Same. She's very real and I appreciate that in a host. Tell me the last time you pronounced a taxonomic name correctly... I just fumble over them as best as I can. (is it the Greek, English or Latin pronunciation??)
Or maybe the reason sauropods stuck to warmer climates is simply because those areas had enough food to support their massive bulk, whereas cooler climates had less food for them to subsist on.
Finally an Arachnid most people hate them but I find them interesting. And as a Gardener I appreciate the free pest control services they provide. Where I live I only have to worry about 3 poisonous species that I’m very Familiar with. And unlike what most people believe spiders are more afraid of us than we are of them and I’ve never been bitten as I leave them alone and they leave me alone. And since I prefer to grow vegetables organically I appreciate the work they do keeping pest insect populations under control.
In the United States prairie dogs sometimes carry plague fleas and plague. There have been cases where people have contracted plague from fleas when they work around prairie dog burrows.
I think I also heard that squirrels Appalachian mountian range can have plague fleas as well. take this with a huge amount of salt though, i heard this from a teacher years ago when we were talking about antibiotics
something about the content and the way youve both communicated these opinions are really weird. like, i feel like you either wouldnt have said it about a dude at all, or you wouldnt have said it as weirdly
@@tturi2 i am bilingual in both spanish and english from childhood as my dad's from the uk and my mother is from Spain, what you are describing is not in any shape relevant to my comment unfortunately.
@@HedonisticPuritan-mp6xv "quien se pica ajos come" look this up also realise i can see your other comments on this profile to see the reason that youre whinging is that you feel like im talking about you (which, seeing those other comments youve made; i most certainly am)
I feel like the research on sauropod metabolism kind of assumes that there's a perfect correlation between habitat and metabolism. Just because they're restricted to warm lower latitudes doesn't mean they're not homeotherms (many tropical adapted species struggle with polar climes). Sauropods, needing large amounts of food, may just stick to the more productive biomes. They still have very fast growth rates, suggesting fast metabolic rates, and likely homeothermy.
That must be the case, because their big sizes and fast metabolisms mean that they must be restricted to warmer places with abundant vegetation in order to properly get enough food and sustain themselves
@coomerslayer420 I believe they might have been making a joke. Saying "elephants live in tropical climates so must be cold-blooded" may point out the flaw assumption of correlating metabolism with climate range I talked about in my comment.
Not really sold on sauropods being cold blooded with Dongbeltitan in a region with seasonal snow fall and Glacilosaurus from Antarctica and had seasonal snow fall as well could be possibly the stayed in warm climates because food was more abundant than in colder climates
Yeah sauropods were probably warm-blooded because they also have fast metabolisms which means their bodies will be producing heat. As for the sauropods that lived in regions with seasonal snow fall, they just lived in places with seasonal snow. They likely either ate lots of vegetation and stored up fat to last the cold seasons or they migrated to warmer places and later come back when snow stopped
Before this they were mesothermic right? I think that’s more accurate. Didn’t need to eat as much, but not cold blooded either, maybe even warm blooded, they had to grow really fast
Emilia... Doug IS a spider. He's just not trapped in that specific amber. He's trapped in a cardboard mold. In all seriousness, that arachnoid is likely a proto-scorpion. I know it doesn't carry the hallmarks, but hear me out. It's too thick for the era for what we consider a true spider or tarantula. Both of those tended to have thinner legs or more grouped legs and were almost fully fossorial. This was trapped in amber, so at least it was in an environment with trees. Amblypygids, vinegaroons, and solifugids all have climbing traits pretty early on. Proto scorpions also don't have anything resembling web organs and their eyes are clustered like in the art. The spines may be what you think, but I always wondered why solifugids had such long spiny hairs on the legs that aren't the sensory pedipalps. This could be for the same purpose.
Pretty sure Doug made the Pinocchio transformation. He was born as a sentient cardboard cutout and dreamt of becoming a real human. Now every time he achieves something special he is transformed into a real human, but unlike Pinocchio this seems not to be lasting. Let's all hope he did it this time 😅
Arachnophobes: Spiders can't be any worse than they are now. Especially tarantulas with those hairy legs of theirs... Douglassarachne: *S P I K Y L E G S* Arachnophobes: * *confused screaming* *
If I recall correctly, many 14th-century rural dovecotes were built at ground level because there were no rats in most areas and rats don't travel at speed across country going from town to town...the way the plague spread...and rats weren't even mentioned in period accounts.. The rat hypothesis was based on an Asian plague outbreak a century or so ago where many dead and dying rats were seen alongside human victims....and the idea just sort of stuck.
I've recently been really interested in how and why chelicerates can look so radically different from each other, so I really liked how the head of this newly discovered arachnid could look like an alternate helmet for some horseshoe crab cousin.
She said that Doug is made of cardboard, but she failed to mention any stick. Is there no stick, and if not, what is it that causes him to bob and twirl as he speaks? Also, it would be interesting to know about that lower jaw structure, and how it works to produce speech as it opens and closes.
btw Pawlowsky is read with v beacuse it's from Polish where letter w is used as v and letter v is not used. Remain from older repression under germanization. For english sound of w, polish language uses letter Ł
0:44 The thing behind the wooden fence is back! Lore expands as we speak. Maybe this is some setup to collab with ghosthunting channels, or it's just Doug...
Kiyacursor longipes looks like it filled the role of the roadrunner, which makes me think there must have been a wily dinosaur filling the role of the coyote. This means there must have been a Cretaceous Acme Inc supplying sticks of dinomite.
Could Doug be a flea relative ? they can't have always been so small The size question could also apply to dust mitts ancestors or not every related member AK
Does the new abellisaurus dinosaur @7:39 not have front legs? Had to look that up... Apparently none of the carnotaurins have functional front legs. That seems like a really inconvenient body plan.
I found a mite with spiky and long legs, it's shape reminded me of mite harvestmen. It had an upturned small tail that may have just been a piece of dirt.
The arachnid may not have been named after Doug, but it's nearly as flat as cardboard cut out Doug! lol Emelia may have coined a new phrase. "Man, what a night we had. I was as Psittacosaurus!"
Spidey like buddy found about 45 min from where I live. I have only found small sea life fossils there so far, but I have seen some cool stuff come from Mazon creek area.
@@m0-m0597if you think these comments are kind youre missing the forest for the trees, the comments are getting unduly weird cracking the odd joke in a comment section is fine but the current pattern is folks are being weird tbh
Please tell me that the thumbnail picture is of one 4 and a half feet wide and 7 3/4 feet long. AND OH MY GOD ITS ON YOUR BACK!! IT'S ON YOUR BACK... 🥺😔😞
Ben has changed so much since this channel started
You might say…he’s evolved. ;)
Guess it is the Hair, it is pretty.
I'm proud of her
That's ben? Darn. Haven't been here a while. He looks good tho
@@SoulDelSol Obviously not Ben (the replies are just joking)
Oh boy, a spider that can double as medieval weaponry.
I wonder how big Doug is. Guess I'll have to Google it.
new spider just dropped
😂😂😂
Don't you mean spooder
they released a fucking spider before winds of winter. unreal
@@Crowborn hey at least this spider is better than Madame Webb
@@CrowbornWe really got a new species of spider before we got gta6 💀
I love the bloopers in Emilia’s episodes
Same. She's very real and I appreciate that in a host. Tell me the last time you pronounced a taxonomic name correctly... I just fumble over them as best as I can. (is it the Greek, English or Latin pronunciation??)
Or maybe the reason sauropods stuck to warmer climates is simply because those areas had enough food to support their massive bulk, whereas cooler climates had less food for them to subsist on.
This is a gut check response.
Also, wasn't there an issue with sauropods needing to reduce heat because of their body mass?
Elephants live in a tropical climate, so elephants must be cold-blooded.
Great answer, that must be the case. After all they need to live in places with abundant food in order to get enough food and live sustainably
Only question then is how did mammoths maintain their size in cold climates?
"What is Doug?" A question for the ages.
Baby don't hurt me
He's a dog. No really, not joking, no way, not at all, no no no
@@hawkbartril3016I wish I wasn't so ugly.
Doug is an enigma and undefinable.
poor bella :( they better put her in a beautiful sanctuary. i love belugas so dearly
Finally an Arachnid most people hate them but I find them interesting. And as a Gardener I appreciate the free pest control services they provide. Where I live I only have to worry about 3 poisonous species that I’m very Familiar with. And unlike what most people believe spiders are more afraid of us than we are of them and I’ve never been bitten as I leave them alone and they leave me alone. And since I prefer to grow vegetables organically I appreciate the work they do keeping pest insect populations under control.
I swear if this is another eurypterid cosplaying as a spider...
Getting megarachne flashbacks
The spite in this comment is so clear to see, I love it
Looks kind of like a harvestman (Opiliones).
I cant believe Doug was finally uncovered from the earth to be donated to a museum!
9:45 Doug, 2D or 3D, is a mystery, wrapped in a burrito and hidden in a stromboli
It's because the western interior seaway was much shallower than previously thought. Doug is a crinoid feather star.
I see, I click, I'm happy!
Да ты бы и собаку!
New 7DOS, interesting content entertaining and professional hosting on Emilia's side.
Endorphins released, day improved!
Indeed! Emilia is sooooooooooo hott!!
@@denizen9998can you like, choose to stop being weird
We want to see cardboard spider-Doug.
Spoug
What a... coincidence
@@ronaldweasley408 Ronald Weasley
Emelia knocks it out of the park again!
In the United States prairie dogs sometimes carry plague fleas and plague. There have been cases where people have contracted plague from fleas when they work around prairie dog burrows.
I think I also heard that squirrels Appalachian mountian range can have plague fleas as well.
take this with a huge amount of salt though, i heard this from a teacher years ago when we were talking about antibiotics
You go Emilia, you're progressing as a great presenter. Your confidence (and pronunciation) are pretty impressive!!!
Agreed. Bravo! But her voice gets a raspy tone towards the end of some longer bits. Running out of air perhaps. Somewhat distracting.
something about the content and the way youve both communicated these opinions are really weird.
like, i feel like you either wouldnt have said it about a dude at all, or you wouldnt have said it as weirdly
@@markd.s.8625 lots of people use language differently between men and women, French is a good example
@@tturi2 i am bilingual in both spanish and english from childhood as my dad's from the uk and my mother is from Spain, what you are describing is not in any shape relevant to my comment unfortunately.
@@HedonisticPuritan-mp6xv "quien se pica ajos come"
look this up
also realise i can see your other comments on this profile to see the reason that youre whinging is that you feel like im talking about you (which, seeing those other comments youve made; i most certainly am)
Great show Emelia. I was amazed at your pronunciation of that string of “Dino” words in the arachnid section. Bravo!
I feel like the research on sauropod metabolism kind of assumes that there's a perfect correlation between habitat and metabolism.
Just because they're restricted to warm lower latitudes doesn't mean they're not homeotherms (many tropical adapted species struggle with polar climes).
Sauropods, needing large amounts of food, may just stick to the more productive biomes. They still have very fast growth rates, suggesting fast metabolic rates, and likely homeothermy.
Elephants live in a tropical climate, so elephants must be cold-blooded.
@@ExtremeMadnessXNo, elephants don’t live in cold climates. Mammoths did. And they’re all warm-blooded. What are you even talking about?
That must be the case, because their big sizes and fast metabolisms mean that they must be restricted to warmer places with abundant vegetation in order to properly get enough food and sustain themselves
@coomerslayer420 I believe they might have been making a joke. Saying "elephants live in tropical climates so must be cold-blooded" may point out the flaw assumption of correlating metabolism with climate range I talked about in my comment.
@@coomslayer6996 I was sarcastic.
Not really sold on sauropods being cold blooded with Dongbeltitan in a region with seasonal snow fall and Glacilosaurus from Antarctica and had seasonal snow fall as well could be possibly the stayed in warm climates because food was more abundant than in colder climates
Elephants live in a tropical climate, so elephants must be cold-blooded.
Yeah sauropods were probably warm-blooded because they also have fast metabolisms which means their bodies will be producing heat. As for the sauropods that lived in regions with seasonal snow fall, they just lived in places with seasonal snow. They likely either ate lots of vegetation and stored up fat to last the cold seasons or they migrated to warmer places and later come back when snow stopped
@KillRhythm grow up
Before this they were mesothermic right?
I think that’s more accurate.
Didn’t need to eat as much, but not cold blooded either, maybe even warm blooded, they had to grow really fast
@@coomslayer6996 Basically, like whales but on land.
I love this channel for: 1. Lots of cool science news. 2. Perfect English RP which is a music for my polish ears. Best Regards!
As a fellow Pole, is there any reason as to why RP is so pleasing to you? It must be the strong spirit of rzeczpospolita!
@@Apost0345 RP stands for Received Pronunciation.
Best host is with us today!
Also looking very pretty too in that lovely black top
@@coomslayer6996bro...
Just say she’s pretty and move on bro 💀
Makes you wonder doesnt it @@coomslayer6996
I wonder if the cartoon Doug still holds up.
Emilia hosting is an instant click. Shes such a talented science communicator
okay the comment sections are getting weirder
dudes need to become normal
Excellent video! I for one never tire of arthropods, living or extinct.
Makes you wonder why spikey spider legs. My guess is maybe they were slower back then so they needed more protection.
my mental Illinois
It's like everything from Mazon Creek is determined to be unclassifiable. This arachnid, Tullimonstrum, Etacystis, Ecumasia...
Douggie is a fabulous name for a spikey spidersorus rex.
First stupendemis, now pisstacossaurus, you're killing me maam 😂😂
Fast becoming my favourite presenter on any channel.
I love this content! Great work!
Holy crap we found another dinosaur already from La Colonia? Carnotaurus has been getting a lot of new neighbors. Keep them coming!
Watching from Illinois. Amazing!
Emilia... Doug IS a spider. He's just not trapped in that specific amber. He's trapped in a cardboard mold.
In all seriousness, that arachnoid is likely a proto-scorpion. I know it doesn't carry the hallmarks, but hear me out. It's too thick for the era for what we consider a true spider or tarantula. Both of those tended to have thinner legs or more grouped legs and were almost fully fossorial. This was trapped in amber, so at least it was in an environment with trees. Amblypygids, vinegaroons, and solifugids all have climbing traits pretty early on. Proto scorpions also don't have anything resembling web organs and their eyes are clustered like in the art. The spines may be what you think, but I always wondered why solifugids had such long spiny hairs on the legs that aren't the sensory pedipalps. This could be for the same purpose.
yes, I saw the picture of a beautiful, gorgeous spider, and I clicked :)
"Is he cardbord? Is he human?" xD
Pretty sure Doug made the Pinocchio transformation. He was born as a sentient cardboard cutout and dreamt of becoming a real human. Now every time he achieves something special he is transformed into a real human, but unlike Pinocchio this seems not to be lasting.
Let's all hope he did it this time 😅
super cute and funny blooper at the end 😀
I'm from ILLINOIS & not surprised because there are too many spiders here.
It’s your friendly neighborhood Spider-Doug
8:39 Douglassarachne?! I bet the fossil donation to the museum was...
very expensive.
Glad to have a channel where men of education and men of culture can ruminate 😅✌️
I always get excited when I hear a new dinosaur has been discovered, but it always turns out to be dead.
it always "friends out"?
@@Eidolon1andOnly "turns" 🙄
Oh my God Illinois finally did something
Arachnophobes: Spiders can't be any worse than they are now. Especially tarantulas with those hairy legs of theirs...
Douglassarachne: *S P I K Y L E G S*
Arachnophobes: * *confused screaming* *
Proud Illinoian moment
New Halloween costume idea: ancient arachnid encased in a millions of years old rock.
Megarachne 2.0: no longer a scam
If I recall correctly, many 14th-century rural dovecotes were built at ground level because there were no rats in most areas and rats don't travel at speed across country going from town to town...the way the plague spread...and rats weren't even mentioned in period accounts.. The rat hypothesis was based on an Asian plague outbreak a century or so ago where many dead and dying rats were seen alongside human victims....and the idea just sort of stuck.
I've recently been really interested in how and why chelicerates can look so radically different from each other, so I really liked how the head of this newly discovered arachnid could look like an alternate helmet for some horseshoe crab cousin.
I love her accent. Doing a great job!!
Thanks for the new as always guys!
nice!! I love that the spider is named Doug lol, we can pretend it's for our BGT Doug!
The arachnid appears to be a water strider. It would have used its spines to either stay afloat or to hold onto air while under water.
She said that Doug is made of cardboard, but she failed to mention any stick. Is there no stick, and if not, what is it that causes him to bob and twirl as he speaks? Also, it would be interesting to know about that lower jaw structure, and how it works to produce speech as it opens and closes.
btw Pawlowsky is read with v beacuse it's from Polish where letter w is used as v and letter v is not used. Remain from older repression under germanization.
For english sound of w, polish language uses letter Ł
Brilliant presentation Emilia well done.
Australia lore update
Hi, how many new dinosaur species are named yearly? I love your enthusiasm; thank you.
Could it be that the 'empty' residential buildings were used to house domesticated animals instead?
0:44 The thing behind the wooden fence is back! Lore expands as we speak.
Maybe this is some setup to collab with ghosthunting channels, or it's just Doug...
Kiyacursor longipes looks like it filled the role of the roadrunner, which makes me think there must have been a wily dinosaur filling the role of the coyote. This means there must have been a Cretaceous Acme Inc supplying sticks of dinomite.
Great show👍🏻❤️
News from the carboniferous?! I love arthropods, please more! Also, Pistaciosaurus was a good one
Greetings from the BIG SKY of Montana.
Could Doug be a flea relative ? they can't have always been so small The size question could also apply to dust mitts ancestors or not every related member AK
Woo Hoo . Great episode. Wonderful good job. Poor baby girl wale . People can be so cruel 😢
The evolution of feathers is amazing
maybe they should start lighting up more fossils in UV
I knew before I started the vid, she'd have a British accent.
Perfect.
I wish fossil bias was not as rare as it is, but we still found a lot of amazing creatures so I'm not complaining.
Well, it’s nice to have something other than the Tully Monster, I suppose.
Does the new abellisaurus dinosaur @7:39 not have front legs? Had to look that up... Apparently none of the carnotaurins have functional front legs. That seems like a really inconvenient body plan.
I always thought that sauropod would most likely be cold-blooded because can u imagine metabolism of 80 tons heavy warm-blooded terrestrial animal?
Totally agree. 😊
I also believe as you, that a 80 tons animal, would create its own heat.
0:53 cute rat 10/10
The Beluga whale, that's so sad
New Crab Variations added
Giant Tick. Obviously fed on warm blooded dingosaurs.
I like this channel. I like it a lot.
doug its not a spider silly, he is a piece of cardboard
Brilliant!
I found a mite with spiky and long legs, it's shape reminded me of mite harvestmen.
It had an upturned small tail that may have just been a piece of dirt.
The arachnid may not have been named after Doug, but it's nearly as flat as cardboard cut out Doug! lol
Emelia may have coined a new phrase.
"Man, what a night we had. I was as Psittacosaurus!"
Poor spiders. Evolution basically told them to just take a piss for hundreds of millions of years.
Spidey like buddy found about 45 min from where I live. I have only found small sea life fossils there so far, but I have seen some cool stuff come from Mazon creek area.
So impressed with your pronunciation. 👍👏🏻😊
Cardboard Doug is BEST Doug.
Ooh ooh I totally agree. What were you saying again ….??? ✌️
Found in Illinois! I live there!!!
Doug is hundreds of giant prehistoric arachnids in a human suit !!!
Thx for the vid❤👋🇫🇮
Thanks!
Great to hear about the colouration and scales of piss-take-o-saurus.
I don't know what it is, but I'm suddenly more interested in science lately.
because a woman is presenting the channel - perhaps time to grow up?
@@frankcarter6427 Ever tried to being nice to people? It's great and you make the world a better place.
@@m0-m0597if you think these comments are kind youre missing the forest for the trees, the comments are getting unduly weird
cracking the odd joke in a comment section is fine
but the current pattern is folks are being weird tbh
@@m0-m0597 ever tried treating women with respect?
@@frankcarter6427 you know my text, try being nice to people :)
I can't believe the TFS Spiker joke was stolen from irl.
Please tell me that the thumbnail picture is of one 4 and a half feet wide and 7 3/4 feet long. AND OH MY GOD ITS ON YOUR BACK!! IT'S ON YOUR BACK... 🥺😔😞
Damn i didn't know Illinois was so old I wonder if it ate Chicago style hot dogs
This channel has become as nice to watch as listen to recently.