The Rise and Reign of the Mammals ~ PROFESSOR STEVE BRUSATTE
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 1 มิ.ย. 2024
- PROFESSOR STEVE BRUSATTE is a vertebrate palaeontologist and evolutionary biologist at University of Edinburgh, Scotland - specializing in the anatomy, genealogy, and evolution of dinosaurs and other fossil organisms. As well as describing over 15 new species of fossil animals, he was also the scientific consultant for the BBC's Walking With Dinosaurs team and - most recently - the palaeontology advisor for Jurassic World Dominion.
MARK from Evolution Soup asks Steve about his new book The Rise & Reign of the Mammals, and how mammals stepped up when the dinosaurs bowed out.
#dinosaurs #mammals #jurassicworld
00:00 START
01:10 What Steve does
02:19 Paleontology origins
04:52 Jurassic World Dominion
08:09 Rise & Reign of the Mammals
10:36 Synapsids
18:19 Favourite megafauna
20:30 Advice to aspiring paleontologists
23:15 New projects
LINKS FOR STEVE BRUSATTE:
University of Edinburgh page: www.research.ed.ac.uk/en/pers...
SITE: sites.google.com/site/brusatte/
TWITTER: @SteveBrusatte
/ stevebrusatte
TH-cam: Real life dinosaur hunter: Steve Brusatte | Meet My Planet (Ep 3) | Earth Unplugged bit.ly/3Oi9pzy
University of Edinburgh: www.ed.ac.uk/
BOOKS
The Rise and Reign of the Mammals: A New History, from the Shadow of the Dinosaurs to Us amzn.to/3A3yBpD
The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs: The Untold Story of a Lost World amzn.to/3bvidE2
ART:
JULIO LACERDA
Twitter / juliotheartist
@JuliotheArtist
www.deviantart.com/julio-lace...
/ art.julio.lacerda
Insta: @lacerda.julio
PALEOREX:
Instagram: / paleorex
Etsy Shop: www.etsy.com/shop/paleorex
FOOTAGE
Ottawa, IL Flyover - ProVisional Shot
EVOLUTION SOUP ~ SHOP: www.redbubble.com/people/evol...
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#evolutionsoup #evolution #paleo #paleontology #paleoartist #Homosapiens #hominid #artwork #Darwin #cave #bone #fossils #Neanderthal #australopithecus #hominin #extinct #animals #science #anthropology #paleoanthropology #genus #species #africa #skull #skulls #naturalselection #lucy #paleontology
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This interview is amazingly thoughtful and production quality is excellent.
It is a absolute joy to watch these ideas come alive. Fantastic job convincing me this is my next read!
Just got to finish Neil Oliver's "Wisdom of the Ancients".
Another fabulous read for anyone who like powerful views of history that put today into perspective :)
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great interview. I'm very glad he managed to get the feathered dinosaur into the movie.
What an excellent interview! Well, as always... but still, you definitely deserve this like and comment for the Almighty Algorithm!
YES -- more Synapsids! ✨✨✨
I would love to see a Paraceratherium if I had a time machine.
Been a big fan of Greg since he signed.. Always gave his all, & before Ange, we picked up more points with him in the team than Laxault.. His stats have always been impressive, & Ange has seen his qualities straight away & we're seeing his coaching bringing out the best in him.. So happy for him, he thoroughly deserves all the praise going.. #HH
Great interview. And appreciate the improved sound quality on this one : )
Thanks! I can't do much about the interviewee's microphone but I always enhance everything as best I can. :-)
Interesting. I never thought that the mammal ancestors kept the dinosaurs (other than birds) big so that none of them could survive the KT event.
Yes an interesting idea and logical. I've never thought of this before!
I've read both of Professor Brusatte's books and greatly enjoyed them. After reading them I can watch a program about plate tectonics and relate that to what was in the books. It has also given me a better understanding of evolution and its mechanics.
I'm from the same area in Illinois. Small world!
I’m from Rockford which is by the Wisconsin border. I’ve noticed that the more south you go in Illinois, people tend to say “Ellinois” versus “Ill-in-ois”
What a great book 🎉
That new book sounds fascinating even before he has written it! I have read that birds survived the asteroid because they were burrowing species. Maybe this is the same for mammals?
Seems like I'll be going to the pictures soon! 🙂
Great interview yet again! It's so gratifying to hear these findings straight from the scientists themselves. I'm definitely interested in the new Mammals book. Did Prof Brusatte record an audio version??
Hi -- there is an Audible version on Amazon, although I don't think it is Steve himself who reads it...
I almost finished reading Professor Brusatte's book on dinosaurs, will be getting straight into his book on mammals. Great communicator. Hopefully we'll get more videos. We need better science education for the general public. Prof Brusatte could be the David Attenborough or Carl Sagan for paleontology.
I think Robert T. Bakker would be better for that title
a podcast where I figure out what books\audiobooks to buy next
Really like these interviews!!! I thoroughly enjoyed the professor's dinosaur book and I look forward to the new mammal book. In the past few years I have read a bit about the synapsids and the early mammals. Fascinating stuff!
Spielberg DID know there were feathers on theropod dinosaurs. Archaeopteryx had been known for over a century. Ostrom’s work from the late 1960s was a few decades old by the 1990 publication of the book, Jurassic Park, and later the movie. The special effects guys back then were up to their eyeballs just trying to create the first digital dinosaurs. Feathers were too much, too soon for computers of that decade.
“That humble little change,” that temporal fenestra found in synapsids ALSO appeared by convergence in a clade of millerettids including Australothyris, Eunotosaurus and Casea, all plant-eaters that did not survive their era.
Mammals kept the dinosaur big? Not really. Podokesaurus, Protoavis, Archaeopteryx, Marasuchus, Scutellosaurus, the ‘compys’ frequently mentioned in Jurassic Park the book are only a few of the small ones Brusatte is omitting. Plus ALL the baby dinosaurs hatching out of small eggs and growing up throughout the Mesozoic. They count, too!
has anyone done any research into evolution of pinipeds and whales and what land mammal they came from
I think quite a bit of work has been done. Whales are artiodactyls, and pinnipeds are within order Carnivora.
So what are the "rats" of evolution that live in the shadows of mammals and might survive us?
I can’t believe that a significant amount of Americans think the earth is only a few thousand years old and humans and Dinos coexisted.
Useless data.. Only good for drawing a paycheck...