix. Teach what is known, what has evidence. Not what you believe. However, I would rather see religious schools than see freedom of religion be tampered with in any way so I guess it’s a trade off.
I don't know if it's important to many people, but we owe our ancestors every piece of life & joy we can obtain today, because they fought hard to survive in extreme conditions and adversities. I'm proud of being a part of their MIllion Years Heritage...the ancients that faced terrible times, they didn't had our intellectual speed and brain power to understand what was happening.... Even that, they DID MAKE IT. We are here thanks to Them.
I hope thousands years later, our descendants will say the same about us. I wish they will thank us for the technologies we obtain in this age. I wish our descendants will be walking among the stars and never be bothered by diseases or lack of resources. I wish they will be living in an age of such prosperity that we us now would never have dreamed of. I wish they will thanks us for laying down the solid foundation for them just like our ancestors did for us.
We don't "owe" them anything besides the promise to continue surviving and keeping the species alive just like they did. We are, however, grateful that they took on the unfair battle of life, survived and evolved long enough for us to be here and be how we are today.
First time I heard about it, was in the context of "This early mammal was around during the last days of the dinosaurs", so I thought maybe it was named Purgatorius because it lived in kind of a chaotic limbo-world that wasn't quite one thing or the other? Like, not dinosaurs in charge anymore really, but the mammals hadn't truly taken over yet either. ...it's really too bad about the Purgatory Hill thing. All of our other guesses are way more interesting. :P
@@Shinigami15436 oh sorry i meant to reply to the original comment, which at the time seemed like it was against evolution. My comment must have made me seem like a creationist there lmao. I can assure you i’m not.
Omg yes. Religious people always get so offended when you talk to them about evolution. But as a religious person I think billions of years of perfecting each species is so much more compelling, and teaches us empathy, morality and love for the world around us. The orangutan is a close relative of ours and we are destroying its habitat for palm oil. If we acknowledged how closely related they were to us, would we still treat them that way?
I never understand why creationists hate the idea that we share a common ancestor with other primates. I think it an honour to be related to such wonderful creatures !
You can mix the 2 things. When someone is inventing something, he doesn't immediately come to the final form, there some prototypes before and he will updating/upgrading.
Dami same. Shows like Planet Earth were what gave me interest in learning more about the natural evolution of the animal kingdom. But TH-cam definitely definitely helped me form my new opinion
Jeez , this video should be part of the curriculum in all high schools. It would make biology and anthropology that much interesting and exciting ! This video is not far from being a work of genius , one can tell the amount of effort put into it , for instance the masterful summarising of a huge quantity of information into 12 mins , or the brilliant editing of images , diagrams , storytelling and verbal delivery . Seriously, this video could change the lives of teenager education and their enjoyment of natural sciences. Ps : the comedic choice of pictures of the apes and monkeys just takes this video to another level 😂
I will never understand why religious nuts are bothered by this. It's SO COOL that we're just part of a big interwoven tapestry of living things. This is way more interesting and awe-inspiring.
They are bothered because evolution suggests that we can understand ourselves based on the laws of nature, and that our existence is finite. Religious nuts want to be eternal magic ghosts, unfathomable mysteries in the image of their favorite god.
@@medad5502 well I hope you can see why people generalize about religions. They literally say in their books that they declare themselves as correct and everything else as false. You can choose to believe what you want out of the religions book, but if you don't follow the whole thing, isn't that blasphemous?
J Cortese I am a devout Catholic and I LOVE these videos about evolution. The man behind the Big Bang Theory was a Catholic priest, Lemaître although the world only recognizes Hubble.
@@medad5502 I don't think "religious nuts" means every single religious person but those who truly lost their minds. Sadly they are the loudest and that's part of why people tend to generalize.
Just imagine how far back you would have to go back like this to find how closely related you are to say an octopus or a jellyfish, yet it could still be done. Amazing.
I would like to redirect you to Benjamin Burgers channel for that, he has a pretty comprehensive outline on the evolution of plant reproduction here: th-cam.com/play/PL9o6KRlci4eAyElYru4zsTRJDZQqz37fF.html I would recommend looking at lectures 27-37 for a look at the evolution history of land plants or just 36-37 on angiosperms in particular.
laser325 Yes, I really want to know more about the past of that. I'd ask "why would a plant...?" but the opportunistic animal that remains in me simply says "just because it was an available food source". ....But still, "WHY?? And HOW??"
“Humans are not proud of their ancestors, and rarely invite them round to dinner.” ― Douglas Adams I think this is something we should change. An all primate dinner party might be great fun. Or alternatively it might be a disaster that would make a great TH-cam video.
The use of the word 'ancestors' here is incorrect. It would be best to just call them 'distant cousins', as is usually used in videoes such as these. But absolutely agreed. I've been thinking - i.e. having mental experiments/thoughts on how the social inter-play between myself and the different Ape & Semiiformes species might work & play out. Been fantastic in my head, thinking it would be a hundred times better in person.
PLEASE CONTINUE THIS!!! It would be amazing to see where we sit in relation to other mammals. I've done a lot of browsing through Wikipedia to see this but it would be awesome to see it in your videos.
Part of the problem is that its hard to place where various more distantly related mammal groups fit in together with respect to each other beyond the level there are all placental mammals. Around the time of divergence mammals that would split to become the placental mammals left a very scarce fossil record dominated by teeth and trace fossils which isn't much to go by...
And now I'm remembering that one quote from Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: "And some thought even the trees had been a bad idea, and that nobody should ever have left the oceans." XD
It's really weird to think that we're the last hominins, with so many others that are never gonna be here again. It would be so interesting to go back in time and meet different hominins.
@@ProFow i think if space travel/colonization ever happens that will, but as we are now with how interconnected the whole world is i dont know if humans will be able to diversify on earth, its not any of us truly occupy different niches, and we all breed together even when from differing environments
6:00 'They're basically built in seat cushions!' The delivery of that line is amazing :D Next time I want to sit down somewhere I'm going to confuse someone by saying 'Oh damn, I wish I still had my Ischial Callosities' :P
Thank you so much! I'm an English teacher and I've been using lots of your videos. I can't support you on patrion, but I tell people around me about the worlk you do. So even in Russia you are known and loved! Please go on being an awesome bunch of professionals you are! 🌻
Wow, that was a lot of information to take in but I'm really glad you guys made this video. It helps my understanding of this topic quite a bit to hear explained this way.
Found this channel during corna virus isolation. I've learnt so much and watched so many all the things mentioned before I'm "like oh yeah I get you". I think it be easier trying to watch them in some kind of order though. I feel like a Professor though.
It's because primates lack a tapetum lucidum, which is the reflective layer on the retina that gives most mammals better night vision. That means that nocturnal primates have had to evolve gigantic eyes instead.
Lorises evolved about 9-10 million years before homo sapians appeared, so they've been cute to us for longer than we have existed. The more accurate question is why have we evolved to find them cute.
I got admission into a university just to understand the molecular clock and am now trying to complete a presentation about it. I hope you guys are happy with what you've done.
So, did you understand it? I am asking this because even I am very curious about the actual process, mathematics and techniques of the "molecular clock".
Simplifying us in just a frame is awesome but being a Wildlife science PhD scholar and being into taxonomy, I would really bow my head to all those researchers behind all those researches all these decades! Not easy,it's filled with a pure dedication, passion and patience, and moreover the love for the field! HATSOFF! - A modern Homind!
My new favourite EONS video. Really amazing stuff. You consistently manage to deliver complex topics in easier-to-understand presentations. This rapid look back 60 million years is fascinating. I would have loved to see it go even further back..
Came back to rewatch this and the human evolution playlist and I gotta say, this is the single best channel on TH-cam. The only one I've even made a patron for. I hope it sticks around for a long, long time.
What an reconstruction... Hats off to all of you... It is much better way to learn... I am the student of geology so understood it fully..again thanks to everyone.
The script for this video is one of the best I’ve seen because it explains how we know what we know in a clear, logical, and readily understandable format. The illustrations are relevant and the characteristics described are things anyone could see if the look, say at a zoo, online, or in a museum. As an educator, I think this is one of the best the team at Eons has produced. Great job.
I don't think I've ever been so focused on a video as I was for this one. Nice work. Love these videos. I may have said this before, but I have learned more about life on earth from these videos, then I ever did way back when I was in school.
Totally watched the video before I commented. (who am I kidding, any youtuber that sees a video that just came out will comment before watching) Anyway, I always click these videos. One of the most entertaining science channels out there.
Thanks for explaining Git branching for us, it is always nice to see people help new developers. Though maybe you should talk about Git merging as well.
Hey amazing video!! Could you make a video about gondwanian terrestrial crocodilomorphs? Why they got extinct and it relation with the gondwana breake up?!
I would love an episode dedicated to all crocodilomorphs. The fact that there were many marine and fully terrestrial species until humans killed the last of them is kinda mind blowing. Our concepts of dragons and sea serpents probably derive from this amazing group of animals.
Thank you, remembering taxonomy was pretty cool. When I studied was from the start with the most simple form of life until now, it's a really cool matter to study and learn about. Once again thank you very much.👍
"They're basically built-in seat cushions" But this misses the most important part. The reason they're so big, hairless and red is so that they can act as sexual signals. That is why they brighten during mating season and don't attain their appearance until after puberty. The same is true of female human breasts, which are much larger than they need to be just to provide ample milk.
It’s funny to me that a defining feature of Homininae is apparently a lack of these, since it seems like the sexual selection for those “features” kinda made a comeback with people in a downplayed variant
Thank you Eons for this wonderful episode. It's comforting to know where one lies on the family tree. Last time I visited the monkey enclosure at the zoo I was fascinated by their ear whorles that look so "human".
I find it odd that religious people think it's crazy to think that humans came from monkeys yet say it's rational to believe that humans came from dirt
Im a christian and i dont believe that text is to be taken literally. Like most things in the bible the conveyed message that humans were taken from the earth is symbolism and some sort of metaphor. But with everything you see on our planet cant you say that it may be possible that there is a collective consciousness that christians call god?
I'm in my first university level anthropology class and it is so interesting watching these videos after my classes! Very helpful with solidifying that information that I picked up at school, and shown in both an educational and entertaining way!
I want to see a video on the evolution of snakes, mostly on the evolution of pythons and boas. I think it would be an interesting topic to discuss how venomous lizards adapted to both venomous and non-venomous snakes, as well as how they lost their legs and started eating prey whole etc.
Do a side-by-side rundown of bird and crocodilian evolution since their branches split 250 million years ago and on the synapomorphies that still unite them.
Can you do more videos on plants? I really enjoyed the video describing when flowers first started to appear on the planet. I would like to learn more about the evolution of trees, carnivorous plants, and cacti, etc. Thanks!
Haplorhines lack the ability to synthesize vitamin-C; we must obtain it from our diet, hence scurvy being a thing. However, we haplorhines have the rare ability to move our upper lips.
I would really love to see a video about the circulatory system and how it evolved from simple organisms into complex ones like ourselves. Great videos. Keep up the good work.
I saw a live male orangutan in person once. His arm was as long as I am tall. Let me tell you, I've never left a zoo exhibit faster. I don't care how many walls you put between me and him, I'm not getting any closer unless he's sedated off his rump.
My evolution stretches back to Alan, a bitter old drunk who swore at the television. He never streamed fantastic content like this; thus avoiding the garbage on free to air tv.
Thank you for putting this up! Evolution, especially human evolution, is fascinating to me. Thanks to videos, like yours I understand the subject much better.
Could you guys consider doing an episode on marsupials/metatherians and how they are almost exclusively found in the Australian region? And/or an episode on how and why mammals are either metatherian, eutherian, or prototherian? Thanks! Love the show!
I had to step the video and say this. I completely agree, I look a lot like my older sister but at my 21st a few weeks ago my other older sister took a picture of me and my cousin together and we looked so alike. Also awwww, that tiny tarsier is so adorable with those big yellow eyes and all that fluff. Did I mention it was adorable? Also lemurs.
ahhh... just watched this for the third time (because i'm an addict and can't wait for tuesday upload day), and it gave me the most massive urge to go out and find a monkey and give it a great big hug. i get depression a lot (no shame in that) and it made me feel good and part of things again. maybe if humans could spend more time hanging out around other primates (besides people), learning from them and how they live, instead of isolated in cubicles and cars and soulless commercial spaces, we could recover our roots. i think a lot of people feel quite disconnected from contemporary living. i know i do. but just watching monkeys for the ten minutes this video lasted made me feel more connected. it somehow warms and rekindles ancient feelings deep inside. thank you Kallie, you wonderful ape, you! x ps. maybe a video on old world and new world monkeys is due? not that i just want an excuse to sit and watch monkeys for another ten minutes or anything...
Loved the video as always! You can really tell how much effort y'all put into researching and presenting the topics! I have a couple of topic requests. How do we study the behavior of extinct organisms? What was the first organism to purposefully make noise to communicate, and how has communication evolved since then?
My guess would be Tiktaalik or one of it's direct descendants, but that is a completely uneducated guess. Hopefully they will do a video about it, you peaked my interest.
Loved the video & pls do more videos related to Evolutionary anthropology. P.S. Love all the channels of PBS digital studios, you guys are doing an amazing job. Keep up the awesome work
Thanks for this video. Very pleasant to watch. It nicely outlines exactly where we fit with our primate cousins, something I've always wondered about. But it is presented with a bit of a mystery that keeps us watching -- when will purgatorius appear? Our natural "this is not a creature I can identify with" attitude is set aside for the sake of the mystery, allowing us to dispassionately compare our traits with tarsiers and bonobos and all the other primates past & present. Way to go, PBS Eons!
This was somehow structured almost exactly like the movie Memento without being confusing. We got a little insight into the distant past, with tiny flashbacks to that scattered between an increasingly distant past starting from the present. Weird how it somehow made it less confusing and more engaging than just starting at a weird possum looking thing and working forward chronologically slowly until humans show up.
Hi everyone in the comment section! Just to echo what Kallie said at the beginning of the episode: our first-ever sticker is available now. Designed by the brilliant paleoartist Franz Anthony! Check it out: store.dftba.com/collections/eons/products/eons-sticker-decal
PBS Eons I low genus designations are somewhat arbitrary. But why do we put Homo where we do? Shouldn’t it logically go with the first species with a similar brain size and habits such as Heidelbergensis and Neanderthals?
I'm often accused of being a primate. Thanks for clearing that up PBS
I like that you have a shop but i'd really like a poster that looks more like your timeline scale where the eons - eras are all lined up on the left side. A poster styled like that with some neat facts and images from the show for each period would quickly find a home adorning my office where i design literal rockets!! (Also if you did them as a series of posters with more details i'd TOTALLY buy the set!)
Love the show, I cannot wait to for each new episode!!
Where do you guys take suggestions?
Steven Baumann I thought they did.... i.e. Homo Neanderthalis and Homo Heidelbergensis? Unless I'm misunderstanding your question, in which case I don't have the answer. Lol
It's great to see the whole family together again.
Except for the ones who are extinct.
@MX Yes why, is someone messing with the thermostat again?
@@edwardofhydeiii666 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Nice one. 👍
We should do this *every* year.
MX Yes Don’t forget brother, we are also slaughtering ourselves with climate change. It does not discriminate
A really good sequel to this would be "Your chicken's place in the dinosaur family tree"
If chickens are dinosaurs (and I believe they are), then, actually, we're all just fish.
*parakeet
Unless 'fish' is a non-scientific word and permissibly paraphyletic. Because since turtles likely branch off of the diapsid line before synapsids and turtles are colloquially called reptiles then all Mammals and Birds would also be reptiles. Unless the turtle body plan is convergent over both modern anapsids with diapsid ancestors and a previous naturally anapsid line of turtles in which case reptiles could be monophyletic if they include birds but then the word turtle would become polyphyletic and I've gone cross-eyed O.o
@@kindlin What are you a Creationist?
"Fish" is a descriptive term, not a diagnostic one like "dinosaur" is.
We are incredibly lucky to be born in a time and place in the universe where we can actually understand and contemplate our history/existence.
I think humans have always tried to do so to the best of our abilities; in 200 years, a lot of things about current scientific theories will probably be seen as ridiculous.
Nnnnot really... But whatever makes you happy.
If intelligent life is indeed rare in the universe, we are truly special.
This is cool. Having a common ancestor with other animals makes me feel more connected to them.
We aren't that different yet unique in our way.
Zoom in very closely and you'll see we're all just the same. All made of the same cells, just arranged in different ways to better suit our specific needs.
Well, technically speaking we are all related. It's a fact that gets thrown out almost always but stop and think about it like seriously, it's so freaking cool
*looks at fish*
B-brother?
@@lightenergy17 you have achieved comedy
@@lightenergy17 uncle would be more accurate
I went to a religious school for K-12, so evolution was never covered in science classes. This twelve-minute video taught me more than an entire year of sophomore-level biology. Thanks :)
Not bashing but how are such schools even allowed? Doesn't that kinda defeat the purpose of schooling? That's like if I open up a school and decided to simply not teach mathematics.
Same here I thot growing up that dinosaur were just myths that I saw in movies I never knew that the were fossil out there. I really believed that we were kicked from heaven 😅. Till I find this channel and it open my eyes. I wish I saw it when I was younger I will love to have become an pedologist. I think that how you spell it sorry eng is self learned.
@@xroyalbloodx idek. I won’t get into it super heavy cause it’s not relevant but there’s no reason why religion and education should mix.
Teach what is known, what has evidence. Not what you believe. However, I would rather see religious schools than see freedom of religion be tampered with in any way so I guess it’s a trade off.
I had a hyperfixation once I think I've watched 8 years or seven years worth of evolution videos
@@Alepoudiitsa Do you mean paleontologist, those who study ancient forms of life and fossils?
It is never too late to do what you love. :-)
It's hard to fit all of these names on my business card.
You made my day, aha !
Nature is more amazing and fascinating than any story humans can come up with on their own.
You clearly haven't watched Inception
You won't believe what my grandparents had to do when they went to their schools.
My place on the primate family tree doesn't matter cause primates don't stay on one branch for long.
Hahaha
Ingenious!
69th like
THAT IS THE KING OF ALL PUNS
Steve2323ZX Ah, I get it now.
Me: "I'm not very good"
Primateologist: "You're a _great_ ape."
Me: :)
That’s wholesome
The lesser apes on Twitter : TRIGGERED!
I do like bananas . . . 🤔❓
@@georgeb.wolffsohn30 You like termites as well?
@@neeharika422 I mean they offer alot of protein... So don't knock it till you try it I suppose
I don't know if it's important to many people, but we owe our ancestors every piece of life & joy we can obtain today, because they fought hard to survive in extreme conditions and adversities.
I'm proud of being a part of their MIllion Years Heritage...the ancients that faced terrible times, they didn't had our intellectual speed and brain power to understand what was happening....
Even that, they DID MAKE IT.
We are here thanks to Them.
Bravo! Well stated!
I hope thousands years later, our descendants will say the same about us. I wish they will thank us for the technologies we obtain in this age. I wish our descendants will be walking among the stars and never be bothered by diseases or lack of resources. I wish they will be living in an age of such prosperity that we us now would never have dreamed of. I wish they will thanks us for laying down the solid foundation for them just like our ancestors did for us.
We don't "owe" them anything besides the promise to continue surviving and keeping the species alive just like they did. We are, however, grateful that they took on the unfair battle of life, survived and evolved long enough for us to be here and be how we are today.
They fought, they hadn't "fighted"
*fought* + it’s a 3.5 billion year heritage + *they didn’t have* + *Even then, they MADE IT.*
I hate family reunions.
Witty
yeah, they are weird
Especially if you have a big family.
Unless you are a bonobo
@@Lutefisk445 FR
Considering its controversial status in taxonomic limbo, it's sort of darkly ironic that it's named "Purgatorius."
I...I think that's intentional...you do realize scientist named it right? We didn't it find it with a darkly ironic name plate?
First time I heard about it, was in the context of "This early mammal was around during the last days of the dinosaurs", so I thought maybe it was named Purgatorius because it lived in kind of a chaotic limbo-world that wasn't quite one thing or the other? Like, not dinosaurs in charge anymore really, but the mammals hadn't truly taken over yet either.
...it's really too bad about the Purgatory Hill thing. All of our other guesses are way more interesting. :P
Call me Pedanticus because I believe you mean coincidental and not ironic. Ironic would be like if it had the name "Classifiabilicus" or something.
James i request that you change your username to "James Pedanticus Kaminski"
@Giuarco97 i prolly would have said the exact same thing so props to you for the correction
This is more beautiful than any creation myth could ever hope to be.
No, it is a fact. Well established and substantiated fact actually.
@@koba763 Comparative anatomy, DNA sequencing and phylogenetic taxonomy. Look up what a primate is instead of proudly displaying your ignorance.
@@Shinigami15436 oh sorry i meant to reply to the original comment, which at the time seemed like it was against evolution. My comment must have made me seem like a creationist there lmao. I can assure you i’m not.
Omg yes. Religious people always get so offended when you talk to them about evolution. But as a religious person I think billions of years of perfecting each species is so much more compelling, and teaches us empathy, morality and love for the world around us. The orangutan is a close relative of ours and we are destroying its habitat for palm oil. If we acknowledged how closely related they were to us, would we still treat them that way?
THIS is the comment I have been waiting for. Evolution is mind blowing and it's verifiable!
I never understand why creationists hate the idea that we share a common ancestor with other primates. I think it an honour to be related to such wonderful creatures !
Because for them animals are filthy
Well they are idiots! Ignored them!
5 years ago I didn’t believe in evolution. Now I’m obsessed and in love with it. Gotta love growing up in the Bible Belt.
Chris Bynum - What changed your mind, if you don’t mind me asking?
You can mix the 2 things. When someone is inventing something, he doesn't immediately come to the final form, there some prototypes before and he will updating/upgrading.
Dami same. Shows like Planet Earth were what gave me interest in learning more about the natural evolution of the animal kingdom. But TH-cam definitely definitely helped me form my new opinion
My place on the tree? Laying on the ground at the bottom of it yelling help, l've fallen and I can't get up.
Jeez , this video should be part of the curriculum in all high schools.
It would make biology and anthropology that much interesting and exciting !
This video is not far from being a work of genius , one can tell the amount of effort put into it , for instance the masterful summarising of a huge quantity of information into 12 mins , or the brilliant editing of images , diagrams , storytelling and verbal delivery .
Seriously, this video could change the lives of teenager education and their enjoyment of natural sciences.
Ps : the comedic choice of pictures of the apes and monkeys just takes this video to another level 😂
Proud to be a primate.
As am I.
Oock oock! 👍 🍌
Watch out. I don't like where you're going.
Christian triggered
wrong anwere racict 😠 *proud 2 be native american* 😂
I will never understand why religious nuts are bothered by this. It's SO COOL that we're just part of a big interwoven tapestry of living things. This is way more interesting and awe-inspiring.
They are bothered because evolution suggests that we can understand ourselves based on the laws of nature, and that our existence is finite. Religious nuts want to be eternal magic ghosts, unfathomable mysteries in the image of their favorite god.
Please don't generalize, I'm a practicing muslim and believe in evolution and have no conflicting ideas between religion and "laws of nature".
@@medad5502 well I hope you can see why people generalize about religions. They literally say in their books that they declare themselves as correct and everything else as false. You can choose to believe what you want out of the religions book, but if you don't follow the whole thing, isn't that blasphemous?
J Cortese
I am a devout Catholic and I LOVE these videos about evolution. The man behind the Big Bang Theory was a Catholic priest, Lemaître although the world only recognizes Hubble.
@@medad5502 I don't think "religious nuts" means every single religious person but those who truly lost their minds. Sadly they are the loudest and that's part of why people tend to generalize.
The last time I was this early to a PBS Eons video, it was a RNA world...
So you're telling me that you're the first DNA organism
Seems legit.
A Snake nah he just says that for likes.
Katherine, hand me the mop. Reddit leaks again.
Well, I had to make a meme related to paleontology
lmao
Just imagine how far back you would have to go back like this to find how closely related you are to say an octopus or a jellyfish, yet it could still be done. Amazing.
This is so much more beautiful than any just-so story, a grand, sweeping history that goes back so long that we can't conceptualize it.
It's amazing to watch videos of baby gorillas and see how similar their movements and facial expressions are to human babies.
Im interested in the evolutionary history of angiosperms, the flowering plant. How did plants start reproducing like that?
I would like to redirect you to Benjamin Burgers channel for that, he has a pretty comprehensive outline on the evolution of plant reproduction here: th-cam.com/play/PL9o6KRlci4eAyElYru4zsTRJDZQqz37fF.html
I would recommend looking at lectures 27-37 for a look at the evolution history of land plants or just 36-37 on angiosperms in particular.
Aurgelmir87 Thank you :) but I was also hinting for this channel to cover it. Appreciated tho
This channel already covered this topic: th-cam.com/video/13aUo5fEjNY/w-d-xo.html
@Aurgelmir87 May your days be filled with glory and achieve Valhalla for sharing this information!
laser325 Yes, I really want to know more about the past of that. I'd ask "why would a plant...?" but the opportunistic animal that remains in me simply says "just because it was an available food source". ....But still, "WHY?? And HOW??"
“Humans are not proud of their ancestors, and rarely invite them round to dinner.”
― Douglas Adams
I think this is something we should change. An all primate dinner party might be great fun. Or alternatively it might be a disaster that would make a great TH-cam video.
The use of the word 'ancestors' here is incorrect. It would be best to just call them 'distant cousins', as is usually used in videoes such as these.
But absolutely agreed. I've been thinking - i.e. having mental experiments/thoughts on how the social inter-play between myself and the different Ape & Semiiformes species might work & play out. Been fantastic in my head, thinking it would be a hundred times better in person.
You are, of course, correct. But the joke needs to use the word ancestors in order to work.
We invite our distant cousins over for dinner all the time! Then we eat them.
Extant primates are not our ancestors.
@@stefantherainbowphoenix One of the smartest comments on here!
PLEASE CONTINUE THIS!!! It would be amazing to see where we sit in relation to other mammals. I've done a lot of browsing through Wikipedia to see this but it would be awesome to see it in your videos.
Part of the problem is that its hard to place where various more distantly related mammal groups fit in together with respect to each other beyond the level there are all placental mammals. Around the time of divergence mammals that would split to become the placental mammals left a very scarce fossil record dominated by teeth and trace fossils which isn't much to go by...
There are some days I wish our ancestors never climbed down from the trees. I wonder, is it too late to climb back up? I love this channel.
And now I'm remembering that one quote from Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: "And some thought even the trees had been a bad idea, and that nobody should ever have left the oceans." XD
Well, technically, you can still live in the trees.
They likely didn't come down by choice.
It's really weird to think that we're the last hominins, with so many others that are never gonna be here again. It would be so interesting to go back in time and meet different hominins.
You never know, maybe in the distant future we might have evolved to have multi-branches again
@@ProFow i think if space travel/colonization ever happens that will, but as we are now with how interconnected the whole world is i dont know if humans will be able to diversify on earth, its not any of us truly occupy different niches, and we all breed together even when from differing environments
6:00
'They're basically built in seat cushions!'
The delivery of that line is amazing :D
Next time I want to sit down somewhere I'm going to confuse someone by saying 'Oh damn, I wish I still had my Ischial Callosities' :P
Thank you so much! I'm an English teacher and I've been using lots of your videos. I can't support you on patrion, but I tell people around me about the worlk you do. So even in Russia you are known and loved!
Please go on being an awesome bunch of professionals you are! 🌻
Мне б такие уроки.
@@strakhovandrri thanks 😊
Wow, that was a lot of information to take in but I'm really glad you guys made this video. It helps my understanding of this topic quite a bit to hear explained this way.
TheJeffreyJJones agreed this was a great video
thank goodness someone explains this taxonomic system; this video is very useful!
Can u do a video on interglacial periods
The glaciers are melting and I want to go home.
Isn't this story much better than some guy named Adam just randomly existing and his wife Eve, made from his rib?
Underrated comment.
This is not a story, this is a FACT
*Tips fedora*
Found this channel during corna virus isolation. I've learnt so much and watched so many all the things mentioned before I'm "like oh yeah I get you". I think it be easier trying to watch them in some kind of order though. I feel like a Professor though.
yes. coronavirus has turned me into a PBS eons junkie.
idk about you, but i consider myself a quite intelligent gibbon
But can you sing?
Are you sure? They have truly long arms 2:15
How have lorises evolved to be so cute?? WHY?? THEY ARE SO WONDERFUL!
Only for another primate species to keep them as exotic pets and cause them massive population declines
Simon Janevic Yes, that is very very sad.
It's because primates lack a tapetum lucidum, which is the reflective layer on the retina that gives most mammals better night vision. That means that nocturnal primates have had to evolve gigantic eyes instead.
@@simonj3413 Being cute in the eyes of homo sapiens is a massive advantage. It's the only reason pandas still exist
Lorises evolved about 9-10 million years before homo sapians appeared, so they've been cute to us for longer than we have existed. The more accurate question is why have we evolved to find them cute.
It would be fantastic if you guys could cover the evolution of blood!! Great work
Schooley Spencer Yes!! I can’t find any good information about this and it really interests me 😊
They did it recently. History of your blood or something like that. Just search it. It's facinating
Oddly specific but sounds interesting
Kally is the best narrator amazing voice, pace, pitch, love love love!!
You are also amazing...💘
I got admission into a university just to understand the molecular clock and am now trying to complete a presentation about it.
I hope you guys are happy with what you've done.
So, did you understand it? I am asking this because even I am very curious about the actual process, mathematics and techniques of the "molecular clock".
@@anandviswanathan4625 Did a presentation on it.
I searched and watch lot of videos and read articles but this video is very easy to understand and useful. Thanks
How about an episode on the other human species? I'm disappointed that this episode didn't cover neanderthals, denisovans, hobbits, eldar, etc.
Or the Naboo
Nolan Westrich We shared some gene from those species.
Nolan Westrich yep, especially since we are a hybrid of them
@@patrickmccurry1563 thanks. Now I gotta find out where Floriensis fits on the family tree. ^_^
I'm not remotely disappointed in the video, but I'd also love another video on other human species!
Because of you, I know a little more about me. Well reasoned. Thank you.
Simplifying us in just a frame is awesome but being a Wildlife science PhD scholar and being into taxonomy, I would really bow my head to all those researchers behind all those researches all these decades! Not easy,it's filled with a pure dedication, passion and patience, and moreover the love for the field! HATSOFF! - A modern Homind!
0:45 Add an acorn and two fangs and you got Scrat.
😂
I knew that bastard was behind this... he's always starting something with that dang acorn of his.
* Inside joke/Easter egg from Ice Age movies...
Saber teeth.... they’re saber teeth
Thank you, that's just what I was thinking.
"But you can still pick out some features that you share with, say your second cousins..."
Habsburg jawline intensifies,
at least you're a royalty
My new favourite EONS video. Really amazing stuff. You consistently manage to deliver complex topics in easier-to-understand presentations. This rapid look back 60 million years is fascinating. I would have loved to see it go even further back..
You might want to check out the book, The Ancestor's Tale.
Came back to rewatch this and the human evolution playlist and I gotta say, this is the single best channel on TH-cam. The only one I've even made a patron for. I hope it sticks around for a long, long time.
What an reconstruction... Hats off to all of you... It is much better way to learn... I am the student of geology so understood it fully..again thanks to everyone.
Whenever I look at my Chihuaha I can't help but think that my ancestors and his ancestors were in the same litter 85 million years ago.
The script for this video is one of the best I’ve seen because it explains how we know what we know in a clear, logical, and readily understandable format. The illustrations are relevant and the characteristics described are things anyone could see if the look, say at a zoo, online, or in a museum. As an educator, I think this is one of the best the team at Eons has produced. Great job.
I don't think I've ever been so focused on a video as I was for this one. Nice work. Love these videos. I may have said this before, but I have learned more about life on earth from these videos, then I ever did way back when I was in school.
Totally watched the video before I commented. (who am I kidding, any youtuber that sees a video that just came out will comment before watching)
Anyway, I always click these videos. One of the most entertaining science channels out there.
Thanks for explaining Git branching for us, it is always nice to see people help new developers.
Though maybe you should talk about Git merging as well.
convergent code version ~
One of the most beautiful videos I’ve seen. I’m happy to be a part of this family ❤
Hey amazing video!!
Could you make a video about gondwanian terrestrial crocodilomorphs? Why they got extinct and it relation with the gondwana breake up?!
I would love an episode dedicated to all crocodilomorphs. The fact that there were many marine and fully terrestrial species until humans killed the last of them is kinda mind blowing. Our concepts of dragons and sea serpents probably derive from this amazing group of animals.
Thank you, remembering taxonomy was pretty cool. When I studied was from the start with the most simple form of life until now, it's a really cool matter to study and learn about.
Once again thank you very much.👍
"They're basically built-in seat cushions"
But this misses the most important part. The reason they're so big, hairless and red is so that they can act as sexual signals. That is why they brighten during mating season and don't attain their appearance until after puberty. The same is true of female human breasts, which are much larger than they need to be just to provide ample milk.
It’s funny to me that a defining feature of Homininae is apparently a lack of these, since it seems like the sexual selection for those “features” kinda made a comeback with people in a downplayed variant
Don't you just know so much about the family?
The size of a female humans breasts doesn’t actually affect the amount of milk they produce.
@@chloe-tj2rv that was part of what the OP was saying.
u mean the female booty
Thank you Eons for this wonderful episode. It's comforting to know where one lies on the family tree. Last time I visited the monkey enclosure at the zoo I was fascinated by their ear whorles that look so "human".
I find it odd that religious people think it's crazy to think that humans came from monkeys yet say it's rational to believe that humans came from dirt
They demand so much evidence of evolution but yet will believe in magic described in an ancient book
I mean not all religious people think that. Conservative Judaism mostly accepts evolution in my experience
Not all God believers deny science..
Im a christian and i dont believe that text is to be taken literally. Like most things in the bible the conveyed message that humans were taken from the earth is symbolism and some sort of metaphor. But with everything you see on our planet cant you say that it may be possible that there is a collective consciousness that christians call god?
I'm in my first university level anthropology class and it is so interesting watching these videos after my classes! Very helpful with solidifying that information that I picked up at school, and shown in both an educational and entertaining way!
Signed on for additional knowledge and I'm glad i did! But I can't help but notice one trend in several videos ... Kallie's braid is always on point!
My braid NEVER looks that nice! I have about the same length hair, maybe a "hair" (haha) more, but my hair has split ends on its split ends...
@@robinchesterfield42 long braids are beautiful. Hers is just beyond perfect every single time
I want to see a video on the evolution of snakes, mostly on the evolution of pythons and boas. I think it would be an interesting topic to discuss how venomous lizards adapted to both venomous and non-venomous snakes, as well as how they lost their legs and started eating prey whole etc.
I am highly evolved Scrat.
We are all Scrat.
Could you please cover the evolution of blood?
They did it already
@@SherriLyle80s that was a year after they made the comment
Thank you so much for this channel!! It's my absolutely favorite, especially the videos about human evolution!
I agree! I love watching every eposode! I cant belive we get this for free 😢😢😢. Once i finish school and start working, i will contribute to them!
Watched all of it, so much information I needed to slow down the video to digest it, I normally multitask and play these videos in the background
Beautiful primate footage and so interesting!
This was great. Thank you PBS Eons team.
My boy Steve is still doing us proud. You got an exclamation point today man.
Do a side-by-side rundown of bird and crocodilian evolution since their branches split 250 million years ago and on the synapomorphies that still unite them.
I would love to watch some 1 hour long documentary made by you guys.
Excellent. PBS has great content imo. Straight forward, interesting, entertaining, informative from talented people.
Sorry for being flippant.. Amazing video.. Incredibly informative!! Thank you so much PBS Eons!
This is a fantastic video. Great job!
Beats the Hell out of magic stories from the bronze age.
Can you do more videos on plants? I really enjoyed the video describing when flowers first started to appear on the planet. I would like to learn more about the evolution of trees, carnivorous plants, and cacti, etc. Thanks!
Oh thank goodness TH-cam came back online and first video notification is from PBS Eons. XD XD
Thanking Papa Purgatorius for not turning down that movie date back in the Paleocene
Haplorhines lack the ability to synthesize vitamin-C; we must obtain it from our diet, hence scurvy being a thing. However, we haplorhines have the rare ability to move our upper lips.
I would really love to see a video about the circulatory system and how it evolved from simple organisms into complex ones like ourselves. Great videos. Keep up the good work.
This video has made me realize chimps are about a foot taller than my mental image of them.
I saw a live male orangutan in person once. His arm was as long as I am tall. Let me tell you, I've never left a zoo exhibit faster. I don't care how many walls you put between me and him, I'm not getting any closer unless he's sedated off his rump.
He’s not going to hurt you :(
My evolution stretches back to Alan, a bitter old drunk who swore at the television. He never streamed fantastic content like this; thus avoiding the garbage on free to air tv.
Thank you for putting this up! Evolution, especially human evolution, is fascinating to me. Thanks to videos, like yours I understand the subject much better.
Could you guys consider doing an episode on marsupials/metatherians and how they are almost exclusively found in the Australian region? And/or an episode on how and why mammals are either metatherian, eutherian, or prototherian? Thanks! Love the show!
this channel is amazing!! absolutely love it dont stop!
wow, thanks a lot - you just answered the question that poped-up in my mind so meticulously!
Magnificent description, hats off for your hard work
I had to step the video and say this. I completely agree, I look a lot like my older sister but at my 21st a few weeks ago my other older sister took a picture of me and my cousin together and we looked so alike.
Also awwww, that tiny tarsier is so adorable with those big yellow eyes and all that fluff. Did I mention it was adorable? Also lemurs.
I'm a simple man, I see a new Eons video, I click.
ahhh... just watched this for the third time (because i'm an addict and can't wait for tuesday upload day), and it gave me the most massive urge to go out and find a monkey and give it a great big hug.
i get depression a lot (no shame in that) and it made me feel good and part of things again. maybe if humans could spend more time hanging out around other primates (besides people), learning from them and how they live, instead of isolated in cubicles and cars and soulless commercial spaces, we could recover our roots.
i think a lot of people feel quite disconnected from contemporary living. i know i do. but just watching monkeys for the ten minutes this video lasted made me feel more connected. it somehow warms and rekindles ancient feelings deep inside.
thank you Kallie, you wonderful ape, you! x
ps. maybe a video on old world and new world monkeys is due? not that i just want an excuse to sit and watch monkeys for another ten minutes or anything...
Loved the video as always! You can really tell how much effort y'all put into researching and presenting the topics! I have a couple of topic requests. How do we study the behavior of extinct organisms? What was the first organism to purposefully make noise to communicate, and how has communication evolved since then?
My guess would be Tiktaalik or one of it's direct descendants, but that is a completely uneducated guess. Hopefully they will do a video about it, you peaked my interest.
Probably the best video you guys have ever made. Excellent!
Loved the video & pls do more videos related to Evolutionary anthropology.
P.S. Love all the channels of PBS digital studios, you guys are doing an amazing job. Keep up the awesome work
Thanks for this video. Very pleasant to watch. It nicely outlines exactly where we fit with our primate cousins, something I've always wondered about. But it is presented with a bit of a mystery that keeps us watching -- when will purgatorius appear? Our natural "this is not a creature I can identify with" attitude is set aside for the sake of the mystery, allowing us to dispassionately compare our traits with tarsiers and bonobos and all the other primates past & present. Way to go, PBS Eons!
When your dog is also watching so he now thinks he's human.
You basically raised him to think that, don't blame the channel for that! 😁
Eons is great. Wish I couldve soaked up all this info way back when I was but a wee bairn.
Very clear and understandable.
This was somehow structured almost exactly like the movie Memento without being confusing. We got a little insight into the distant past, with tiny flashbacks to that scattered between an increasingly distant past starting from the present. Weird how it somehow made it less confusing and more engaging than just starting at a weird possum looking thing and working forward chronologically slowly until humans show up.
Can you do one that shows how we evolved over time to be adapted to eat meat (red or otherwise)?
Lol we didn't
We didn’t
You triggered two vegans lol
Incoming triggered vegand!!!!!
i would also like that....